ABSTRACT

The Half-Alive Ones consists of nine clinical papers and two more theoretical ones. It celebrates almost fifty years of therapeutic work, depicting some of the author's most poignant professional experiences, both personal and collective. The author sees herself as an eclectic Jungian, with a flexible approach to analysis and therapy, revealed in her case studies, which demonstrate that the author rarely works with a single person who is ill by himself. She finds it more fruitful to perceive him and to treat him as part of a total situation, which he brings into the consulting room: his family of origin, his work situation, and part or current significant relationships. The author attempts to confirm her deep-felt belief that good listening, sensitive timing, versatility, and evaluation of the other's truth, are indispensable ingredients of every therapeutic hour. Analysis is but an arid endeavour without compassion and creativity.

chapter Two|23 pages

The half-alive ones

chapter Four|23 pages

Relationships and the growth of personality

Co-written with colleagues at the Family Discussion Bureau

chapter Five|9 pages

An approach to marital therapy

chapter Six|7 pages

Working with a couple

chapter Nine|4 pages

On death and survival

chapter Ten|3 pages

“Experts in mothercraft”