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0333804308
Includes bibliographical references.
What do consumers of therapy want and what do they get in practice? Is what they get more beneficial than what they think they want, or can it actually be harmful? Many psychotherapists work from the premise that the idiosyncrasies of their practice are integral and necessary ingredients in the therapeutic process. The client's behaviour, on the other hand, tends to be viewed primarily as an expression of the personal world she imports into the therapy room from outside it. But what about the therapist's personal world? And how are clients affected by the context of therapy itself? Falling for Therapy suggests that certain approaches and techniques can be deeply damaging and attempts to chart some of the ways in which differences of perception might influence the course of therapy. Using examples from the author's personal experience, it looks at the failure to communicate on the part of two people who saw/see themselves as highly competent communicators, the failure of a system of therapy to contain those caught up in it, the failure of the institutions of therapy to address satisfactorily the ensuing dilemmas - and at the ethical and practical issues involved. Ann Sands' book is an attempt to put that failure to good use by asking questions about psychotherapy from a client's point of view; it is also a plea for greater openness and humanity within it.
2016
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