ABSTRACT

A passionate, proactive stance on the present state of psychotherapy, The Vulnerable Therapist: Practicing Psychotherapy in an Age of Anxiety picks the brains of contemporary mental health professionals and finds a common symptom--fear. You’ll see why litigation, market forces, and ethical confusion have raised a dark umbrella of angst over psychotherapy practices and discover what therapists can do to restore the profession to its former good self.The Vulnerable Therapist will capture your interest with its broad systemic approach, contextual analysis, fascinating case studies, and anecdotal material. You’ll see the need for improvement at the institutional and individual levels of the psychotherapy professions. Specifically, you’ll read about:

  • social, cultural, and contextual aspects of the crisis of meaning in psychotherapy
  • professional responses to the crisis of meaning which create ethical dilemmas for individual practitioners
  • the power of language to construct and control mental health beliefs
  • psychotherapy’s core constructs and ethical “buzzwords”
  • psychological and legal risks in practicing psychotherapy today
  • specific problems with licensing boards and other complaint channels
  • problems with rule-based ethics
  • alternative models for creating ethical therapist-client relationships Today, more and more, excessive litigation and market-driven forces are imposing standard ethics decisions on psychotherapists, forcing them to see their clients through the clouded lenses of risk management and liability instead of through the lens of therapeutic need. Much like the symptomatic children whose dysfunctional family stops blaming them and starts shouldering part of the “problem,” distraught therapists need the psychotherapy profession to address its own psychopathology at the institutional level. The Vulnerable Therapist shows how you can contribute to a total revamping of the mental health professions in a way that facilitates rather than impedes ethical functioning.

chapter Chapter 1|15 pages

Introduction: Ethical Contexts, Ethical Rules

chapter Chapter 4|10 pages

Language: Some Theoretical Considerations

chapter Chapter 5|13 pages

Diagnosis: The Power to Name

chapter Chapter 7|20 pages

The Language of Professional Ethics: Some Buzzwords

chapter Chapter 8|23 pages

Legal Vulnerabililty: Context

chapter Chapter 10|18 pages

Psychological Vulnerability

chapter Chapter 11|17 pages

Alternatives to Traditional Models

chapter Chapter 12|19 pages

Toward an Ethic of Multiplicity and Mutuality

chapter Chapter 13|19 pages

Toward an Ethic of Care, Compassion, and Character

chapter Chapter 14|9 pages

Toward Transformation