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Article November 1, 2012

Swimming with The Sharks

From Therapist to Executive Coach

A therapist from a working-class background finds himself on a surprising mid-career journey into the belly of 21st-century capitalism as an executive coach. Read more

Article November 1, 2012

Reinventing Your Life

Finding Self-Renewal in the Himalayas

Tens of thousands of miles away from his practice, a therapist accidentally discovers a new sense of purpose, unable to distinguish the act of giving from the... Read more

Article November 1, 2012

While the “empty chair” was once identified as a popular Gestalt therapy technique, for many therapists today, faced with empty appointment hours... Read more

Article November 1, 2012

The Art of the First Session

Getting It Right From the Start

You never get a second chance to have a first session, so make the most of it. Read more

Article November 1, 2012

Tribal Politics

Moral Issues are at the Heart of Elections

Social psychologist Jonathon Haidt offers a perspective on why we vote the way we do that you’re unlikely to have read about in the deluge of mainstream... Read more

Article November 1, 2012

Nothing Like Willy Loman?

A Classic Play Still Casts a Haunting Spell

More than 60 years after its Broadway debut, a classic play continues to cast a haunting spell. Read more

Article November 1, 2012

What if you could predict how well a client would respond to psychotherapy? What if a simple test could tell you whether a patient needed psychodynamic therapy... Read more

Article November 1, 2012

The American Psychiatric Association is scheduled to publish the much-delayed fifth edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSM) by May 2013. With... Read more

Article November 1, 2012

Do childhood trauma and a chaotic family environment cause adult borderline personality disorder (BPD)? Common clinical wisdom says yes, but new results are... Read more

Video October 2, 2012

The Power of Secure Attachment

Offering Deep Relatedness from the Very First Session

Diane Poole Heller, an expert in trauma and attachment, on helping clients find their way back to meaningful, safe relationships. Read more

Article September 12, 2012

With nearly eight million Americans affected by the symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and tens of thousands of troops returning from military... Read more

Article September 12, 2012

Psychologist Philip Zimbardo knows a thing or two about tough guys. In 1971, his notorious Stanford prison experiment, originally planned for two weeks, had to... Read more

Article September 1, 2012

Editor's Note: September/October 2012

Playing the Conversational Instrument

Even though talking and listening to people may come naturally to most therapists (if not, we’re in the wrong profession), as the writers in this issue make... Read more

Article September 1, 2012

One Brick at a Time

Therapy is More Craft Than Art or Science

In this era of medical necessity and evidence-based therapies, it’s easy to lose sight of a basic truth. We heal not through prescriptions and procedures... Read more

Article September 1, 2012

How Conversation Sparks Therapeutic Change

The Search for the Unspoken Self

When we trust in ourselves to follow the signals of life that the patient emits in seemingly casual conversation, we increase chances of stepping outside the... Read more

Article September 1, 2012

Why Teens Hate Therapy

Mistakes Therapists Should Avoid

It’s probably fair to say that most teens loathe the very idea of therapy. Yet, with confused and troubled adolescents needing our help more than ever, the... Read more

Article September 1, 2012

Visions Of A Sustainable Planet

We Need to Expand Our Moral Imagination

We live in a culture of denial, especially about the grim reality of climate change. Sure, we want to savor the occasional shrimp cocktail without having to... Read more

Article September 1, 2012

The Truth About Bullying

How therapists can help harassed kids

While some believe the incidence of school bullying has reached epidemic proportions, therapists remain largely uninformed about the nature of the problem and... Read more

Article September 1, 2012

Men with anger problems are generally highly reluctant clients who come to our offices only because they’ve gotten “the ultimatum” from their wives... Read more

Article September 1, 2012

Psyche and Soma

How Our Bodies Reveal Our Inner Experience

For more than 25 years, Pat Ogden has been at the forefront of developing somatic approaches that can succeed where the talking cure fails. Read more

Article September 1, 2012

Bookmarks: Creatures of Habit

Understanding the automatic loops that shape our lives

A surprise bestseller shows us the crucial roles that even minor habits can play in individual and group behavior. Read more

Article September 1, 2012

Isle of Dreams

Searching for a lost self in the Ould Sod

Sometimes the places we long to visit speak to needs that go much deeper than our appetite for exotic sights. Read more

Article September 1, 2012

Imagine a world populated by college undergraduates. A world filled with binge drinkers and sleep-deprived procrastinators tweeting their sexual exploits to... Read more

Article August 6, 2012

Fostering Moral Imagination

Empathy is a radical act

In a world where differences between people have become increasingly demonized, more than ever, the therapist's job is to help people expand their circle of... Read more

Article July 1, 2012

Editor's Note: July/August 2012

Ethics and Boundaries

The hallmark of the therapeutic encounter is that the therapist is an expert, trained in a particular skill-set to conduct a rather odd, rarified conversation... Read more

Article July 1, 2012

Yesterday’s Ethics Vs. Today’s Realities

Boundaries in an Age of Informality

As the status of therapist has shifted from an oversized figure with Svengali-like powers to an overworked and underpaid service provider at the mercy of the... Read more

Article July 1, 2012

Therapeutic Ethics In The Digital Age

When the Whole World is Watching

The revolution in communication technology has created a new set of ethical dilemmas, which are invading our sessions, whether we know it or not. Read more

Article July 1, 2012

Therapist Self-Disclosure

Think Before You Get Personal

The ways we disclose, read cues from our clients, and dialogue about what’s been divulged are the keys to whether therapist self-disclosure helps clients’... Read more

Article July 1, 2012

Psychotherapy and The Law

Two Practical Perspectives
Steven Frankel and Clifton Mitchell

A therapist–lawyer on what most often gets clinicians in trouble with the law and everything you need to know about the duty to report, to warn—and more. Read more

Article July 1, 2012

The Art of Hanging-In There

A Hospice Social Worker’s Take on Inside Curveballs

When something is coming at you that may cause pain or self-doubt, it’s natural to want to duck. Read more

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