วันเสาร์ที่ 30 พฤศจิกายน พ.ศ. 2556

Sex, Sexuality, and Therapeutic Practice

IP is over the quota
IP is over the quota

Human sexuality is a complex and controversial issue that is often ignored during therapy and clinical training. Yet, it is a salient aspect of the human experience, which requires deep understanding by both client presenting for therapy and therapist facilitating treatment.

Sex, Sexuality, and Therapeutic Practice provides therapists with a critical framework for understanding our personal beliefs regarding sexuality and a guide for addressing sexuality in clinical practice. Written from systemic, cognitive behavioral, and social constructivist approaches, this book offers readers an opportunity to understand the impact of sex and sexuality on the individual as well as on the larger social and cultural contexts in which the person lives.

The book begins with a theoretical discussion regarding various conceptualizations of sex and sexuality. A straightforward description of sex, sexuality, and gender through biological, legal, moral, and spiritual lenses provide readers with a solid knowledge base on which to draw throughout the remaining chapters. The next chapter discusses how therapists may talk about sex with clients during therapy. A discussion regarding health and disability sheds lights on the sexual issues often experienced by this infrequently discussed population. The following chapter considers the experience of sexual and gender minorities during therapy, purporting how training programs may address these issues with aspiring therapists. The penultimate chapter evaluates sexuality across the lifespan; a developmental perspective toward the end of the book provides a context in which the previous chapters may be understood. This is a critical chapter as it describes the unfolding of sexuality across the developmental continuum. The book culminates with a chapter discussing the relationship among culture, sex, and sexuality.

This book is a practical guide for all therapists regardless of theoretical orientation. Practical exercises pepper each chapter to ensure that readers apply the information rather than simply think theoretically about sexuality. Quizzes ask readers to test their assumptions and knowledge about sex, sexuality, gender, and sexual orientation. Complex theories and concepts are boxed and bulleted to facilitate readers' understanding and application of those concepts to clinical care. Diagrams complement complex theories and provide readers with a visual image that illustrates the relationship among theory, concept, and human behavior. This is a definite read for students in graduate training programs and therapists currently in practice.




วันอาทิตย์ที่ 17 พฤศจิกายน พ.ศ. 2556

Book Review - RESOLVE: A New Model Of Therapy by Richard Bolstad

AppId is over the quota
AppId is over the quota

Copyright: 2002

Publisher: Crown House Publishing

Richard Bolstad's book RESOLVE: A New Model of Therapy is excellent on several levels and is highly recommended for anyone interested in advancing the science of Neuro-Linguistic Programming (NLP) or the use of NLP is psychotherapeutic practice. It is extensively referenced, citing research, other NLP developer's ideas, and non-NLP models of change. This is not a book focused on NLP "pyrotechnics" (his term), rather it is integrative and practical. Bolstad makes connections between NLP and other models of psychotherapy. He presents a perspective on the utility of NLP as an explanatory model, as NLP concepts are useful for explaining what therapist from many orientations do. His RESOLVE model is essentially a well articulated synthesis of the use of the NLP in the context of an NLP informed psychotherapy model.

The book provides a historical perspective on NLP and psychotherapy. Bolstad makes the point that NLP's roots and assumptions have connections with other forms of psychotherapy. He devotes a chapter providing a clear, science based, linkage between NLP and how the brain functions. Bolstad discusses several aspects of the model (representational systems, submodalities, emotional states, etc.) and relates these to what has been learned in recent years about neurological functioning. For instance, his discussion of the state-dependent qualities of neural encoding and the implications of this for intervention was fascinating.

Bolstad makes the point that research into NLP is still needed to make it more useful for psychotherapists. He notes that since the earliest NLP writings this need has been recognized, "but it was 20 years before the field of NLP itself began to respond effectively to this need." He goes on to describe several studies published over the last ten years that examined the use of NLP in psychotherapy that found positive results. But research supporting that NLP is successful "in a general sense" has not been enough to draw a great deal of attention to it among psychotherapists. He also notes that few attempts to link NLP techniques and those used in other models of psychotherapy have been made since NLP's inception, with a notable exception being Practical Magic: A Translation of Basic Neuro-Linguistic Programming into Clinical Psychotherapy by Stephen Lankton, published in 1980. Bolstad notes that it has been more than 20 years since Lankton's book and "both NLP and psychotherapy have evolved." Clearly Bolstad feels that more attention to the use of NLP in psychotherapy is warranted. A major accomplishment of this book is to systematically address how NLP fits into psychotherapy as it is practiced today. Among other things, he advocates the incorporation of NLP interventions into the context of the therapist preferred modality to speed the achievement of many specific results.

