ABSTRACT

This book addresses the current demand to apply findings in neuroscience to a broad spectrum of psychotherapy practices. It offers clear formulations for what has long been missing in how psychotherapists present their work: research-based descriptions of specific memory functions and attention to the role that synaptic plasticity and neural integration play in making lasting psychological change possible. The book provides a detailed perspective on how patients integrate into their own narratives what transpires in their treatment and how the clinician's memory guides the different phases of the process of healing. Long-neglected in psychotherapeutic formulations, findings about memory-in particular, episodic and autobiographical memory-have a direct bearing on what happens in treatments. Whether the information is about the recent past, such as what happened between sessions, or about traumatic childhood experiences, the patient's disclosures are in the service of a more complete narrative about self. At the same time, the therapist's ways of remembering what occurs in each therapeutic relationship will guide much of the healing process for the patient.

part I|245 pages

Applying the Findings in Research

chapter One|236 pages

Why memory and psychotherapy

chapter Two|215 pages

The nature of subjectivity

chapter Three|190 pages

Retrieving history of the self

chapter Four|165 pages

Stories told and retold

chapter Five|141 pages

Dreams as stories

chapter Six|113 pages

Metaphors and meaning

part II|85 pages

Remembering, Reporting, and Teaching

chapter Seven|24 pages

Where it happens and how

chapter Eight|58 pages

What there is to tell

chapter Nine|35 pages

Listening in a different state of mind