
A Safe Place for Change, 2nd Ed: Skills and Capacities for Counselling and Therapy
- psychology
- Categories:Psychology
- Language:English(Translation Services Available)
- Publication date:February,2019
- Pages:219
- Retail Price:(Unknown)
- Size:178mm×254mm
- Publication Place:Australia
- Words:(Unknown)
- Star Ratings:
- Text Color:(Unknown)
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Review
- Professor Ione Lewis in Psychotherapy in Australia
A Safe Place for Change is not obsessed with content and instructions, it is not limited to just one approach, but instead provides a holistic and integrated foundation on which to build further knowledge of both skills and theory. Highly recommended!
- Paul Bogacs, Lecturer and Counselling Strand Convenor, Avondale College of Higher Education
It is such a unique text in the way it clearly explains issues for the beginning therapist, and what this strange beast called "process" looks like.
- Kim Kownacki, Morling College
Description
Unlike most texts, A Safe Place for Change focusses squarely on the therapeutic relationship. Skills are presented in terms of their contribution to the relationship. Theories and models are referred to throughout, but the authors emphasise what the different approaches have in common, rather than the specialised terminology that often makes them seem more different than they actually are.The personal capacities and skills that distinguish a good counsellor or therapist are presented in the same order in which they would appear within the actual therapeutic relationship. The initial chapters teach ‘holding’ and ‘exploring’—skills that are almost automatically required in the first few sessions with a new client. Then follows a chapter that deals with the challenge to the counsellor–client relationship which often appears after the first two sessions, and shows counsellors how they can respond most usefully to that challenge. As the therapeutic relationship continues and deepens, it becomes possible to invite clients to consider how they might be contributing to their own problems—the skill of ‘gentle honesty’ or ‘encountering’.Finally, the authors introduce two different approaches to achieving change-- ‘solving the problem’ via advice, instruction, and homework, and ‘re-parenting the person’—something that is more likely to be crucial in long-term work with clients who present entrenched difficulties in living and relating.Well-written, insightful and accessible, this textbook speaks directly to students of counselling and psychotherapy, recognising their needs and their challenges. The authors’ real-world experience is evident throughout the book, as is their skill in teaching complex concepts in clear language.