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Gestalt Therapy: 100 Key Points and Techniques PDF

297 Pages·2010·0.71 MB·English
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Gestalt Therapy ‘I wish this book had been available when I was beginning to learn about therapy. Mann, writing in his conversational style, draws the reader into gentle conversation with a wise elder who makes gestalt therapy accessible without reducing its wisdom.’ – Lynne Jacobs, Ph.D., Co-Founder, Pacific Gestalt Institute, Los Angeles, CA, USA. ‘I recommend this book to all practitioners, students and professionals, as well as to clients wishing to review the journey they have made with their therapist.’ – Terry Browning, Gestalt Counsellor, London & Member of the British Association for Counselling and Psychotherapy. ‘Whether you are familiar with Gestalt Therapy, or just starting out, this book is a must.’ – Dr Sally Denham-Vaughan, UKCP Registered Gestalt Psychotherapist, Trainer, Supervisor and Writer. Gestalt therapy offers a present-focused, relational approach, central to which is the fundamental belief that the client knows the best way of adjusting to their situation. By working to heighten awareness through dialogue and creative experimentation, gestalt therapists create the condi- tions for a client’s personal journey to health. Gestalt Therapy: 100 Key Points & Techniques provides a concise guide to this flexible and far-reaching approach. Topics discussed include: (cid:127) the theoretical assumptions underpinning gestalt therapy (cid:127) gestalt assessment and process diagnosis (cid:127) field theory, phenomenology and dialogue (cid:127) ethics and values (cid:127) evaluation and research. As such this book will be essential reading for gestalt trainees, as well as established therapists, counsellors and psychotherapists wanting to learn more about the gestalt approach. Dave Mann is a UKCP Registered Gestalt Psychotherapist, Supervisor and Trainer affiliated with the Metanoia Institute, Gestalt Psycho- therapy Training Institute and Sherwood Psychotherapy Training Insti- tute. He is also a former Assistant Editor of the British Gestalt Journal. 100 Key Points Series Editor: Windy Dryden ALSO IN THIS SERIES: Cognitive Therapy: 100 Key Points and Techniques Michael Neenan and Windy Dryden Rational Emotive Behaviour Therapy: 100 Key Points and Techniques Windy Dryden and Michael Neenan Family Therapy: 100 Key Points and Techniques Mark Rivett and Eddy Street Transactional Analysis: 100 Key Points and Techniques Mark Widdowson Person-Centred Therapy: 100 Key Points and Techniques Paul Wilkins Gestalt Therapy 100 Key Points and Techniques Dave Mann First published 2010 by Routledge 27 Church Lane, Hove, East Sussex, BN3 2FA Simultaneously published in the USA and Canada by Routledge 270 Madison Avenue, New York, NY 10016 Routledge is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group, an Informa business This edition published in the Taylor & Francis e-Library, 2010. To purchase your own copy of this or any of Taylor & Francis or Routledge’s collection of thousands of eBooks please go to www.eBookstore.tandf.co.uk. © 2010 Dave Mann All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or utilized in any form or by any electronic, mechanical or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publishers. This publication has been produced with paper manufactured to strict environmental standards and with pulp derived from sustainable forests. British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Mann, Dave, 1957– Gestalt therapy : 100 key points & techniques / Dave Mann. – 1st ed. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references. 1. Gestalt therapy. I. Title RC489.G4M355 2010 616.89′143—dc22 2010004663 ISBN 0-203-84591-9 Master e-book ISBN ISBN: 978-0-415-55293-6 (hbk) ISBN: 978-0-415-55294-3 (pbk) Contents Preface ix Acknowledgements xii Part1 MAPS FOR A GESTALT THERAPY JOURNEY: THEORETICAL ASSUMPTIONS UNDERPINNING THE APPROACH 1 1 What is gestalt? 3 2 What is a gestalt? 6 3 Creative adjustment 8 4 Figure and ground 11 5 The here and now 15 6 Self as process: selfing 18 7 The self: concepts of id, ego and personality 20 8 Holism and the orientation towards health 23 9 Gestalt’s relationship to the psychiatric/ biomedical model 26 10 The awareness continuum 29 11 Individualism and field paradigms 32 12 The contact boundary 34 13 The gestalt cycle of experience: early formulations 36 14 The gestalt cycle of experience: later developments 38 15 Resistances, interruptions, moderations to contact 41 16 Introjection 44 v CONTENTS 17 Retroflection 47 18 Projection 50 19 Confluence 53 20 Dimensions of contact 55 21 Unfinished business: the Zeigarnik effect 57 22 Caring and creative indifference 60 23 The Paradoxical Theory of Change 62 24 Autonomous and aesthetic criterion 65 25 Support as ‘that which enables’ 68 26 Contact and resistance 71 27 The five abilities 73 Part2 BEGINNING THE THERAPY JOURNEY: PREPARATIONS AND SETTING OFF 75 28 The therapy setting and context 77 29 Expectations explored, contracts established 79 30 Listening to