ABSTRACT

The adolescent finds himself in the very difficult position of having to make all these readjustments whilst he has to deal with the subsequent conflicts and anxieties. The earlier passionate mixture of love and hatred that characterizes the attachment and dependency on the parents must now be renounced until the adolescent reaches a point at which it is possible for him to confirm his own identity and find new love relationships. These must neither be based too much on repetition of previous early attachments, nor be entirely and exaggeratedly opposed to them. It goes without saying that none of this can be achieved without much upheaval and experimenting. The step from adolescence to adulthood is complex and involves not only the individual's emotional experience, but also the continuous input, reactions from the world in which he/she lives. It is these interactions that are described and discussed in this book.

chapter One|6 pages

Normality and pathology in adolescence

ByLuis Rodriguez de la Sierra, Joan Schachter

chapter Two|15 pages

Depression and anxiety in the older adolescent

ByLuis Rodriguez de la Sierra, Joan Schachter

chapter Three|6 pages

Academic failure

ByLuis Rodriguez de la Sierra, Joan Schachter

chapter Four|10 pages

Aggression

ByLuis Rodriguez de la Sierra, Joan Schachter

chapter Five|9 pages

Drug abuse

ByLuis Rodriguez de la Sierra, Joan Schachter

chapter Six|7 pages

Severe mental illness

ByLuis Rodriguez de la Sierra, Joan Schachter

chapter Seven|15 pages

The therapist’s angle

ByLuis Rodriguez de la Sierra, Joan Schachter

chapter Eight|20 pages

The parents’ angle

ByA. H. Brafman