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Overview"This practical and helpful volume details how clinicians can work through various common challenges in individual, couple, or group psychotherapy. Chapters draw upon clinical wisdom gleaned from the author’s 48 years as a practicing psychiatrist to address topics such as using countertransference for therapeutic purposes; resistance, especially when it needs to be the focus of the therapy; and a prioritization of exploration over explanation. Along with theory and clinical observations, Dr. Gans offers a series of ""Clinical Pearls,"" pithy comments that highlight different interventions to a wide range of clinical challenges. These include patient hostility, the abrupt and unilateral termination of therapy, the therapist’s loss of compassionate neutrality when treating a couple, and many more. Many of the ""Clinical Pearls"" prioritize working in the here-and-now. In addition to offering advice and strategies for therapists, the book also addresses concerns like the matter of fees in private practice and the virtue of moral courage on the part of the therapist. Written with clarity, heart, and an abundance of clinical wisdom, Addressing Challenging Moments in Psychotherapy is essential reading for all clinicians, teachers, and supervisors of psychotherapy." Full Product DetailsAuthor: Jerome S. GansPublisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Weight: 0.362kg ISBN: 9781032005331ISBN 10: 1032005335 Pages: 130 Publication Date: 30 September 2021 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Tertiary & Higher Education , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Not yet available This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release. Table of ContentsPart I: Introduction; Part II: Clinical Observations; 1. There Is No Completely Objective Data in Interpersonal Relations. The Way I Am with You Partly Determines the Way You Are with Me; 2. Many Natural Reactions Are Not Helpful and Many Helpful Reactions Do Not Come Naturally; 3. With Some Patients There Is No Risk of Ever Establishing the Truth; 4. In Most Cases, All Things Being Considered, People Are Doing the Best They Can. If You Don’t Think So, You Probably Don’t Have Enough Information, or You Do Not Fully Understand the Information You Do Have; 5. It Is at the Boundaries That Meaningful Psychotherapeutic Work Takes Place; 6. In Chronic Marital Discord, Each Is Contributing Approximately 50% of the Problem No Matter How Asymmetrically They Present or Seem During the Course of Therapy; 7. Internal Conflict Can Masquerade as Dialogue; 8. One of The Fringe Benefits of Being a Psychotherapist Is All That We Can Learn from Our Patients; 9. Seemingly Innocuous Patient Comments Often Yield Valuable Information About the Patient, the Patient-Therapist Relationship and the Phase of the Therapy; 10. Shame Is a Painful, Ubiquitous, Debilitating and Often Hidden Emotion; 11. Ideas Are One of The Most Powerful Medications; Part III: Clinical Pearls; 12. Shifting Focus from There-And-Then to Here-And-Now; 13. Employing Irony and Paradox for Therapeutic Purposes; 14. Using Countertransference for Therapeutic Purposes; 15. Responding Therapeutically to Patients’ Questions; 16. Securing the Patient’s Attention; 17. Dealing with the Group’s Resistance; 18. Encouraging the use of imagination; 19. Welcoming and Deepening the Negative Side of Ambivalence; 20. Employing Methods of the Existential School of Psychiatry; 21. Miscellaneous; Notes.ReviewsThis book is the wonderfully rich distillation of 48 years of experience treating individuals, couples, and groups in a variety of settings. Dr Gans shows his considerable wisdom and compassion throughout the variety of clinical examples. He covers a wide variety of therapeutic challenges ranging from threatened suicide to seemingly casual remarks. The book offers a compelling combination of thoughtful and sophisticated analysis with eminently clear writing and will help clinicians at all levels to reflect more deeply about each therapy session they conduct. - Eleanor F. Counselman, EdD, ABPP, CGP, DLFAGPA, distinguished fellow and immediate past president, American Group Psychotherapy Association. Dr. Gans writes with clarity and deep appreciation for the psychotherapeutic process. His book illuminates the ways in which effective therapists must use themselves expertly as therapeutic agents, fully integrating their knowledge, understanding, compassion, and humanity. Throughout, he demonstrates how the values of therapist decency and deep care