Transactional Analysis Counselling in ActionSAGE, 23 Okt 2013 - 280 halaman Selling over 25,000 copies across three editions, this book provides an unrivalled introduction to the core concepts and basic techniques of Transactional Analysis (TA). Ian Stewart guides the reader step-by-step through the successive stages in using TA to create therapeutic change, building understanding of the way the approach works in real-life practice. Key features of this new edition include: -a single extended case study running through the book -′Key ideas′ panels to summarize the main ideas in each section -Detailed discussion of ′closing the escape hatches′: TA′s distinctive approach to resolving the issues of suicide, self-harm or violence -Practice Checklists offering suggested questions readers can use to appraise their own work with clients at strategic points in the text - Space for Reflection sections and Further Reading lists to conclude each chapter. This bestselling textbook offers trainee and practising psychotherapists and counsellors a concise, hands-on exploration of current concepts and techniques in Transactional Analysis. Ian Stewart is Co-Director of The Berne Institute, Nottingham. He is the author of Eric Berne (SAGE, 1992) and Developing Transactional Analysis Counselling (SAGE, 1996), and co-author of TA Today (2nd edn, Lifespace, 2012). |
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... adult survivors of abuse. Both theory and practice were further codified,and TA acquired its own Dictionary (Tilney, 1998). From. 2000. to. the. Present. While the area of innovation in TA in the 1990s was principally concerned with the ...
... adult life. Because dysfunctional patterns were originally decided upon, rather than being forced upon the individual, they can be changed by making new decisions. Thus TA holdsthat people can change. This change canbe genuine and ...
... adult decisionmaking. Instead, they are made nonverbally, in the form of emotional responses. They may also be reflected in the person's body as held physical tensions. This ideaof 'making decisions without words' may seem strange if ...
... adult, and uses a different form of realitytesting (see, for example, Erikson, 1950; Piaget, 1951). It is on this basis that early decisions are made. The young child's emotional experience is one of rage, despair, terror or ecstasy ...
... adult life, he suggested, westill need strokes, though we learn to accept them in symbolic aswell as literal form. If you are coming to TA with a background in another counselling modality, you may already have connected Berne's concept ...
Isi
Separating Past from Present | |
THE PROCESS OF COUNSELLING WITH | |
Taking the First Steps | |
Exploringa Childhood LifePlan | |
Forestalling Tragic Outcomes | |
Making Contracts for Change | |
Challenging Outdated Beliefs | |
Making New Decisions | |
Ending Counselling | |
References | |
Index | |