To Disclose or Not to Disclose, That is the Question! Self-Revelation's Impact on the Disclosing Therapist
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- FormatePub
- ISBN978-1-0369-0663-4
- EAN9781036906634
- Date de parution19/12/2024
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurSeuil (réédition numérique Fen
Résumé
Therapist self-disclosure has long been a controversial subject in clinical practice and while studies have investigated its effects on client healing, its impact on the disclosing therapist has remained a neglected area. In this groundbreaking and illuminating book, Counselling Psychologist and Integrative Psychotherapist, Dr Genevieve Marais focuses on this under-explored topic. Dr Marais has a keen interest in the mind-body connection and, considering that two subjectivities are present in the therapeutic space, she holds a curiosity about the therapeutic dyad with a specific focus on what happens in 'the in-between'.
In the book, she provides an historical overview of therapist self-disclosure - how attitudes within the psychology and psychotherapy community have evolved from Freud's 'blank-screen' approach of neutrality to the acknowledgement of the 'two-way interpersonal process'. With courageous contributions from fellow psychotherapists, she goes on to investigate the complexity of the subject, the risks self-disclosure poses, the beneficial outcomes it can produce, and how boundaries can help safeguard therapists protect the vulnerabilities the phenomenon can expose.
Dr Marais hopes her book will encourage and help psychotherapy trainees and post-qualified therapists to talk about and judiciously reflect on the impact that self-revelation has on the disclosing therapist in the hope that by embracing our humanness, it will lead to greater authenticity and better practices to support good psychological outcomes while holding a space for the vulnerability of the disclosing therapist.
TABLE OF CONTENTS1. An Introduction to Self-Disclosure2. Self-disclosure across Theoretical Orientations - a Brief Historical Overview3. The Myth of Neutrality within Self-Disclosure and the Essence of Human Subjectivity 4. The Tensions between the Personal and Professional Roles of the Therapist 5. Empirical insights and psychological implications6. The Therapist's Use of Self and The Wounded Healer 7.
Wrestling with the Ambiguity and Complexity of Self-Disclosure 8. Types of self-disclosure 9. Risks involved in therapist self-disclosure 10. Professional Risks 11. The Emotional and Psychological Impact 12. Influences of power, motivation, and the shadow 13. Vulnerability and Humanity as Integral to the Self of the Therapist and the Wounded Healer14. Conclusion
In the book, she provides an historical overview of therapist self-disclosure - how attitudes within the psychology and psychotherapy community have evolved from Freud's 'blank-screen' approach of neutrality to the acknowledgement of the 'two-way interpersonal process'. With courageous contributions from fellow psychotherapists, she goes on to investigate the complexity of the subject, the risks self-disclosure poses, the beneficial outcomes it can produce, and how boundaries can help safeguard therapists protect the vulnerabilities the phenomenon can expose.
Dr Marais hopes her book will encourage and help psychotherapy trainees and post-qualified therapists to talk about and judiciously reflect on the impact that self-revelation has on the disclosing therapist in the hope that by embracing our humanness, it will lead to greater authenticity and better practices to support good psychological outcomes while holding a space for the vulnerability of the disclosing therapist.
TABLE OF CONTENTS1. An Introduction to Self-Disclosure2. Self-disclosure across Theoretical Orientations - a Brief Historical Overview3. The Myth of Neutrality within Self-Disclosure and the Essence of Human Subjectivity 4. The Tensions between the Personal and Professional Roles of the Therapist 5. Empirical insights and psychological implications6. The Therapist's Use of Self and The Wounded Healer 7.
Wrestling with the Ambiguity and Complexity of Self-Disclosure 8. Types of self-disclosure 9. Risks involved in therapist self-disclosure 10. Professional Risks 11. The Emotional and Psychological Impact 12. Influences of power, motivation, and the shadow 13. Vulnerability and Humanity as Integral to the Self of the Therapist and the Wounded Healer14. Conclusion
Therapist self-disclosure has long been a controversial subject in clinical practice and while studies have investigated its effects on client healing, its impact on the disclosing therapist has remained a neglected area. In this groundbreaking and illuminating book, Counselling Psychologist and Integrative Psychotherapist, Dr Genevieve Marais focuses on this under-explored topic. Dr Marais has a keen interest in the mind-body connection and, considering that two subjectivities are present in the therapeutic space, she holds a curiosity about the therapeutic dyad with a specific focus on what happens in 'the in-between'.
In the book, she provides an historical overview of therapist self-disclosure - how attitudes within the psychology and psychotherapy community have evolved from Freud's 'blank-screen' approach of neutrality to the acknowledgement of the 'two-way interpersonal process'. With courageous contributions from fellow psychotherapists, she goes on to investigate the complexity of the subject, the risks self-disclosure poses, the beneficial outcomes it can produce, and how boundaries can help safeguard therapists protect the vulnerabilities the phenomenon can expose.
Dr Marais hopes her book will encourage and help psychotherapy trainees and post-qualified therapists to talk about and judiciously reflect on the impact that self-revelation has on the disclosing therapist in the hope that by embracing our humanness, it will lead to greater authenticity and better practices to support good psychological outcomes while holding a space for the vulnerability of the disclosing therapist.
TABLE OF CONTENTS1. An Introduction to Self-Disclosure2. Self-disclosure across Theoretical Orientations - a Brief Historical Overview3. The Myth of Neutrality within Self-Disclosure and the Essence of Human Subjectivity 4. The Tensions between the Personal and Professional Roles of the Therapist 5. Empirical insights and psychological implications6. The Therapist's Use of Self and The Wounded Healer 7.
Wrestling with the Ambiguity and Complexity of Self-Disclosure 8. Types of self-disclosure 9. Risks involved in therapist self-disclosure 10. Professional Risks 11. The Emotional and Psychological Impact 12. Influences of power, motivation, and the shadow 13. Vulnerability and Humanity as Integral to the Self of the Therapist and the Wounded Healer14. Conclusion
In the book, she provides an historical overview of therapist self-disclosure - how attitudes within the psychology and psychotherapy community have evolved from Freud's 'blank-screen' approach of neutrality to the acknowledgement of the 'two-way interpersonal process'. With courageous contributions from fellow psychotherapists, she goes on to investigate the complexity of the subject, the risks self-disclosure poses, the beneficial outcomes it can produce, and how boundaries can help safeguard therapists protect the vulnerabilities the phenomenon can expose.
Dr Marais hopes her book will encourage and help psychotherapy trainees and post-qualified therapists to talk about and judiciously reflect on the impact that self-revelation has on the disclosing therapist in the hope that by embracing our humanness, it will lead to greater authenticity and better practices to support good psychological outcomes while holding a space for the vulnerability of the disclosing therapist.
TABLE OF CONTENTS1. An Introduction to Self-Disclosure2. Self-disclosure across Theoretical Orientations - a Brief Historical Overview3. The Myth of Neutrality within Self-Disclosure and the Essence of Human Subjectivity 4. The Tensions between the Personal and Professional Roles of the Therapist 5. Empirical insights and psychological implications6. The Therapist's Use of Self and The Wounded Healer 7.
Wrestling with the Ambiguity and Complexity of Self-Disclosure 8. Types of self-disclosure 9. Risks involved in therapist self-disclosure 10. Professional Risks 11. The Emotional and Psychological Impact 12. Influences of power, motivation, and the shadow 13. Vulnerability and Humanity as Integral to the Self of the Therapist and the Wounded Healer14. Conclusion