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Books in the Routledge Focus on Mental Health series

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  • - Moving in All Directions
    by Garet Newell & Simon Paul Ogden
    £17.49 - 44.49

  • - What SST Leaders Think
    by Windy (Goldsmiths Dryden
    £48.99

    Single-Session Therapy and Its Future provides an introduction to the major principles of single-session therapy and what currently constitutes good practice in the field.

  • - A Roadmap of Trauma and Critical Incident Care
    by Fiona Dunkley
    £17.49 - 49.99

  • - The Right To Be Understood
    by Jude Boyles & Nathalie Talbot
    £20.49 - 46.49

  • by Paul Lawrence, Sarah Hill, Andreas Priestland, et al.
    £19.49 - 49.99

  • by Evelyn M. (International Association for the Study of Dreams Duesbury
    £49.99

    A Dream-Guided Meditation Model and the Personalized Method for Interpreting Dreams presents a model for meditation that counselors can use with clients regardless of gender, race, national origin, religion, age, or marital status.

  • - Using Cognitive Hypnotherapy and EMDR
    by Elizabeth Brooker
    £20.49 - 49.99

  • by Angelika Staehle
    £37.49

    Analytic Listening in Clinical Dialogue focuses on the work of four leading clinicians as they assess how their unconscious basic assumptions impact their clinical work.Using the case study of a seven-year-old boy, the authors evaluate a videotaped psychoanalytic first interview and exchange their mutual clinical approaches. Their discussions uncover the way that unconscious basic assumptions arise from the core of one's personality and act as the pillars that support primary- and secondary-process thinking. These fundamental models of thought and emotion result in convictions which play a key role in the processes of understanding, evaluating, classifying, anticipating and regulating. The authors show how an 'analytic listening' approach can also be used to good effect in supervisions and intervisions, as it provides a path out of the domain of 'being right' into a space of what is shared as well as what is different. They argue that this method allows an analyst's own blind spots to be reduced.Translated from the original German, Analytic Listening in Clinical Dialogue will be of great interest to psychoanalysts, psychotherapists and psychologists.

  • by Lori R. Kogan
    £46.49

    The Gifts We Receive from Animals is a book guaranteed to brighten a reader's day. Professionals engaged in therapy work as well as those who have companion animals at home will enjoy learning about the many ways in which animals impact people's lives. Through a series of short, true-life stories, written by professionals engaged in animal assisted interventions, The Gifts We Receive from Animals reminds readers of the core essence of the human animal bond and the reason behind the growing phenomenon of animal assisted interventions. Readers will learn, for example, about the young child who shares her inner most thoughts with a dog and, as a result, learns how to talk with people; the soldier who feels comfortable and safe with a dog, a feeling he has been lacking since active duty; and the elderly adult who works through difficult physical therapy because of his therapy dog. The Gifts We Receive from Animals takes readers on a delightful journey, offering insights into the unique impact animals have in the lives of those they help.

  • by Mary Adams
    £46.49

    This book is an exploration of the internal world of James Joyce with particular emphasis on his being born into his parents' grief at the loss of their firstborn son, offering a new perspective on his emotional difficulties.Mary Adams links Joyce's profound sense of guilt and abandonment with the trauma of being a 'replacement child' and compares his experience with that of two psychoanalytic cases, as well as with Freud and other well-known figures who were replacement children. Issues such as survivor guilt, sibling rivalry, the 'illegitimate' replacement son, and the 'dead mother' syndrome are discussed. Joyce is seen as maturing from a paranoid, fearful state through his writing, his intelligence, his humour and his sublime poetic sensibility. By escaping the oppressive aspects of life in Dublin, in exile he could find greater emotional freedom and a new sense of belonging. A quality of claustrophobic intrusive identification in Ulysses contrasts strikingly with a new levity, imaginative identification, intimacy and compassion in Finnegans Wake. James Joyce and the Internal World of the Replacement Child highlights the concept of the replacement child and the impact this can have on a whole family.The book will be of interest to psychoanalysts, psychoanalytic psychotherapists and child psychotherapists as well as students of English literature, psychoanalytic studies and readers interested in James Joyce.

  • - A Newcomer's Guide
    by Walter Matweychuk & Windy (Emeritus Professor of Psychotherapeutic Studies at Goldsmiths Dryden
    £20.49 - 48.99

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