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OverviewSelf-Supervision: Psychodynamic Strategies invites therapists to construct ways to achieve a more extensive and effective self-awareness and develop a 'self-supervisory self.' Appealing to teachers, students, and supervisors, Dr. Marc Lubin and Dr. Jed Yalof outline a process of teaching, learning, and strengthening a self-supervisory attitude. This book highlights how self-supervision can be taught and how its practice can deepen the treatment experience as the therapist reflects and takes ""second-and-third-looks"" through repeated dives into the clinical material, where each successive look has the promise of insight and understanding. The processing moves from the surface of conscious thought to the integration of less conscious experiences that tie back to the clinical exchange but with a different perspective, enhanced by listening to the self-supervisory self. The authors recommend strategies through case illustrations that provide therapists with a roadmap for processing clinical exchanges while working in a diverse set of psychotherapy training contexts. This approach informs the patient-therapist-supervisor experience by describing methods for achieving a deeper and more informed self-supervisory experience. How, for example, will a therapist know that they achieved an alternative state of understanding of a complex clinical interaction when self-supervising in response to the manifest clinical material? How does the therapist articulate and describe how this shift occurred? What were the steps that led to a new perspective where a key word in a transcript review or process note triggered a series of seemingly random associations, which, when tracked in a stepwise sequence of 'a, then b, then c,' led to an elaborated and coherent narrative of what felt initially like a moment of impasse? How did the coalescence of this material illuminate not only the patient's underlying dynamics but also served to clarify aspects of the supervisory relationship that were not obvious prior to the self-supervisory activity? These are the type of questions addressed in this creative, teachable, and psychodynamically informed approach to self-supervision. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Marc Lubin , Jed YalofPublisher: Rowman & Littlefield Imprint: Rowman & Littlefield Dimensions: Width: 15.40cm , Height: 1.00cm , Length: 22.30cm Weight: 0.218kg ISBN: 9781538156230ISBN 10: 1538156237 Pages: 122 Publication Date: 24 May 2023 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsReviewsA wonderfully informed, immensely informative, robustly innovative, grandly generative, and exquisitely elaborated vision of psychodynamic/psychoanalytic self-supervision. An absolute must-read for reflective practitioners, trainers, and supervisors alike!--C. Edward Watkins, Jr., University of North Texas Self-supervision is the most common form of therapy supervision and the authors underscore its importance. The authors review and discuss every aspect of this process with a focus on helping clinicians who have little to no access to quality external supervision, but also show how self-supervision is a central aspect of continued growth as a therapist regardless of the circumstances. This is an original work and will make a significant contribution to the psychotherapy literature in general and to the psychodynamic literature specifically. It will be relevant to practicing therapists and teachers and students of psychotherapy.--William H. Gottdiener, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, The City University of New York Self-supervision is the most common form of therapy supervision and the authors underscore its importance. The authors review and discuss every aspect of this process with a focus on helping clinicians who have little to no access to quality external supervision, but also show how self-supervision is a central aspect of continued growth as a therapist regardless of the circumstances. This is an original work and will make a significant contribution to the psychotherapy literature in general and to the psychodynamic literature specifically. It will be relevant to practicing therapists and teachers and students of psychotherapy.--William H. Gottdiener, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, The City University of New York Effective psychotherapy rests upon competent self-supervision. In Self-Supervision: Psychodynamic Strategies, Lubin and Yalof train therapists from the novice to the advanced to rigorously examine themselves and their own work to realize the full potential of psychodynamic treatment. Rich in clinical examples, this text is the most authoritative and comprehensive book on this topic to date.--Virginia M. Brabender, Institute for Graduate Clinical Psychology, Widener University Self-supervision is the most common form of therapy supervision and the authors underscore its importance. The authors review and discuss every aspect of this process with a focus on helping clinicians who have little to no access to quality external supervision, but also show how self-supervision is a central aspect of continued growth as a therapist regardless of the circumstances. This is an original work and will make a significant contribution to the psychotherapy literature in general and to the psychodynamic literature specifically. It is relevant to practicing therapists and teachers and students of psychotherapy.--William H. Gottdiener, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, The City University of New York A wonderfully informed, immensely informative, robustly innovative, grandly generative, and exquisitely elaborated vision of psychodynamic/psychoanalytic self-supervision. An absolute must-read for reflective practitioners, trainers, and supervisors alike!--C. Edward Watkins, Jr., University of North Texas A wonderfully informed, immensely informative, robustly innovative, grandly generative, and exquisitely elaborated vision of psychodynamic/psychoanalytic self-supervision. An absolute must-read for reflective practitioners, trainers, and supervisors alike! --C. Edward Watkins, Jr., University of North Texas Effective psychotherapy rests upon competent self-supervision. In Self-Supervision: Psychodynamic Strategies, Lubin and Yalof train therapists from the novice to the advanced to rigorously examine themselves and their own work to realize the full potential of psychodynamic treatment. Rich in clinical examples, this text is the most authoritative and comprehensive book on this topic to date. --Virginia M. Brabender, Institute for Graduate Clinical Psychology, Widener University Self-supervision is the most common form of therapy supervision and the authors underscore its importance. The authors review and discuss every aspect of this process with a focus on helping clinicians who have little to no access to quality external supervision, but also show how self-supervision is a central aspect of continued growth as a therapist regardless of the circumstances. This is an original work and will make a significant contribution to the psychotherapy literature in general and to the psychodynamic literature specifically. It is relevant to practicing therapists