Ebook Family therapy - His tory, theory, and practice (6/E): Part 2
➤ Gửi thông báo lỗi ⚠️ Báo cáo tài liệu vi phạmNội dung chi tiết: Ebook Family therapy - His tory, theory, and practice (6/E): Part 2
Ebook Family therapy - His tory, theory, and practice (6/E): Part 2
My father tells inc my mother is slowing down.He talks deliberately and with deep feelings as sloop shouldered he walks to his garden behind rhe garag Ebook Family therapy - His tory, theory, and practice (6/E): Part 2ge.My mother informs me about my lather s lailứig health."Not as robust as before,” she explains, "Lower energy than in his 50s.” Her concerns arise as she kneads dough for biscuits.Both express their fears to me as we view the present from the past.In love, and with measured anxiety, I move with th Ebook Family therapy - His tory, theory, and practice (6/E): Part 2em into new patterns.Gtaddinỵ. 1992bCHAPTER OVERVIEWFrom reading this chapter, you will learn about■Hie importance of ailed in experiential family theEbook Family therapy - His tory, theory, and practice (6/E): Part 2
rapy.■The major theorists, premises, techniques, roles of the therapist, processes, and outcomes of experiential family therapy.■The uniqueness of theMy father tells inc my mother is slowing down.He talks deliberately and with deep feelings as sloop shouldered he walks to his garden behind rhe garag Ebook Family therapy - His tory, theory, and practice (6/E): Part 2mfortable you are with the expression of emotions and touch.■The active nature of experiential family therapists.■Whether the experiential approach to family therapy is as relevant now as it was 30 years ago and why that might lx- so.The experiential branch of family therapy emerged out of the human Ebook Family therapy - His tory, theory, and practice (6/E): Part 2istic-existential psychology movement of the 19<>0s and was most popular when that movement was new. Some of its proponents and creators drew heavilyEbook Family therapy - His tory, theory, and practice (6/E): Part 2
from Gestalt therapy, psychodrama, client-centered therapy, and the encounter group movement of the lime. The emphasis is on immediate, here-and-now, My father tells inc my mother is slowing down.He talks deliberately and with deep feelings as sloop shouldered he walks to his garden behind rhe garag Ebook Family therapy - His tory, theory, and practice (6/E): Part 2asized. Theory and abstract factors arc minimized. The quality of ongoing experiences in rhe family is rhe criterion for measuring psychological health and deciding whether or not to make therapeutic interventions.Experiential family therapy, which has a number of forms, emphasizes affect, that is, Ebook Family therapy - His tory, theory, and practice (6/E): Part 2emotions. Awareness and expression of feelings are considered rhe means to both personal and family fulfillment. Professionals who operate from this pEbook Family therapy - His tory, theory, and practice (6/E): Part 2
erspective consider the expression of allcct to be a universal medium in which all can share. They encourage expression of feelings in a clear and effMy father tells inc my mother is slowing down.He talks deliberately and with deep feelings as sloop shouldered he walks to his garden behind rhe garag Ebook Family therapy - His tory, theory, and practice (6/E): Part 2ts and encourages a wide range of emotions and personal encounters. In contrast, dysfunctional families resist taking affective risks, and members arc rigid in their interactions. They do not know how to empathize with one another and reflect feelings.MAJOR THEORISTSA number of professionals have co Ebook Family therapy - His tory, theory, and practice (6/E): Part 2ntributed significantly to the development of experien rial family therapy. Among rhe most notable are David Kantor, Frank Duhl. Runny Duhl, VirginiaEbook Family therapy - His tory, theory, and practice (6/E): Part 2
Satir, Carl Whitaker. Bernard Guerney, Louise Guerney. Walter Kempler, Augustus Napier. Leslie Greenberg, and David Keith. Virginia Salir and Carl WhiMy father tells inc my mother is slowing down.He talks deliberately and with deep feelings as sloop shouldered he walks to his garden behind rhe garag Ebook Family therapy - His tory, theory, and practice (6/E): Part 2as extraordinarily different from others even at an early age. Al 3 years of age, she had learned to read, and by the rime she was 11, she had reached her adult height of nearly six feet" (Simon, 1989, p. 37). Although she was sickly and missed a lot of school, she was a good student and began her c Ebook Family therapy - His tory, theory, and practice (6/E): Part 2ollege experience after only IV’ years of formal education. Her initial goal, which she achieved, was to become a schoolteacher. "Growing up a big, awEbook Family therapy - His tory, theory, and practice (6/E): Part 2
