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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... experiences emotions differently from an 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 ...
... experience you will have noted how some people seemto set up time and again for painful things to happen tothem ... experiences this literally as a matterof lifeand death. Thereforeevery childdevelops strategies for extorting strokes ...
... experiences terrorat the possibility of abandonment (Zalcman, 1986). He escalates the expression of this feeling by ... experience unfinished. To relieve at least some of the discomfort of this situation, the child may 'explain it away ...
... experienced from hismother whenhe was an infant. He mayrespond tothismemory by beginning to reexperience the terror he felt atthe time. Thisemotion, likethe memorywith which it is connected, will be outside ofhis conscious awareness. As ...
... experiences and scripty fantasies.All of thesereflect strategies thatthe infantdecided toadopt asameans of getting ... experience internal sensations suchas tension or muscle pain, or somatic disturbances like blushing or indigestion ...
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 | |