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Overview
Filled with enlightening first-person accounts, Talking About Therapy tells us why patients sought therapy, what they think of the therapists to whom they entrusted their well-being, and whether the treatment was worth the struggle, the emotional pain, and the money. Through stories that are touching, sometimes shocking, and always candid, readers will learn how patients responded to a wide range of treatment, including: Freudian and neo-Freudian psychoanalysis, Jungian analytic psychology, group psychotherapy, Reichian therapy, and newer alternative approaches. Whether portraying their therapeutic experience as a scam or a liberation, or something in-between, the feelings shared by these forthright individuals will be fascinating to patients, potential patients, their families, and mental health professionals.
Talking About Therapy will also help therapists and their clients see beyond the individual context of treatment. The authors have organized their work by the decade in which each interview subject entered treatment (1940s to the present day), and this narrative framework reveals much about the evolution of the mental helth field in the last half century. From the heyday of Freudian psychoanalysis, through the tumult of the Vietnam War, feminism and gay activism, to our current era of street drugs, and the prevalence of anti-depressants, the impact of therapy on the lives of the individuals in this amazing book is conveyed directly and dramatically, with unflinching honesty.
Synopsis
This fascinating book of touching, sometimes shocking, and always candid first-person account reveals: why former patients sought psychotherapy, what they think about the therapists to whom they entrusted their well-being, and whether the treatment option they chose was worth the emotional pain and the money.
Booknews
Contains 52 narratives by individuals who have been in psychotherapy at some period in their lives. Respondents of all ages describe what therapy did or did not do for them, providing the reader with an overall picture of how therapy can help or not help various people and situations and how it has changed and developed over the past six decades. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or.
Editorials
From the Publisher
"This is a book that will be interesting and useful to both a lay and professional readership. Those persons who are considering entering therapy will find encouragement and guidance from the experiences their predecessors describe in this book. Therapists, on the other hand, will garner from these narratives valuable information about those qualities and abilities that psychotherapy patients most cherish in their therapists."
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American Journal of Psychotherpay
"From the heyday of Freudian psychoanalysis, through the tumult of the Vietnam War, feminism and gay activism, to our current era of street drugs, and the prevelence of anti-depressants, the impact of therapy on the lives of the individuals in this book is conveyed directly and dramatically, with unflinching honesty."
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Adolescence