kward, sickly child. Sadr drew- from her experience of being an outsider" and developed an acute sensitivity for others (Simon, 1989. p. 37). This quaMy father tells inc my mother is slowing down.He talks deliberately and with deep feelings as sloop shouldered he walks to his garden behind rhe garag Ebook Family therapy - His tory, theory, and practice (6/E): Part 2ture came after 6 years of teaching school and 9 years of clinical work in an agency. Herwww.downloadslide.netChapter 9 • Experiential Family Therapy 251unique approach to working with families evolved from her treatment of a schizophrenic young woman whose mother threatened to sue Satir when the yo Ebook Family therapy - His tory, theory, and practice (6/E): Part 2ung woman improved. Instead of becoming defensive, Satir invited the mother to join the therapy and worked with them until they reached communicationEbook Family therapy - His tory, theory, and practice (6/E): Part 2
congruence (Salir, 1986). she then invited the father and oldest son into treatment until the family had achieved a balance.Satir was influenced by MuMy father tells inc my mother is slowing down.He talks deliberately and with deep feelings as sloop shouldered he walks to his garden behind rhe garag Ebook Family therapy - His tory, theory, and practice (6/E): Part 2esearch Institute (MR1) in Palo Allo. California, after which she became its first director. From her clinical work and interaction with other professionals there, she refined her approach to working with families, which was simultaneously folksy and complex. "Salir w as the archetypal nurturing the Ebook Family therapy - His tory, theory, and practice (6/E): Part 2rapist in a field enamored of abstract concepts and strategic maneuvers. Her warmth and genuineness gave her tremendous appeal as she traveled the couEbook Family therapy - His tory, theory, and practice (6/E): Part 2
ntry giving demonstrations and workshops’’ (Nichols 2013, p- 145). At the core of Salir’s approach was “her unshakable conviction about people’s potenMy father tells inc my mother is slowing down.He talks deliberately and with deep feelings as sloop shouldered he walks to his garden behind rhe garag Ebook Family therapy - His tory, theory, and practice (6/E): Part 21961 w ith the publication of her first lx>ok. Conjoint Family 'ibcrapy. The clarity of her w riting made the text a classic and pul Salir in demand as a workshop presenter. She continued to write and demonstrate her process model of therapy" (Salir, 1982) all over the globe—Europe. North America, L Ebook Family therapy - His tory, theory, and practice (6/E): Part 2atin America, and Asia—until her death (Bermudez, 2008). Among her many contributions were strong, charismatic leadership (Beels & Ferber, 1969); a siEbook Family therapy - His tory, theory, and practice (6/E): Part 2
mple but eloquent view- of effective and ineffective communication patterns (Satir. 1972: Satir & Baldwin, 1983): and a humanistic concern about buildMy father tells inc my mother is slowing down.He talks deliberately and with deep feelings as sloop shouldered he walks to his garden behind rhe garag Ebook Family therapy - His tory, theory, and practice (6/E): Part 2 and between sessions” (Kaplan, 2000b, p. 6). She conducted much of her work using structured experiential exercises (Woods ỏi Martin, 1984).Salir is often described as a master of communication and even as an originator of family communications theory, an approach that focuses on clarifying transac Ebook Family therapy - His tory, theory, and practice (6/E): Part 2tions among family members. In her later work, she “brought a spiritual understanding into the family therapy realm, holding that people arc* connecteEbook Family therapy - His tory, theory, and practice (6/E): Part 2
d not only to their own bodies and states of being bur in relationships as well" (Reirer, 2014, p. 5).During her lifetime Sarir worked with more than My father tells inc my mother is slowing down.He talks deliberately and with deep feelings as sloop shouldered he walks to his garden behind rhe garag Ebook Family therapy - His tory, theory, and practice (6/E): Part 2ed her skills and her approach before hundreds of audiences (Sarir & Bitter, 2000). Sarir was unashamedly optimistic, and she genuinely believed that healthy families arc able to Ik* reciprocal and open in their sharing of feelings and affection. Satir died in 1988 at the age of 72 years. Today her Ebook Family therapy - His tory, theory, and practice (6/E): Part 2model of w orking with families is often referred to as rhe human validation process model, and there is a movement to enhance it “by integrating it wEbook Family therapy - His tory, theory, and practice (6/E): Part 2
ith the explicit principles and tools of Emotion Focused Therapy” (Brubacher, 2006. p. 141).Carl Whitaker (1912-1995)Carl Whitaker grew up on a dairy My father tells inc my mother is slowing down.He talks deliberately and with deep feelings as sloop shouldered he walks to his garden behind rhe garag Ebook Family therapy - His tory, theory, and practice (6/E): Part 2ily moved to Syracuse in 1925. he felt awkward and out of place. He attributedwww.downloadslide.netMy father tells inc my mother is slowing down.He talks deliberately and with deep feelings as sloop shouldered he walks to his garden behind rhe garagGọi ngay
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