the client’s story 83 31 Process diagnosis 85 32 Assessment 88 33 The client’s situation 91 34 The client’s contact functions 93 35 The client’s awareness (three zones of awareness) 96 36 Transference, counter-transference, and co-transference possibilities 98 37 How the client ‘bodies forth’ 101 38 Treatment planning: planning the journey 104 Part3 THE THERAPY JOURNEY 107 Part3.1 Exploring the client’s ‘lifespace’, field, or situation 109 39 The lifespace and the field 111 40 Viewing the lifespace through a developmental lens 114 41 The therapy space as present situation 117 42 The need organises the field 119 43 Investigating supports 121 vi CONTENTS 44 Shame and guilt as functions of the field 124 45 A setting for challenge and experiment 127 46 The cultural field 129 47 Creative experimentation 132 48 Use of metaphor and fantasy 135 49 Homework and practising 138 Part3.2 Focus on experience: phenomenology in gestalt therapy 141 50 Sensations and feelings 143 51 Co-creation, temporality, horizontalism 145 52 Intentionality: reaching out and making sense of my world 148 53 Transcendental phenomenology and Husserl 150 54 The discipline of phenomenological reduction 152 55 Existential phenomenology: ‘I am’ 154 56 Intersubjectivity: I am always embedded in my experience 156 57 Attending to the bodily ‘felt sense’ 158 58 Projective identification 160 59 Energy, interests, needs, vitality 163 60 Awareness and diminished awareness 165 61 Patterns of contacting 167 62 Working with dreams 170 Part3.3 Dialogue: emerging through relationship 173 63 Martin Buber: I–Thou and I–It relating 175 64 The between 177 65 Inclusion – a cautionary note regarding empathy 179 66 Presence 181 67 Confirmation 183 68 Commitment to dialogue 185 69 Non-exploitation 187 70 Living the relationship 189 71 Attunement 191 72 The I–Thou attitude, the I–Thou moment 193 73 Self-disclosure 195 74 Language 198 75 Rupture and repair 200 vii CONTENTS Part4 BECOMING: TRANSITIONS ALONG THE JOURNEY 203 76 Aggressing on the environment 205 77 Developmental theory 207 78 The five layer model 210 79 Experimentation 213 80 Developing supports 216 81 Polarities and the top dog/under dog 219 82 ‘Aha’ experience 222 83 Catharsis and release 224 84 Developing awareness of awareness 227 85 Individual and group therapy 229 86 Endings 232 87 On-going self-therapy 235 Part5 ETHICS AND VALUES: KEY SIGNPOSTS FOR ALL JOURNEYS 237 88 Therapeutic boundaries 239 89 Assessing risk 242 90 Attending to the wider field 245 91 Working with difference 248 92 Sexual issues 251 93 Touch in therapy 254 94 Gestalt supervision 257 95 Therapist support 260 Part6 RESEARCH AND EVALUATING THE APPROACH: DESTINATION AND LOOKING BACK 263 96 Gestalt’s spiritual traditions and the transpersonal 265 97 Research and appropriate research paradigms 267 98 Applications of gestalt beyond 1:1 and group therapy 270 99 Looking back and reviewing 272 100 On uncertainty 274 References 276 viii Preface Just as our perception of the world in the present does not spring from a void, neither did gestalt therapy suddenly appear from nowhere. Just as our way of being in the world has a deep multi- layered history that shapes the way in which we relate now, so too was gestalt therapy’s theory and practice shaped by the past multi-layered field prior to its conception. That field contained a rich diversity, creatively synthesized when the founders of the approach first published Gestalt Therapy (Perls, Hefferline and Goodman, 1951 – hereafter referred to as ‘PHG’). The process of creating a truly integrative approach from gestalt’s rich ground is reflected in the personal journeys of its founders – Frederick ‘Fritz’ Perls, Laura Perls and Paul Goodman. They learnt experi- entially in an embodied way and this is mirrored in the founding text and throughout gestalt theory. This rich ground, which we can think of as fertile earth supporting the acorn’s growth into an oak tree, contains amongst others such philosophies as: holism, existentialism, phenomenology, field theory, dialogue and Eastern philosophies such as Zen Buddhism and Taoism. All were part of the pre-existing fertile ground from which gestalt emerged and continues to form the ground upon which it stands today. The way in which these philosophies – which might at this point appear to be a confusing collection of terms – integrate to create gestalt therapy will unfold over the next 100 points. Gestalt therapy is as much an art as it is a science. We need the science of theory, research and technique to support us in our work in the clinical setting where we lead with the art of the approach – intuition, creativity and immediacy. What art and ix

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Gestalt therapy offers a present-focused, relational approach, central to which is the fundamental belief that the client knows the best way of adjusting to their situation. By working to heighten awareness through dialogue and creative experimentation, gestalt therapists create the conditions for a
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Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.