Topical Panel 04 from the Evolution of Psychotherapy 2000 - The Initial Interview
Featuring William Glasser, MD, Mary Goulding, MSW, Harriet Lerner, PhD, and Alexander Lowen, MD.
Moderated by Jon Carlson, Psy.D, Ed.D
Topical Panel 09 from the Evolution of Psychotherapy 2000 - Couple/Family Therapy
Featuring William Glasser, MD, John Gottman, PhD, Salvador Minuchin, PhD, and Peggy Papp, ACSW.
Moderated by Ruth McClendon, MSW
State of the Art Address 02:
This address suggests that what is needed in the field of marital intervention is an empirically-based theory about the disasters and masters of marriage. The theory also is an integration of behavioral, object-relations, system and existential approaches to marriage. This theory is described and presented in this address.
Too often our clients make poor decisions that serve to unnecessarily complicate their lives. In this clinical hypnosis session, the focus will be on using hypnosis to encourage a better quality of decision making in some area of the client's life.
Price:
$29.00Base Price - $59.00 Sale is $29.00price reduced from Base Price - $59.00
Our natural sexual setpoint explains a lot about arousal, desire and intimate satisfaction. We will explore this issue with research, facts and humor, with the objectives of understanding the effects of estrogen on desire and the effects of testosterone on desire.
Strength-based therapy elicits people’s abilities, previous solutions, strengths and resources in bringing about change. Watch Bill O’Hanlon, cofounder of the solution-oriented approach, demonstrate this evocative approach to brief therapy.
Price:
$29.00Base Price - $59.00 Sale is $29.00price reduced from Base Price - $59.00
The therapist will illustrate steps 2-4 of EFT, that is delineating the negative cycle, and unpacking underlying emotions to create a coherent picture of the couples problems as seen through an attachment lens.
Price:
$29.00Base Price - $59.00 Sale is $29.00price reduced from Base Price - $59.00
James Hillman (2009) Hillman reveals how to bring “soul talk” back into modern psychotherapy. The case history of a client is the diagnosis, present complaint, family history, employment history, but nothing of the “soul” of the person. Dr. Hillman assures us that we can almost ignore the case history. Using “soul” talk (Longings, dreams, secrets, how a client accepts joy and sorrow) takes the session out of the box and returns a resonance to psychotherapy that it has lost.
Eugene Gendlin (2000) demonstrates with two volunteers. The first is guided through feelings of tension in her shoulders and shakiness in her stomach. Gendlin conducts a second demonstration. The next volunteer presents the trauma of a hysterectomy due to cancer. Gendlin concludes with an explanation of his method.