A Gestalt Institute of Cleveland Publication On Intimate Ground On Intimate Ground A Gestalt Approach to Working with Couples Gordon Wheeler Stephanie Backman Editors Jossey-Bass Publishers • San Francisco Copyright© 1994 by Jossey-Bass Inc., Publishers, 350 Sansome Street, San Francisco, California 94104. Copyright under International, Pan American, and Universal Copyright Conventions. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form-except for brief quotation (not to exceed 1,000 words) in a review or professional work-without permission in writing from the publishers. Chapter Five is adapted from P. Papernow, "La therapie gestaltiste avec des families reconstitutees," which is an article that appeared in the journal Gestalt ("Families en Gestalt-therapie," issue no. 5, 1993), a publication of the Societe Fran~aise de Gestalt. ~ A Gestalt Institute of Cleveland publication Substantial discounts on bulk quantities ofjossey-Bass books are available to corporations, professional associations, and other organizations. For details and discount information, contact the special sales department atjossey-Bass Inc., Publishers. (415) 433-1740; Fax (415) 433-0499. For international orders, please contact your local ParamouP "ablishing International office. Manufactured in the United States of America. Nearly alljossey-Bass books and jackets are printed on recycled paper that contains at least 50 percent recycled waste, including 10 percent postconsumer waste. Many of our materials are also printed with vegetable-based inks; during the printing process these inks emit fewer volatile organic compounds (VOCs) than petroleum-based inks. VOCs contribute to the formation of smog. library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data On intimate ground : a Gestalt approach to working with couples I Gordon Wheeler, Stephanie Backman, editors. - 1st ed. p. em. - (The Jossey-Bass social and behavioral science series) Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 0-7879-0039-7 I. Marital psychotherapy. 2. Gestalt therapy. I. Wheeler, Gordon. II. Backman, Stephanie III. Series. RC488.5.0527 1994 94-17754 616.89'156-dc20 CIP FIRST EDITION HBPrinting 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 I Code 94122 Contents Preface: The Gestalt Model in Context Gordon Wheeler ix The Editors XXV The Contributors xxvii Introduction Gordon Wheeler 1 Part I Theory 1. The Tasks of Intimacy: Reflections on a Gestalt Approach to Working with Couples Gordon Wheeler 31 2. Contact and Choice: Gestalt Work with Couples judith Hemming 60 3. Self-Organization and Dialogue Hunter Beaumont 83 4. Processes of Experiential Organization in Couple and Family Systems Netta R Kaplan and Marvin L. Kaplan 109 Partll Applications 5. Therapy with Remarried Couples Patricia Papernow 128 vii viii Contents 6. Gestalt Couples Therapy with Gay Male Couples: Enlarging the Therapeutic Ground of Awareness Allan Singer 166 7. Gestalt Couples Therapy with Lesbian Couples: Applying Theory and Practice to the Lesbian Experience Fraelean Curtis 188 8. Working with the Remarried Couple System Isabel Fredericson andJ oseph H. Handlon 210 9. The Gestalt Couples Group Mikael Curman and Barlno Curman 229 10. Trauma Survivors and Their Partners: A Gestalt View Pamela Geib and Stuart Simon 243 Partm Perspectives 11. Couples' Shame: The Unaddressed Issue Robert Lee 262' 12. Intimacy and Power in Long-Term Relationships: A Gestalt Therapy-Systems Perspective Joseph Melnick and Sonia March Nevis 291 13. The Grammar of Relationship: Gestalt Couples Therapy Cynthia Oudejans Harris 309 14. Giving and Receiving Richard Borofsky and Antra Kalnins Borofsky 325 15. The Aesthetics of Gestalt Couples Therapy Joseph Zinker and Sonia March Nevis 356 Epilogue: The Aesthetic Lens Stephanie Backman 400 Index 408 Preface The Gestalt Model in Context T he reader who knows the Gestalt model only in its late Perlsian workshop version of psychodramas and empty chairs is in for a surprise-we believe a very pleasurable and instructive one-with the present volume. In place of the confrontation, hyperindividualism, and percussive rhythms of the Perlsian model we have here a very different Gestalt per spective, one that derives from the lineage of Kurt Lewin, Kurt Goldstein, Laura Perls, Fritz Perls (especially the earlier work), Paul Goodman, Isadore From, and many Gestalt writers of the past twenty years-the Nevises and Polsters, Yontef, Zinker, and others. Many of these were our teachers, and all in their various ways emphasize themes of contact and context, dialogue, growth in relationship, the phenomenological perspective, and a con structivist view of the self as the "organizer of the field" and the artist of life. Because this approach is so different from some common preconceptions, it seems worthwhile to consider briefly what this Gestalt model is and how it fits into the wider context of psy chological and psychotherapy models. The discussion will be brief because the entire history of psychology as a science, after all, and of psychotherapy as a discipline and a practice within that science, goes back only about a hundred years-long enough to give some perspective, but still perhaps short enough to allow a summary of a few dominant streams. ix Preface X The Gestalt Model in the Context of Other Models A full century has now passed since the earliest beginnings of the Gestalt perceptual model, which completely revolutionized our understanding of human cognition and human experience. With the passage of time we can now understand perhaps bet ter than the early framers of the model some of the implications of the perspective for behavior, affect, cognition, and mean ing-which are the components of experience itself. Some of these implications are: tt. We perceive in wholes, not in bits and pieces or individual "stimuli" that are somehow added up, as the old associa tionist and behavioral models would have it; we resolve the whole field at once, or try to, and the parts take on meaning in relation to this context of understanding. • What we experience is this whole-field resolution; our expe rience of any given event doesn't lie in the event itself, but in the meaning we attach to it. Psychotherapy, no matter the terminology of the particular school, has to involve the ex ploration of this constructed meaning. • This means that there is no seeing without interpreting, and no perceiving that does not include feeling and evaluating. There is no such thing as experience that is prior to mean ing: both arise in the same act and process of taking in the world. This is a point borne out by contemporary brain re search, which more and more shows the involvement of the whole brain in the organization of perception and cogni tion, and the mediation of perception and memory by affect. • Our behavior is never the simple product ofintemal "drives" and "schedules of reinforcement," as the classical Freudian and behaviorist models maintained. Appetites, drives, and conditioning may all be important at various times, but our actual behavior is always mediated and organized in terms of our "map" or resolution of the whole field, the whole con text of perceived risks and resources, in relation to our own felt needs and goals. • In a systemic perspective, the same thing applies. Systems
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