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Substance Use & Abuse, Treatment - General & Miscellaneous - Psychology, Psychotherapy, Native American Folklore & Mythology - General & Miscellaneous, Drugs & Controlled Substances - Social Aspects, Native North American Peoples - Folklore
Coyote Speaks by Jacques Rutzky β€” book cover

Coyote Speaks

by Jacques Rutzky
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Overview

Coyote Speaks describes the strengths, the strategies, and the resilience a therapist needs to work successfully with alcoholics and addicts. It reports what a therapist sees, hears, smells, and feels in the midst of treating those yet to achieve sobriety, those recently sober, and those with years of recovery behind them. In the Navajo cosmology, those possessed by Coyote are neither inherently evil nor morally lacking, but like alcoholics and addicts they suffer from a malady of the soul as much as the body. The provocative humor of Coyote stories illustrates the mercurial and quixotic nature of the alcoholic and addict in treatment, while evocative case histories from the author's private practice reveal the humanity behind a disease that binds two individuals in a struggle toward honesty, humility, and sobriety. Coyote Speaks explores the darkness of alcohol and drug addiction, the humility we accept when we acknowledge our limitations as therapists, and the redemption we witness as we attend to a disease that is at best treatable. It is about caring enough, sometimes too much, and about knowing when to let go. It is about the importance of examining the trickster in each of us, and it is about listening, when Coyote speaks.

Synopsis

Coyote Speaks describes the strengths, the strategies, and the resilience a therapist needs to work successfully with alcoholics and addicts. It reports what a therapist sees, hears, smells, and feels in the midst of treating those yet to achieve sobriety, those recently sober, and those with years of recovery behind them. In the Navajo cosmology, those possessed by Coyote are neither inherently evil nor morally lacking, but like alcoholics and addicts they suffer from a malady of the soul as much as the body. The provocative humor of Coyote stories illustrates the mercurial and quixotic nature of the alcoholic and addict in treatment, while evocative case histories from the author's private practice reveal the humanity behind a disease that binds two individuals in a struggle toward honesty, humility, and sobriety. Coyote Speaks explores the darkness of alcohol and drug addiction, the humility we accept when we acknowledge our limitations as therapists, and the redemption we witness as we attend to a disease that is at best treatable. It is about caring enough, sometimes too much, and about knowing when to let go. It is about the importance of examining the trickster in each of us, and it is about listening, when Coyote speaks.

About the Author, Jacques Rutzky

Jacques Rutzky, M.A., M.F.C.C., is a consultant to recovery programs, psychotherapists, and attorneys, providing training, diagnostic evaluations, and treatment recommendations for chemically dependent individuals and their families. Mr. Rutzky maintains a private practice in Woodside, CA, where he treats adults and couples recovering from early childhood traumas, incest, addiction, and physical and emotional abuse; he specializes in long-term analytical psychotherapy.

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Editorials

Franz Mechsner

Rutzky weaves the wisdom of Native American Coyote stories, a wealth of scientific evidence, and his own sensitive intuition as an expert therapist into a new and convincing paradigm for understanding alcoholics and addicts. This wonderful and moving book will surprise many professionals who treat them.

Robert Matano

Jacques Rutzky makes a real contribution to the field by illustrating the central importance of the trickster archetype in the psyche of the alcoholic and addict. This is an extremely valuable resource for all mental health professionals who treat themβ€”an unusual and moving work.

Thomas Kirsch

This book presents the problem of alcoholism and addictions from the point of view of the trickster as symbolized in the Native American myths of Coyote. The author demonstrates how various coyote stories dovetail with personal clinical histories, and also provides an overview of how psychotherapy works and does not work with alcoholics in a very human and understandable way.

Book Details

Published
July 1, 1998
Publisher
Aronson, Jason Inc.
Pages
236
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780765701411

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