The Anxiety Game
It’s Rigged, so Let’s Change the RulesTherapists are supposed to make clients feel safe and secure, creating a cozy haven from a cruel world, right? Well, when it comes to treating anxiety, more... Read more
Therapy’s Nonverbal Dance
Are You in Step with Your Clients?Noticing a client’s nonverbal shifts isn’t enough. You must know what these shifts mean. Read more
The Power of Forgiveness
Cutting the Bonds of ResentfulnessFrederic Luskin has spent the last 20 years studying forgiveness and why achieving it can be so difficult. Read more
Editor's Note: January/February 2013
Fretting Over the AnxiousThrough our lives, most of us develop what can only be called a deeply personal relationship with our anxiety. There’s a good reason for this. A predilection... Read more
Living With The Devil We Know
We May be Anxious, but Not to ChangeAs therapists, we typically assume that a person suffering from severe anxiety is eager and motivated to receive the help we offer. But we should never naively... Read more
The Antipsychotic Epidemic
An alarming number of children and adolescents who walk into a psychiatrist’s office in the United States each year walk out with prescriptions for... Read more
Can Video Games Power Up Your Practice?
Wonder if Pac-Man and Ms. Pac-Man ever needed couples therapy? What might a family therapist say about the sibling rivalry of the Super Mario Bros? It’s... Read more
Dilemmas of the “Haveitall” Mom
A Young Mother Struggles with a New IdentityA young woman confronts the myths and dilemmas of motherhood. Read more
Treating the Anxious Client
New Directions for Psychotherapy’s Most Common ProblemExtra Feature Read more
Motivating the Resistant Male Client
Terry Real On Why Leverage Is Key With MenYou’ve probably worked with men who’ve been dragged, kicking and screaming, into therapy by their partners. But how do you work with a client who... Read more
Being Meryl Streep
Learning to Distinguish Behavior from IdentityA therapist uses a Hollywood analogy to help a client learn an important lesson about distinguishing behavior from identity. Read more
The Coaching Edge
Helping Our Clients Take Their Best ShotThere are advantages to integrating an in-depth understanding of traditional therapy with a more coaching-oriented style—but therapists shouldn't lose sight... Read more
The Art of the First Session
Getting It Right From the StartYou never get a second chance to have a first session, so make the most of it. Read more
Navigating the Maze of DSM-5
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
Can Genes Predict Therapy Outcome?
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... Read more
Joining Through The Truth
Coaching and Our AssumptionsA new breed of therapist believes that it’s disrespectful not to say to clients displaying obnoxious, selfish, or self-defeating behaviors what... Read more
What Causes Borderline Personality Disorder?
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
Editor's Note: November/December 2012
Pushing Past Our LimitsThis issue of the Networker is about what coaches like Andrew can teach psychotherapists, and the role that challenge and incorruptible truth-telling can play... Read more
Swimming with The Sharks
From Therapist to Executive CoachA 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
Tribal Politics
Moral Issues are at the Heart of ElectionsSocial 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
Reinventing Your Life
Finding Self-Renewal in the HimalayasTens 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
Nothing Like Willy Loman?
A Classic Play Still Casts a Haunting SpellMore than 60 years after its Broadway debut, a classic play continues to cast a haunting spell. Read more
Psychotherapy's Declining Market Share
While the “empty chair” was once identified as a popular Gestalt therapy technique, for many therapists today, faced with empty appointment hours... Read more
The Power of Secure Attachment
Offering Deep Relatedness from the Very First SessionDiane Poole Heller, an expert in trauma and attachment, on helping clients find their way back to meaningful, safe relationships. Read more
"Manpocalypse" Now
Psychologist Philip Zimbardo knows a thing or two about tough guys. In 1971, his notorious Stanford prison experiment, originally planned for two weeks, had... Read more