Transactional Analysis in Psychotherapy

Transactional Analysis in Psychotherapy
Author: Dr. Eric Berne
Publisher: Pickle Partners Publishing
Total Pages: 364
Release: 2016-08-09
Genre: Psychology
ISBN: 1787200698

Originally published in 1961, this book outlines a new, unified system of individual and social psychiatry that were introduced in the United States around that time with remarkable success in various hospitals and other psychiatric establishments. Essentially designed for group therapy, this approach is now used by institutions, group workers, and in private practice with neurotics, psychotics, sexual psychopaths, psychosomatic cases, and adolescents. Transactional analysis begins its program by initiating the individual patients into the theory upon which the treatment is based. First attaining a measure of self-knowledge through private sessions with the analyst, the patient then meets with other patients in group therapy, participating in a series of personally meaningful relation-ships in which he becomes increasingly aware of the cause and nature of his illness, preparing at the same time to overcome it. “A comprehensive method of treatment that has no precedent in its concreteness of structure without at the same time diminishing the dynamic quality of the treatment....No one to my knowledge has presented such a new approach.”—Dr. Milton Schwebel, Professor of Education, New York University

50 Psychology Classics

50 Psychology Classics
Author: Tom Butler-Bowdon
Publisher: Hachette UK
Total Pages: 313
Release: 2010-12-07
Genre: Psychology
ISBN: 1857884736

Explore the key wisdom and figures of psychology's development over 50 books, hundreds of ideas, and a century of time.

The Rough Beast: Psychoanalysis in Everyday Life

The Rough Beast: Psychoanalysis in Everyday Life
Author: Denise Cullington
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 188
Release: 2018-10-26
Genre: Psychology
ISBN: 0429833067

The past continues to operate powerfully, wordlessly, in that less conscious part of our human mind and can trip us up unexpectedly. We can perceive and respond to situations in ways which are more to do with early experiences than the present. We can push from mind what we would rather not know. Feelings such as doubt and sadness can seem too weak; envy and anger, too bad; feeling small and in any way in need, could leave us too vulnerable. Though most will never have their own experience of psychoanalysis (or less intensive psychoanalytic psychotherapy), psychoanalytic ideas can be profoundly helpful in making sense of ourselves. Having some access to those more hidden parts of our human mind, we can feel more alive, more real and less likely to act out in unexpected ways. An accessible, sympathetic and challenging guide, The Rough Beast: Psychoanalysis in Everyday Life is for all those who are curious and sceptical as to what, why and how psychoanalytic understanding is useful in everyday life.