ABSTRACT

Therapists inevitably feel more gratified in their work when their cases have better treatment outcomes.  This book is designed to help them achieve that by providing practical solutions to problems that arise in psychotherapy, such as:

Do depressed people need an antidepressant, or psychotherapy alone?  How do you handle people who want to be your “friend,” who touch you, who won’t leave your office, or who break boundaries?  How do you prevent people from quitting treatment prematurely?  Suppose you don’t like the person who consults you?  What if people you treat with CBT don’t do their homework?  When do you explain defense mechanisms, and when do you use supportive approaches? 
 
Award-winning professor, Jerome Blackman, answers these and many other tricky problems for psychotherapists.  Dr. Blackman punctuates his lively text with tips and snippets of various theories that apply to psychotherapy.  He shares his advice and illustrates his successes and failures in diagnosis, treatment, and supervision.  He highlights fundamental, fascinating, and perplexing problems he has encountered over decades of practicing and supervising therapy.

part Section A|7 pages

A very quick take on assessment and technique

chapter |3 pages

Problem 1 what do i say? (technique)

chapter |2 pages

Problem 2 when do i say it? (diagnosis)

part Section B|36 pages

General principles about treatment

part Section C|64 pages

Techniques with different types of disturbances

chapter |4 pages

Problem 17 highly intelligent people

chapter |3 pages

Problem 18 people who are chronically late to sessions

Samoan Spirits in Culture History

chapter |3 pages

Problem 19 do all alcoholics need aa?

chapter |5 pages

Problem 21 bullies

chapter |4 pages

Problem 22 procrastinators

chapter |3 pages

Problem 23 passive, wimpy people

chapter |2 pages

Problem 24 the male “yes, dear”

chapter |3 pages

Problem 29 seniors who feel entitled

chapter |4 pages

Problem 30 promiscuous people 60

part Section D|130 pages

Techniques With Acting In and Acting Out

chapter |1 pages

Problem 31 what about boundaries?

chapter |4 pages

Problem 48 silent people

chapter |3 pages

Problem 51 parting shots

chapter |3 pages

Problem 59 people who demand medicine

chapter |4 pages

Problem 22 procrastinators

chapter |10 pages

Problem 62 suicidal people

chapter |4 pages

Problem 65 people who ask you questions

part Section E|44 pages

Your Reactions to People in Treatment

chapter |3 pages

Problem 68 compliant talkers

chapter |6 pages

Problem 73 people who want your advice

chapter |4 pages

Problem 78 people who threaten you

part Section F|38 pages

Modifications to the “Frame” of Treatment

chapter |2 pages

Problem 80 when you lower your fee

chapter |3 pages

Problem 81 what about e-mail and skype?

chapter |5 pages

Problem 88 child-centered counseling

part Section G|50 pages

Special Issues

chapter |5 pages

Problem 94 wiseguys

chapter |3 pages

Problem 95 people who are friends with other

People You Are Treating