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Full Description
Relational Patterns, Therapeutic Presence presents a comprehensive integrative theory and style of therapeutic involvement that reflects a relational and non-pathological perspective.
Containing work from the course of Richard Erskine's career, this book provides an essential introduction to developmentally-based, relationally-focused integrative psychotherapy. The methods described are contact based, profoundly respectful, developmentally attuned, co-constructive, and intersubjective. Rather than a theoretical integration of therapeutic concepts and techniques, Erskine focusses on the concept of internal integration—a convergence of physiology, affect, and cognition so that behaviour is by choice of the current contacts, and not simulated by fear, compulsion, or conditioning. This Classic Edition includes a new prelude by the author.
Written in a conversational style, Relational Patterns, Therapeutic Presence will be essential reading for psychotherapists in practice and in training.
Contents
PRELUDE TO THE CLASSIC EDITION
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
FOREWORD
by Joshua Zavin
PREFACE
INTRODUCTION
Philosophical principles of integrative psychotherapy
CHAPTER ONE
Integrative psychotherapy: theory, process, and relationship
CHAPTER TWO
A therapy of contact-in-relationship
viiviii CONTENTS
CHAPTER THREE
Attunement and involvement: therapeutic responses
to relational needs
CHAPTER FOUR
Psychotherapy of unconscious experience
CHAPTER FIVE
Life scripts and attachment patterns: theoretical integration
and therapeutic involvement
CHAPTER SIX
Life scripts: unconscious relational patterns and
psychotherapeutic involvement
CHAPTER SEVEN
The script system: an unconscious organization of experience
CHAPTER EIGHT
Psychological functions of life scripts
CHAPTER NINE
Integrating expressive methods in a relational psychotherapy
CHAPTER TEN
Bonding in relationship: a solution to violence?
CHAPTER ELEVEN
A Gestalt therapy approach to shame and self-righteousness:
theory and methods
CHAPTER TWELVE
The schizoid process
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
Early affect-confusion: the "borderline" between despair
and rage 199CONTENTS ix
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
Balancing on the "borderline" of early affect-confusion
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
Relational healing of early affect-confusion
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
Introjection, psychic presence, and Parent ego states:
considerations for psychotherapy
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
Resolving intrapsychic conflict: psychotherapy of Parent
ego states
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
What do you say before you say goodbye? Psychotherapy
of grief
CHAPTER NINETEEN
Nonverbal stories: the body in psychotherapy
CHAPTER TWENTY
Narcissism or the therapist's error?
REFERENCES
INDEX