November/December 2018
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A New Generation of Clients
Is Therapy Keeping Pace?
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Editor's Note
Here, we focus on today’s young adults (many of whom bristle at the label millennials). Not only have they ushered in many of the changes taking place in the therapeutic relationship and the issues we address in therapy, but they increasingly represent the newest crop of therapists, who often have important things to teach their older, seasoned mentors about what today’s clients want and need.
The "Millennial Effect"
How Young Clients Are Leading Therapists to New Places
As they’re about to surpass baby boomers as the largest generation, millennials are coming to dominate the population of therapy consumers. But their impact goes beyond sheer numbers. With sometimes startling directness, they’re demanding that their therapists become even more “real” and disclosing, whether therapists are comfortable being that unguarded or not. Read More
Confessions of a Millennial Therapist
Finding My #Dreamjob
After careful review of the usual stereotypes—technologically adroit, social media fixated, with a touch of narcissism—one 30-something therapist belatedly comes to a realization: she is, in fact, a millennial. And despite the negative connotations often attached to the label, that may not be such a bad thing after all. Read More
Bumps in the Road
Accompanying Young Clients Through Life’s Transitions
Listening to the Next Generation
Are We Hearing What They Have to Say?
The Secret of Getting Through
A Profile of an Impressively Unimpressive Therapist
Extra Feature
The Man Who Became an Adjective
No One Writes about Psychology Like Malcolm Gladwell