How Much is Enough?: Endings in Psychotherapy and CounsellingPsychology Press, 2000 - 176 páginas How Much is Enough? addresses this important question, looking at the reasons why therapy can go on for too long or can come to a destructively premature ending, and offering advice on how to avoid either, with a timely conclusion. Using vivid examples and practical guidelines, Lesley Murdin examines the theoretical, technical and ethical aspects of endings. She emphasises that it is not only the patient who needs to change if one is to achieve a satisfactory outcome. The therapist must discover the changes in him/herself which are needed to enable an ending in psychotherapy. How Much is Enough? is a unique contribution to therapeutic literature, and will prove invaluable to students and professionals alike. |
Contenido
What are we waiting for? aims and outcomes 12 | 8 |
the goal of resolving transference | 23 |
narcissism and endings | 44 |
the patients unilateral ending | 61 |
the therapist ends | 80 |
What is truth? values and valuing endings | 97 |
the ethics of ending | 117 |
last sessions | 133 |
the timelimited | 149 |
Endings in training and supervision 17180 | 160 |
The good ending | 172 |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
How Much is Enough?: Endings in Psychotherapy and Counselling Lesley Murdin Vista previa limitada - 2000 |
How Much Is Enough?: Endings In Psychotherapy and Counselling Lesley Murdin Vista previa limitada - 2013 |
How Much Is Enough?: Endings In Psychotherapy and Counselling Lesley Murdin Sin vista previa disponible - 2002 |
Términos y frases comunes
able accept achieved allow analysis analytic anger Anna Freud anxiety apist autonomy aware Balint become behaviour client Coltart conscious continue counselling counsellor course deal death death instinct decided defences depression desire develop difficulty Edward Connery emphasises end the therapy ending phase ending process ending therapy ethical experience father fear feelings Feltham Ferenczi Free Association Freud goal happens implies inevitably Journal of Psycho-analysis Karnac Kate Atkinson Kernberg kind Lacan lead leave London loss mother narcissism narcissistic neurosis object Oedipal pain patient and therapist perhaps person pist pleasure principle possible potential powerful present problem psyche psychoanalytic psychotherapy question readiness to end reasons recognised referral relating response Robert Frost seek sense sexual situation someone sort stay supervision supervisor symptoms ther thera therapeutic relationship thought time-limited tion transference uncon unconscious Wendy Cope Winnicott wish