In my estimation one of the critical points Bolstad makes relates to what type of information constitutes data supporting the validity of NLP as a change technology. While advocating more clinical research, he also contends that "Because much of NLP is a metadiscipline (a way of analyzing and describing other disciplines), research conducted in these other disciplines will often validate NLP hypotheses (page 6)." This seems to be a recurrent theme as he draws parallels between what various therapeutic modalities do, many of which have more direct empirical support (than NLP per se), and the NLP interventions that use similar processes; just described with different terminology.

In Chapter three, Choices for Change, he contends that most therapeutic modalities have some variant of the techniques of NLP interventions. Bolstad divides NLP interventions in 10 general categories: anchoring, installing new strategies, changing sub modalities, trance-work, parts integration, timeline changes, linguistic reframing, changing interpersonal dynamics, changing physiological contexts, and tasking. He gives examples of the use of these intervention types then describes how these processes are evident in other models of psychotherapy. This part of the book was both provocative and integrative and left me wanting more of this useful style of analysis. It highlighted how change work from various modalities can be understood utilizing NLP as an explanatory model. This book illustrates what many therapists who utilize NLP already know, "NLP" is evident in what therapists do whether they call it NLP or not. He provides information to assist therapists trained in other systems to begin to see the "NLP" in what they do.

Chapter four, the last major section of the book, presents the RESOLVE model. The model is an NLP informed framework for the process of psychotherapy. Though the core ideas (such as presuppositions) and skill-sets (such as rapport building skills) are from NLP, it is clear how his model would be useful for therapists even they are not using NLP change processes per se. RESOLVE is an acronym with each letter corresponding to a part of the model. The letters denote the following: "R" denotes the Resourceful state the therapist should generate in themselves in order to most effectively work with the client. "E" denotes Establish rapport. "S" is Specify the outcome, noting that establishing a well formed outcome is a central NLP premise for change work. "O" is Open up [the client's] model of the world. In some ways this is an intervention but it is also a preparatory task, testing their commitment to change. "L" in the RESOLVE model is Leading to desired state. This is a specific change intervention or process designed to achieve the specified outcome. "V" is Verify Change. "E" is Ecological exit. He discusses each component of the model in detail and continued to make connections and place his ideas in the context of the broader field of psychotherapy. The concepts Bolstad chose to explain and explore were also very useful, practical, and compelling.

In the book Bolstad also makes several points differentiating NLP techniques from a broader view of NLP in the context of psychotherapy. For instance, he makes the point that the techniques of NLP are not simply tools to be used; they are tools requiring a context to be most efficacious. Specifically he notes that "For a person new to NLP, it is tempting to think of "leading" as the real NLP change process. In fact, each step of the RESOLVE model is equally significant in the achievement of change. The steps overlap and reinforce each other, forming a system that increases the chances of success dramatically."

Another point he discusses is that a frequent criticism about NLP and psychotherapy is that NLP fails to understand the importance of the therapeutic relationship. Bolstad argues that, on the contrary, NLP psychotherapy has its foundation in a new and innovative framing of this relationship. It is "educative and consultative" rather than therapeutic in the traditional sense. He believes that how the NLP practitioner structures this relationship is one NLP's most original contributions to the therapeutic theory. He notes the importance of this relationship in facilitating the effectiveness of the change processes themselves.

In sum this book is impressive. Bolstad's RESOLVE model is one way to formulate the integration of NLP in psychotherapy and it is very well done. His supporting citations and reasoning are equally valuable. It is essentially structured as a text book, replete with references. He notes in his introductory chapter if you want to know the research behind what you are doing, as opposed to just an introduction to NLP, "this book will give you those extra pieces." The book delivers on this promise. It is packed with useful information, explanation, and ideas to consider. Psychotherapists, NLP practitioners and trainers, and researchers need to read this book.

