How Clients 'Do' Their Problems: NLP Can Help You Do the "Briefest" Therapy
By Steve Andreas
November/December 2007
Careful attention to body language and nonverbal cues can dramatically streamline the process of therapeutic change.
By Gary Cooper
January/February 2007
A More Powerful Antidepressant * Identifying the more discredited therapies * Assessing Childhood-Obesity Prevention * Evaluating antipsychotic meds * Treatment for chronic fatigue symdrome * Internet porn
Coming Face-to-Face with the Unimaginable
By J. Gibson Henderson, Jr.
March/April 2007
Despite everything I had no choice about, I did have one fundamental choice to make: my choice of a "stance" toward life. Would I find joy in the options that remained, or would I succumb to grief over what I'd lost? I chose joy and, except for occasional times when grief simply overwhelms me, I've stuck to it doggedly.
Finding the Courage to Stay in the Moment
November/December 2006
A therapist helps his anxious clients discover that be not resisting what the present moment offers, they can find a way out of their suffering.
There are Effective Alternatives to Medication
September/October 2005
Bonus - Read the entire article FREE!
Discovering the Core Within Our Multiplicity
May/June 2004
The practice of therapy, for both therapist and client, is transformed when we connect with our fundamental core, a process that involves learning to listen closely to our inner cacophony and embracing even the parts of ourselves that we formerly loathed.
Helping Clients Experience Their Inner Freedom
May/June 2004
Dualistic thinking separates us from our own experience and offers the illusion that we can achieve peace and pleasure by somehow casting out our problems.
Discovering Another Way of Being
March/April 2004
In a single, unforeseen moment, a self-lacerating young woman takes a risk and discovers, deep in her bones, why we're a live.
How to Motivate Depressed Clients
July/August 2004
Getting a depressed client mobilized to take the initial steps toward change can be the key to treatment.
Working with Self-Harming Teens is Dramatic and Unpredictable
January/February 2004
Working with self-harming teens often seems like riding a runaway roller coaster, which keeps threatening to go off the rails altogether. Just as things get smooth and predictable, a crisis sends you hurtling downhill again.
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