and teachers and students of psychotherapy. --William H. Gottdiener, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, The City University of New York Self-Supervision: Psychodynamic Strategies is a unique book that addresses something we rarely focus on in our field, and that is our reliance on ourselves when doing clinical work. Therapists are always carrying different internal representations of prior therapists, supervisors, professors, and/or attachment figures in our minds when we are interacting with patients. This book provides guidance on how to harness those internal voices by addressing post-session reflection, the use of mindfulness, exploring resistance, and identifying defenses as we explore clinical work independently. The authors do a wonderful job providing clinical examples, integrating diversity into their work, and even demonstrating how to assess self-supervision outcomes. This book is a great resource for clinicians practicing on their own as well as graduate trainees who are learning therapy for the first time. --Cheri Marmarosh, PhD, CGT, ABPP, George Washington University; licensed psychologist, Divine Mercy University; fellow of AGPA, Division 29 (Psychotherapy), and Division 49 (Group), APA; and editor, International Journal of Group Psychotherapy With decades of experience as teachers, supervisors, and clinicians, Drs. Yalof and Lubin have written a superb book that turbo-charges the literature on self-supervision. Students, seasoned supervisors, and therapists alike will treasure this highly accessible and exceedingly practical guide to developing, nurturing, and listening to our internal self-supervisor. The writing style and format are clear and concise; the authors make complex concepts lucid, with a minimum of jargon; and most importantly, Yalof and Lubin offer readers a compact instructional handbook on how to teach and develop self-reflective and self-monitoring skills applicable in a broad range of settings and practices. A rare gem! --James Kleiger, PsyD, ABPP, ABAP, independent practice, Bethesda, MD A wonderfully informed, immensely informative, robustly innovative, grandly generative, and exquisitely elaborated vision of psychodynamic/psychoanalytic self-supervision. An absolute must-read for reflective practitioners, trainers, and supervisors alike! Effective psychotherapy rests upon competent self-supervision. In Self-Supervision: Psychodynamic Strategies, Lubin and Yalof train therapists from the novice to the advanced to rigorously examine themselves and their own work to realize the full potential of psychodynamic treatment. Rich in clinical examples, this text is the most authoritative and comprehensive book on this topic to date. Self-supervision is the most common form of therapy supervision and the authors underscore its importance. The authors review and discuss every aspect of this process with a focus on helping clinicians who have little to no access to quality external supervision, but also show how self-supervision is a central aspect of continued growth as a therapist regardless of the circumstances. This is an original work and will make a significant contribution to the psychotherapy literature in general and to the psychodynamic literature specifically. It is relevant to practicing therapists and teachers and students of psychotherapy. Self-Supervision: Psychodynamic Strategies is a unique book that addresses something we rarely focus on in our field, and that is our reliance on ourselves when doing clinical work. Therapists are always carrying different internal representations of prior therapists, supervisors, professors, and/or attachment figures in our minds when we are interacting with patients. This book provides guidance on how to harness those internal voices by addressing post-session reflection, the use of mindfulness, exploring resistance, and identifying defenses as we explore clinical work independently. The authors do a wonderful job providing clinical examples, integrating diversity into their work, and even demonstrating how to assess self-supervision outcomes. This book is a great resource for clinicians practicing on their own as well as graduate trainees who are learning therapy for the first time. With decades of experience as teachers, supervisors, and clinicians, Drs. Yalof and Lubin have written a superb book that turbo-charges the literature on self-supervision. Students, seasoned supervisors, and therapists alike will treasure this highly accessible and exceedingly practical guide to developing, nurturing, and listening to our internal self-supervisor. The writing style and format are clear and concise; the authors make complex concepts lucid, with a minimum of jargon; and most importantly, Yalof and Lubin offer readers a compact instructional handbook on how to teach and develop self-reflective and self-monitoring skills applicable in a broad range of settings and practices. A rare gem! Author InformationMarc Lubin, PhD, is full professor at the Chicago School of Professional Psychology, Irvine, California, with over fifty years of teaching and supervising psychotherapists as well as doctoral students. Previously, Dr. Lubin served as the first faculty chair and campus dean at the Illinois School of Professional Psychology in Chicago, where he taught psychoanalytic psychotherapy to clinical psychology doctoral students while maintaining a private practice in individual psychotherapy and consultation. Throughout his training and practice, Dr. Lubin has benefited from consistent individual and group consultation from an array of respected psychoanalysts, including Howard Bacal, MD, Bruno Bettelheim, PhD, Erik Erikson, Merton Gill, MD, and Robert Langs, MD, and Arnold Goldberg, MD, as well as many senior analytically oriented supervisors at the Austen Riggs Center. Additionally, Dr. Lubin has actively engage in self supervision throughout his clinical career working with a wide range of individual patients. This book captures several decades of Dr. Lubin’s own experience of fostering therapists’ self awareness in therapeutic work as well as his own processes of self supervision through teaching, practice, training and supervising. Jed Yalof, PhD, is a training and supervising and training analyst at the Psychoanalytic Center of Philadelphia, and Professor Emeritus at Immaculata University, where he served as chair of the Department of Psychology and Counseling and director of the PsyD Program in Clinical Psychology for thirty years. Prior to that, he was the director of college counseling and testing services. He is in private practice in Haverford, Pennsylvania, and specializes in psychotherapy, psychoanalysis, personality testing, educational evaluations, and neuropsychological assessment. Dr. Yalof also serves as the staff neuropsychologist at the Austen Riggs Center in Stockbridge, Massachusetts. Dr. Yalof authored Training and Teaching the Mental Health Professional; co-authored, with Drs. David Downing and Marc Lubin, Teaching, Training, and Administration in Graduate Psychology Programs: A Psychoanalytic Perspective; and co-edited, with Dr. Anthony Dr. Bram of Psychoanalytic Assessment, Applications for Different Settings. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |