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Attachment and Psychotherapy
Attachment and Psychotherapy
Description
Book Introduction
It provides a theoretical basis for what therapists can learn from attachment theory and how therapists should approach clients based on their attachment types, and also provides concrete examples through case studies.
It also integrates attachment theory with cutting-edge research fields such as neurophysiology, cognitive science, and Buddhist psychology, explaining how knowledge of implicit memory, reflection, and mindfulness can be usefully applied to interventions aimed at understanding and changing clients.

index
Translator's Preface
Author's Preface

01.
Attachment and Change
Relationships that bring about change
Things I know but haven't thought about
Attitudes toward Experience: Representation, Reflection, and Mindfulness

Part 1: Bowlby and After

02.
Foundations of Attachment Theory
John Bowlby: Proximity, Protection, and Separation
Mary Ainsworth: Attachment, Communication, and the 'Strange Situation'

03.
Mary Main: Mental Representations, Metacognition, and the Adult Attachment Interview
Bowlby and the internal working model
Reconceptualizing the Internal Working Model
Intergenerational transmission of attachment patterns
Metacognition: Thinking About Thinking and Representing the Representational World

04.
Fonagy and Beyond
Peter Fonagy: Mentalization and the Intersubjective Origins of the Self
Form of experience
From attachment to intersubjectivity

Part 2: Attachment Relationships and Self-Development

05.
The many dimensions of the self
The realm of self-experience
Neurophysiology of Attachment
Integrating the mind and body based on attachment and body

06.
Various attachment experiences
Attachment patterns in infancy and beyond
Additional notes on the use of terms and points to note

07.
How Attachment Relationships Shape the Self
Emotion Regulation and Attachment Strategies
What you truly want from the process and development that occurs in a relationship
Co-creation, integration, and intersubjectivity

Part 3: From Attachment Theory to Clinical Practice

08.
Nonverbal Experiences and 'Knowing But Not Thinking': Accessing Your Emotional Core
An Overview of Research Focusing on Nonverbal Experiences
Understanding Nonverbal Language
Work on something you know but haven't thought about
Working on the state of things that are brought about by things that you know but have not thought about
Working on implementing things you know but haven't thought about in a therapeutic setting

09.
Attitudes toward Experience: Immersion, Mentalization, and Mindfulness
Every burial
Mentalization
mindfulness
From burial to spiritualization
Facilitating the strengthening and integration of the reflective self in psychotherapy
Cultivating the Reflective Self: An Example of a Therapeutic Process
Mindfulness in Psychotherapy

10.
Deepening the Clinical Dimensions of Attachment Theory: Intersubjectivity and Relational Perspectives
Beyond the psychology of one person
Attachment and Intersubjectivity: Convergent and Complementary Theories
Rethinking Traditional Concepts: Democratizing Psychotherapy and Personalizing the Therapist's Role
Contribution of intersubjectivity theory to therapeutic intervention methods
What the intersubjective perspective adds to attachment theory

Part 4: Attachment Types in Psychotherapy

11.
Creating a crucible for development
Promoting Collaborative Communication in Psychotherapy
Training patients to participate effectively in psychotherapy
Separation, suspension, and termination
Assessing the patient's state of mind regarding attachment

12.
The Ignorant Patient: From Isolation to Intimacy
Empathy and Confrontation
Therapeutic interactions and neglectful patients

13.
Obsessive Patients: Making Space for Your Own Mind
Pattern of helplessness
Patterns of Anger and Confusion

14.
Unresolved Patients: Healing the Wounds of Psychological Trauma and Loss
Overcoming Patients' Fear of Stability
Projective identification and countertransference with Harry
Overcoming Patients' Fear of Stability (Continued)
Putting psychological trauma into words
Mentalization and Mindfulness

Part 5: Clarifying the Clinical Focus

15.
Nonverbal Domain 1: Dealing with Aspects That Are Aroused and Acted Out
nonverbal communication
What to do about the reactions that arise within the therapist
How to deal with being broken-hearted

16.
Nonverbal Domain 2: Working with the Body
Pay attention to your body
Debodying and the Unresolved Patient

17.
Mentalization and Mindfulness: The Double Helix of Psychological Liberation
Mentalization and Mindfulness as a Process of 'De-immersion'
Developing Mentalization and Mindfulness in the Context of Relationships
The Double Helix: A Clinical Example
Cultivating mindfulness
Promote mentalization
Mentalization, Mindfulness, and the Therapist's Contribution

References
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GOODS SPECIFICS
- Date of issue: April 20, 2010
- Format: Hardcover book binding method guide
- Page count, weight, size: 510 pages | 1,177g | 188*254*35mm
- ISBN13: 9788963303673
- ISBN10: 8963303675

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