for our patients, interface with our theories and techniques. Gans writes with passion, wisdom, humor, and abiding respect for his patients and their inspiring courage and resilience. -Molyn Leszcz, MD, FRCPC, CGP, DFAGPA, professor of Psychiatry, University of Toronto; president, The American Group Psychotherapy Association. It is a cause for celebration when a highly experienced, trusted clinician and teacher, such as Jerry Gans, delivers a work that is as fresh, original, stimulating, provocative and helpful as this book. It reflects a current wish for more creative and innovative ways of working and offers numerous valuable ideas for interacting with clients in unconventional but impactful ways, in individual, couple and group therapy. Paradox, irony and surprise abound. The author offers not just his own ideas but encourages readers to find their own voice as psychotherapists: free, spontaneous and playful. -Morris Nitsun, training analyst, the Institute of Group Analysis, London, author of The Anti-Group and The Group as an Object of Desire. In his book, Dr. Gans weaves selected clinical pearls. Shame, marital discord, countertransferance and pain - Gans illuminates different aspects related to relationships. Skillfully and lovingly he leads us to the depth of the challenge inherent in the therapeutic encounter. With characteristic eloquence and sincerity, he captures the reader's heart as he shares interventions, explains rationale, and shares powerful insights. -Sharon Sagi Berg, MA, group analyst, psychotherapist, director of Tel Aviv Schema Therapy center. This book is the wonderfully rich distillation of 48 years of experience treating individuals, couples and groups in a variety of settings. Dr Gans shows his considerable wisdom and compassion throughout the variety of clinical examples. He covers a wide variety of therapeutic challenges ranging from threatened suicide to seemingly casual remarks. The book offers a compelling combination of thoughtful and sophisticated analysis with eminently clear writing and will help clinicians at all levels to reflect more deeply about each therapy session they conduct. Eleanor F. Counselman, EdD, ABPP, CGP, DLFAGPA, Distinguished Fellow and immediate past President, the American Group Psychotherapy Association Dr. Gans writes with clarity and deep appreciation for the psychotherapeutic process. His book illuminates the ways in which effective therapists must use themselves expertly as therapeutic agents, fully integrating their knowledge, understanding, compassion and humanity. Throughout, he demonstrates how the values of therapist decency and deep care for our patients, interface with our theories and techniques. Gans writes with passion, wisdom, humor and abiding respect for his patients and their inspiring courage and resilience. Molyn Leszcz, MD, FRCPC, CGP, DFAGPA, Professor of Psychiatry, University of Toronto and President, the American Group Psychotherapy Association It is a cause for celebration when a highly experienced, trusted clinician and teacher, such as Jerry Gans, delivers a work that is as fresh, original, stimulating, provocative and helpful as this book. It reflects a current wish for more creative and innovative ways of working and offers numerous valuable ideas for interacting with clients in unconventional but impactful ways, in individual, couple and group therapy. Paradox, irony and surprise abound. The author offers not just his own ideas but encourages readers to find their own voice as psychotherapists: free, spontaneous and playful. Morris Nitsun, Training Analyst, the Institute of Group Analysis, London, and author of The Anti-Group and The Group as an Object of Desire In his book, Dr. Gans weaves selected clinical pearls. Shame, marital discord, countertransferance and pain-Gans illuminates different aspects related to relationships. Skillfully and lovingly he leads us to the depth of the challenge inherent in the therapeutic encounter. With characteristic eloquence and sincerity, he captures the reader's heart as he shares interventions, explains rationale and shares powerful insights. Sharon Sagi Berg, MA, Group Analyst, Psychotherapist, Director of Tel Aviv Schema Therapy Center Author InformationJerome S. Gans, MD, is a Distinguished Life Fellow of the American Group Psychotherapy Association and the American Psychiatric Association. Now retired, he previously worked in private practice and as Associate Clinical Professor of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School. 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