این کتاب یک راهنمای عملی و گامبهگام تکنیکهای رواندرمانی تحلیلی به همراه دستورالعملهایی برای گوش دادن، تعمّق و مداخله است. مؤلف با استفاده از زبان ساده و مثالهای دقیق بهطور نظاممندی خواننده را از مرحلۀ ارزیابی تا خاتمۀ درمان هدایت میکند، همچنین در هر فصل تمرینهایی ارائه شده تا آنچه را که در هر بخش میآموزید، به طور عملی به کار ببندید. این کتاب به شرح موارد زیر میپردازد: چگونگی ارزیابی بیماران رواندرمانی تحلیلی، شامل ارزیابی کارکرد ایگو و دفاعها موارد اساسی برای شروع درمان، شامل پروراندن اتحاد درمانی، چارچوبگذاری و هدفگذاری شیوهای نظاممند برای گوش دادن به بیماران، تأمل در مورد آنچه شنیدهایم و تصمیمگیری در مورد اینکه چه بگوییم و چگونه آن را بیان کنیم چگونگی بهکارگیری این تکنیکها برای پرداختن به مشکلات عزتنفس، رابطه با دیگران، روشهای منحصربهفرد سازگاری و دیگر کارکردهای ایگو این کتاب راهنمای ارزشمندی برای رزیدنتهای روانپزشکی، دانشجویان روانشناسی و مددکاران اجتماعی است و همچنین شیوۀ تفکر جدیدی در مورد رواندرمانی تحلیلی به متخصصان بالینی ارایه میکند. رویکرد عملی و تمرینهای راهنمایی شده، این کتاب را به ابزاری استثنایی برای آموزشدهندگان رواندرمانی به همه سطوح دانشپژوهان مبدل کرده است. نویسندۀ اصلی این کتاب خانم دبورا کابانیس، استاد روانپزشکی دانشکدۀ پزشکان و جراحان دانشگاه کلمبیا و رئیس آموزش رواندرمانی در بخش روانپزشکی این دانشگاه است. او هم اکنون در شهر نیویورک به کار آموزش، نویسندگی و رواندرمانی و روانکاوی بیماران مشغول است.
Back in January, I attended a seminar-workshop on Psychodynamic Psychotherapy at the Philippine International Convention Center, which was organized by a group of psychiatrists from University of the Philippines - Philippine General Hospital. The seminar speakers utilized this book on their lectures, and what got me interested, is the book provided a structured approach to therapy which resembles the Cognitive-Behavioral approach. By applying psychoanalytic approaches, therapy can become a solution-focused process, though initially, it can be intimidating for the client, because defenses will be encountered and addressed. This book is very practical, useful, and gives structure and insight for the psychotherapy oriented towards the psychodynamic or psychoanalytic orientation.
This is a very useful and insightful book. Very practical manual for practitioner.
To be honest, i felt a little sad as i finish the last chapter. It's as if i have to say goodbye to a wise teacher. (I must do therapy on my own now :)
کتابی مناسب برای آشنایی با رواندرمانی تحلیلی. مزیت بزرگ کتاب در مثالهای متعدد آن است. در نیمهی دوم کتاب جزئیات مهمتری دربارهی جزئیات جلسه درمان مطرح میشود که غیر درمانگران نیز میتوانند از آن سود برند.
In my efforts to understand the basics of psychoanalytic psychotherapy, I found the following introductory books especially helpful.
Nancy McWilliams’ Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy describes the psychoanalytic attitude. Every analyst is unique, but there are certain sensibilities that bind analysts, and McWilliams beautifully articulates them in what feels like a love letter to the field. Those new to analysis might initially feel frustrated that she spends little time discussing techniques, but that’s not accidental. Analysis at its core is not a set of techniques but a specific worldview and way of being.
Deborah Luepnitz’s Schopenhauer's Porcupines is a masterfully written collection of short stories. You can’t learn something as complex as psychoanalytic therapy by simply memorizing the techniques. You also need to experience the process. This is why the analytic tradition requires analysts to be analyzed themselves. Reading Luepnitz’s book is obviously not the same thing as undergoing an analysis, but it’s a literary attempt to help us to experience what the process is like. These stories are engaging, funny, heartbreaking, illuminating, frustrating, etc., kind of like analysis.
I especially liked the following two books on technique. Glen Gabbard’s Long-Term Psychodynamic Psychotherapy succinctly describes the essentials of psychoanalytic theory and the primary techniques. An excellent jumping-off place. Deborah Cabaniss’ Psychodynamic Psychotherapy explains the major techniques in more detail. Cabaniss has the gift of making the complex simple and breaks the analytic process down to memorizable parts, writing about the three choosing principles, the three readiness principles, the three organizing sources, and so on. The more experienced therapist might find these constructions somewhat hokey, but I found them incredibly helpful for learning.
I also benefited tremendously from Leslie Greenberg’s Emotion-Focused Therapy. This is not technically a psychoanalytic text, but as someone with a CBT background wanting to learn analysis, I desperately needed to better understand emotions and how to help clients talk about them. Greenberg, the founder of emotion-focused therapy, writes clearly, as his brain seems to think in outlines, and I found him to be an excellent guide.
like what the author wrote in the end of the book “people search for meaning since the beginning,psychodynamic psychotherapy provides meaning to people within themselves.
meaning that originates from our childhood, meaning that related to other materials, meaning that lead us to feel comfortable.
two month of reading , I was quiet enjoying reading this boook. also it’s my first psychodynamic psychotherapy book. get really into this area now. it’s very helpful for a starter psychotherapists who learn and conduct in their sessions. I highly recommended it to everyone who is going to start it and even for people who don’t plan to be a therapist but interested in how their conscious and unconscious works could read it for getting to know themselves better. also the reference could enhance your learning more, too many but good to check when having time. I will read again and make notes when I conduct in my sessions.
This manual is very clear and a good introduction to how to bring what we learn in school into our professions. As a disclaimer, I am a student currently so I cannot speak from a place of much experience.
I found this to be a solid introductory textbook. I appreciated its thorough discussion of every aspect of the patient that a therapist should pay attention to (e.g. Affect, dreams, various ego functions), though I also found that this made some of the book seem repetitive. It's truly a basic text, and functions well in that capacity, but there's not a whole lot of depth. I did really appreciate the multitude of examples, and the exercises to practice techniques.
This is a really good manual and gave me amazing insight into Pyschodynamic Psychotherapy. I loved the fact that is was straight to the point and didnt bore me with long explainations or discussions that just seem to go on forever. The author wanted to get the points across, not just hear herself speak (or write).