Schema therapy with couples : a practitioner's guide to healing relationships /

"Schema Therapy for Couples represents the first practitioner guide to detail effective Schema Therapy techniques in couple and relationship therapy. Shows how the distinctive features of ST make it ideal for addressing the cognitive and emotion-focused problems typical in couple relationships...

Πλήρης περιγραφή

Λεπτομέρειες βιβλιογραφικής εγγραφής
Κύριος συγγραφέας: Simeone-DiFrancesco, Chiara
Άλλοι συγγραφείς: Roediger, Eckhard, Stevens, Bruce, 1950-
Μορφή: Ηλ. βιβλίο
Γλώσσα:English
Έκδοση: Chichester, West Sussex ; Malden, MA : Wiley-Blackwell, 2015.
Θέματα:
Διαθέσιμο Online:Full Text via HEAL-Link
Πίνακας περιεχομένων:
  • Title page; Table of Contents; List of Figures and Tables; Figures; Tables; About the Authors; Preface; From all of us; From Chiara Simeone-DiFrancesco, PhD; From Eckhard Roediger, MD; From Bruce A. Stevens, PhD; Acknowledgments; Abbreviations; Introduction; About the Companion Website; 1 What Schema Therapy Offers; 1.1 What is Hidden, What is Seen; 1.2 Listening to the Evidence; 1.3 Beyond Just Cognitive Therapy; 1.4 Jeff Young and the Development of Schema Therapy; 1.5 The Schema Model; 1.6 Introducing the Mode Model; 1.7 The Challenge of Working with Couples
  • 1.8 Limited Professional Literature1.9 Brief Outline of the Stages of Schema Therapy for Couples; Summary; 2 The Initial Contract and First Interview; 2.1 The Initial Interview; 2.2 Issues that Present; 2.3 Expectations; 2.4 "Contracting" for Therapy; 2.5 Safety First; 2.6 Additional Concerns; 2.7 Beginning with a Crisis Intervention; 2.8 Ending the First Session; 2.9 Starting with One Partner First; 2.10 How Many Therapists?; 2.11 With the Individual or Couple?; Summary; 3 Relationship Assessment; 3.1 A Questionnaire; 3.2 The Genogram; 3.3 Why do a Genogram?
  • 3.4 Autobiography of Relationships3.5 Schema Identification; 3.6 Core and Compensatory Schemas; 3.7 Schema Coping Styles; 3.8 Schema Chemistry in Therapy; Summary; 4 Understanding the Origins of Relational Styles; 4.1 Healthy and Unhealthy Co-functioning; 4.2 A Dark Legacy; 4.3 Unconditional Love?; 4.4 Dealing with the Past; 4.5 A Note on Attraction; 4.6 Brain "Chemistry" linked to Schemas; 4.7 An Interlocking Schema Perspective; 4.8 Drawing the Threads Together in Case Formulation; 4.9 But why Theory?; Summary; 5 Foundations for Evidence-Based Practice in Couple Therapy
  • 5.1 Case Study: Bill and Betty5.2 Repair Attempts; 5.3 Accessing the Full Spectrum of Basic Emotions; 5.4 A Dead End?; 5.5 Additional Thoughts; Summary; 6 Schemas and Modes; 6.1 From Schemas to Modes; 6.2 The Mode Model in Detail; 6.3 Additional Modes; 6.4 The Infant Mode Concept; 6.5 Some Additional Aspects Dealing with Child Modes; 6.6 Mode Cycles in Couples; Summary; 7 Approaching Schema Therapy for Couples; 7.1 Practical Tips for Making Therapy a Safe Place for the Couple; 7.2 Balanced Attention Instead of Staying Neutral; 7.3 Thinking about Language, Tonal Regulation and the Use of Words
  • 7.4 Using Self-Disclosure and Healthy Family Models, Heroes, Spirituality, and Religion7.5 Balancing the Level of Activation; 7.6 Dealing with Volatile Couples; 7.7 Working with Passive Individuals; 7.8 Enhancing Communication Skills; 7.9 What Schema Therapy brings to the Communication Process; Summary; 8 Mode Mapping and Mode Cycle Clash-cards; 8.1 Introducing the Dimensional and Dynamic Mode Model; 8.2 Mode Maps; 8.3 Using Mode Cycle Clash-cards; 8.4 Extended Case Example; 8.5 Advantages of Mode Maps; 8.6 Tim and Carol: Another Extended Example; 8.7 Progress Mapped Out; 8.8 A Road Map