Rich Liotta, Ph.D., is a Psychologist, Author, Trainer, Consultant, and Photographer. As an Author and Fine Art Nature Photographer he strives to encourage appreciation and stimulate potentials toward growth and change. As a Trainer and Consultant he is passionate about providing tools to help people enrich and transform their lives. He offers workshops and seminars, including sponsored events, on a variety of topics. He is a Certified Trainer of Neuro-Semantics, Neuro-Linguistic Programming, and Ericksonian Hypnosis. He owns Enrichment Associates Consultation & Training (http://enrichmentact.com/) with his spouse Rosemary. His more community oriented blog is http://changepathsblog.com/. He is a believer in human potential, abundance, and beauty in the world!




วันเสาร์ที่ 9 พฤศจิกายน พ.ศ. 2556

Good luck to the front

Shawn Achor created in the book "the best of luck in the interest of the seven principles of positive psychology that fuel success and performance at work." He deals with the original idea and one I've never even heard of information is referred to as post signs of growth. The time interval of the characters in the book is the Madam of a new term and is defined as the positive change that occurs as a result of the Struggle and challenging the very life crises. The benefits are endless and they are your personal strength, the changed priorities and a wider variety of existential and spiritual life of the sense of responsibility.

I love his book, and he is mentioned in the investigation of the principle called "." "Of the group, called" positive outlier "-which is owned by the high level of optimism and success-and to manage the two profit growth despite the trauma, but it is not," he writes.

Shawn challenged his readers to try this short test: positive psychology

Take the paper and the side note window, three of the most growth in your life.

I will not take a long time, which is the use of the course of back to school, very late in life and in a car accident.

Shawn makes a public speaking engagement of the 45 of ries at the global level. The results of this exercise seems to be 90% of the responses were very stressful periods for other information. They will go to College, study abroad, playing in the finals, the killing of one job to find better, and even the birth of a child's depression. The growth of the most moments have experienced as a result of stress and change.

For me, getting laid off, go back to school and the car accident was the characters, but not the end of the story. When I got the idea of this chain of events "what?"

Actually a lot of research, you can imagine the worst traumas experienced after the growth: a heart attack, and the military in the fight against breast cancer. But this can actually change as a catalyst. It actually calls for the many individuals for their priorities in line. We all know people who have done this, and it has been noted that two witnesses, and nothing in their progress. Part of the inspiration for me has been and continues to be. In my case the job loss will lead to a career and a change actually Align my core vision and values. Shawn believes that if you have experienced trauma, find one concrete action-something do not know can be associated with negative emotions, you can reduce the combined.

September 11th 2001, Patti Austin, the singer was the flag was scheduled in the United States, but had to cancel the flight, this trip recording commitments. The flight had crashed with all on Board at a later date, the airport, and terrorists were killing it, it consisted of two targeting White House route. He thought if he had been in the air, then that would have been it, and as someone who is spiritual, he realized, God has been the greater plans her life. He changed his attitude and realized that he was the best, he was now addressing the health issues that had plagued in this most of this life. So, he made it to the loss of the city to bypass surgery here allows you to focus on. This gift provides the brain "to win," the ability to keep moving forward.

To create a positive change in our lives, what makes us by way of derogation from article? We are afraid of change and some have become itsetyytyv?isyyteen. When you make a change to your own is unlikely to be anything you can change the user's access. The key to growth came when I saw what really happened to the optimistic version of the Pessimistic version of these events.

We had been taught in the formula for success at a young age. If we work hard, we have been successful, and if we are successful, then we will be satisfied. If this was true, if we can only find a large possibility that the next promotion that the ten pounds to lose to win, type: item good luck will follow; We all know, this is just not the case. Whether or not the happiness of success? No, that concept is fully to the rear. When we are positive, the brain become more involved, creative, motivated, energetic, flexible, and productive at work and in life. And rigorous research, psychology, neuroscience, management studies and organizations around the world to prove it to the line.

Life is not always pleasant to trauma for us, but it is in the rest of the story from the beginning and does not have to be the end. For those who do not believe that the activities of the will to preserve the remains and that growth is still possible.