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El. knyga: Disability, Counselling and Psychotherapy: Challenges and Opportunities

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"What is Disability?" and "Why am I disabled?" asked Joe, the seven year old boy, born with cerebral palsy...

Although disability is of concern to us all, very little attention has been paid to the felt experience of the disabled person and the ways in which psychotherapy might be constructively utilised. Disability, Counselling and Psychotherapy directly addresses this gap and, taking a life-span perspective and a psychoanalytic approach, actively explores the challenges and opportunities of disability to therapy, the caring professions and society more widely.

Shula Wilson introduces a model aimed at achieving autonomy that is based on the significance of the primary mother-baby relationship and the awareness of human mortality. In doing so she offers a new way of relating to disabled people and working through unanswerable questions such as those raised by Joe, above. She also challenges attitudes and reactions to controversial issues such as sex, death and the mystery behind altering body image, and brings to the surface the desires, hopes and frustrations of disabled people living in an environment ridden with fears and prejudices.

With its lively case discussion and clear theoretical base, Disability, Counselling and Psychotherapy is a vital resource for all practising professionals and trainees.

Recenzijos

'This book offers counsellors, careworkers and others a new way of relating to disabled people. It raises awareness of the desires, hopes and frustrations of being confronted by restricted opportunities and the fears of society's prejudices...As a physiotherapist and person-centred counsellor, for me this book brings together the two disciplines in a way that helps understanding of the lifelong effects of disability in the formative years...It will enhance professional self-awareness as well as empathy when working with disabled people.' - Andrea Thomas, Cheshire, Therapy Weekly

Daugiau informacijos

'This book offers counsellors, careworkers and others a new way of relating to disabled people. It raises awareness of the desires, hopes and frustrations of being confronted by restricted opportunities and the fears of society's prejudices...As a physiotherapist and person-centred counsellor, for me this book brings together the two disciplines in a way that helps understanding of the lifelong effects of disability in the formative years...It will enhance professional self-awareness as well as empathy when working with disabled people.' - Andrea Thomas, Cheshire, Therapy Weekly
Acknowledgements vii
Introduction ix
Cultural, Social and Personal Aspects of Disability
1(18)
A Disabled Person's Experience
1(1)
Privacy, Dignity and the Tendency to Infantilize Disabled People
2(2)
The Social Context of the Disabled Child
4(5)
Institutions and Institutionalisation
9(2)
On Becoming a Professional Caregiver
11(4)
Autonomy: the Story of Mary
15(3)
Summary
18(1)
A Relational Model of Disability
19(22)
The Medical Model
19(2)
The Social Model
21(1)
The Analytical Model
22(2)
The Relational Model: the Object Relations Construct of Disability
24(16)
Summary
40(1)
Disability and the Practice of Psychotherapy
41(20)
The First Contact
41(1)
Assessment
42(3)
Managing the First Session
45(8)
Managing the Therapeutic Frame
53(7)
Summary
60(1)
The World of a Disabled Child: the Story of Joe
61(19)
Referral and Pretherapy Interaction
61(1)
Building Trust
61(2)
Body Image and the Disabled Child
63(1)
Making Assumptions about Disability
63(2)
The Therapeutic Environment
65(1)
From Fantasy to Reality
66
Managing Breaks
Summary
78(1)
Epilogue
79(1)
Communication and Autonomy
80(16)
The Effect of Impaired Speech
80(2)
The Therapeutic Frame
82(1)
Di: the Young Woman Who Could Not Speak
83(7)
The Four Phases of the Therapeutic Relationship
90(5)
Summary
95(1)
Disability and Sexuality
96(15)
What Does Disability Do to Sex?
96(1)
Love and Intimacy
96(5)
Sexuality and the Developmental Process
101(3)
Sex and Guilt
104(2)
Gender Identity
106(4)
Summary
110(1)
The Final Separation
111(20)
Birth, Death and Separation
111(2)
The Story of Ron
113(17)
Summary
130(1)
Postscript 131(2)
Bibliography 133(8)
Index 141


SHULA WILSON is a practising psychotherapist, clinical supervisor and the founder and Clinical Director of the SKYLARK counselling service for people affected by disability. She is also a member of the visiting faculty at the School of Psychotherapy and Counselling, Regent's College, London.