ABSTRACT
"Still practicing" has several meanings. Still practicing suggests that the balance of heartaches and joys must not deter us from pursuing a clinical practice. At the same time, still practicing suggests that for the clinician "practice" never "makes perfect." We continue to refine our clinical instruments over our entire working lives.
Framed by her previous work on the concept of emotional balance, Sandra Buechler investigates how vicissitudes in a clinical career can have a profound and lasting impact on the clinician's emotional balance, and considers how the clinician's resilience is maintained in the face of the personal fallout of a lifetime of clinical practice. At each juncture, from training to early phases of clinical experience, through mid and late career, she asks, what can help us maintain a vital interest in our work? How do we not burn out?
Aimed at the nexus of the personal and theoretical, Still Practicing concentrates on the sadness, feelings of shame, and satisfactions inherent in practice, and encourages newcomers and veterans alike to make career choices mindful of their potential long-term impact on their feelings about being therapists. It poses a question vital to the life of the clinician: How can we strike a balance between the work's inevitable pain and its potential joy?
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part |53 pages
Hardships in Training
chapter |24 pages
Failing to Cultivate Clinical Strengths
chapter |27 pages
Emotional Hazards of Clinical Training
part |40 pages
Early Career Vicissitudes
chapter |17 pages
Traumatically Overwhelming Professional Settings
chapter |20 pages
Difficult Patients as First Cases
part |60 pages
Evolving Requirements
chapter |15 pages
Ongoing Challenges to the Clinician's Sense of Self
chapter |18 pages
Cocreated Dysfunctional Patterns of Relating
part |63 pages
Sustaining Practice