Insane Therapy

Insane Therapy
Author: Marybeth Ayella
Publisher: Temple University Press
Total Pages: 226
Release: 2010-06-17
Genre: Psychology
ISBN: 1439903964

Group therapy goes awry in one community and shows how vulnerable we all can be to cult mentality.

Going Sane

Going Sane
Author: Joseph Truman Hart
Publisher:
Total Pages: 500
Release: 1975
Genre: Emotions
ISBN:

Going Sane is a report of the experience of the authors and their associates at the Center for Feeling Therapy in California. The authors' overall thesis about the prevailing condition of personality in societies past and present is the proposition is that the healthy state of the person is that of the child before it has learned to mask and overlay its feelings with learned patterns of meaning, and thus to substitute ideas for 'natural' feelings. The authors do point out that "we do not believe that feeling therapy is or ever will be for everyone ... to us it seems desirable that there be hundreds of different therapies."

Current Catalog

Current Catalog
Author: National Library of Medicine (U.S.)
Publisher:
Total Pages: 1430
Release:
Genre: Medicine
ISBN:

First multi-year cumulation covers six years: 1965-70.

Which Psychotherapy?

Which Psychotherapy?
Author: Colin Feltham
Publisher: SAGE
Total Pages: 228
Release: 1997-04-07
Genre: Psychology
ISBN: 9781446240281

This controversial book argues that 20th century psychotherapy has been fundamentally characterized by serious disagreement on views of human nature, treatment rationales and goals. Focusing on the differences rather than the commonalities in therapy, eight eminent practitioners demonstrate the diversities in therapies and why, for the most part, it is not possible to tolerate or integrate with other approaches. The book awakened me to understanding more about how a core belief or orientation can result in polarised attitudes towards the person. At the same time, in some cases, there is fundamental common ground which could potentially lead to genuine integration' - "[ac]Eisteach, The Journal of the Irish Association for Counselling and Therapy "Eight distinguished practitioners address twelve different questions, aimed at identifying the distinctive qualities of their own approach and demonstrating how it has been arrived at. The result is a book that will allow both experienced practitioners and trainees to become familiar with and compare the current thinking of these well-known people... the very passion of these opposing and sometimes exclusive convictions may be the well-spring for the efficacy and achievements of these eminent practitioners and trainers' -"Self & Society " Each therapist highlights the distinctive properties of his or her orientation, and discusses questions such as: why and how they came to found, adapt or choose the approach they currently practise; what criticisms of the approach they consider to be valid; which approaches they consider to be ineffective, misleading or dangerous, and, conversely, more promising or effective; why their approach is more effective or comprehensive, and why it may be more suited to certain clients or client problems; and how they account for research which suggests that no one approach seems more effective than any other.

Power Games

Power Games
Author: Richard Raubolt
Publisher: Other Press, LLC
Total Pages: 414
Release: 2021-04-20
Genre: Psychology
ISBN: 1635421438

www.richardraubolt.com An intense account of the misuse of power in psychotherapeutic training that offers solutions to this urgent issue. Over the course of his own training in psychotherapy and psychoanalysis, Richard Raubolt came to see that advanced training is more often than not plagued by authoritarian practices, some subtle and many pronounced. It is the contention of Raubolt and his contributors that these practices instill fear and foster blind obedience to the favored proclivities of the leaders of the training institute. In turn, this subservience, which seeps into the therapeutic relationship, prevents both the training candidates and their prospective patients from developing creative, authentic, and meaningful experiences. This is a book written from the perspective of scholars and experienced clinicians who are acutely aware both on a personal and theoretical level of the disruptive role of power games in psychoanalytic institutes. The collection features a highly nuanced and comprehensively developed psychoanalytic understanding of the use and misuse of power, authority, status, and control operating in many traditional and nontraditional training experiences. Finally, new supervisory and training models based on empathy, respect for subjective experiences, and democratic principles are proposed as an alternative to the abusive practices so powerfully described in this book.

Modern Therapies

Modern Therapies
Author: Virginia Binder
Publisher: Prentice Hall
Total Pages: 248
Release: 1976
Genre: Psychology
ISBN:

Includes chapters on the therapeutic use of psychedelics and megavitamins.