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On Being a Therapist »

Book cover image of On Being a Therapist by Jeffrey A. Kottler

Authors: Jeffrey A. Kottler
ISBN-13: 9780470565476, ISBN-10: 0470565470
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Wiley, John & Sons, Incorporated
Date Published: April 2010
Edition: (Non-applicable)

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Author Biography: Jeffrey A. Kottler

Jeffrey A. Kottler is professor, Department of Counseling, California State University, Fullerton. He is the author or coauthor of more than eighty books, including the New York Times best seller The Last Victim, Divine Madness, Creative Breakthroughs in Therapy, and Changing People's Lives While Transforming Your Own. He is also head of the Madhav Ghimire Foundation, which provides scholarships for at-risk girls in Nepal.

Book Synopsis

New from Master Therapist and Best-Selling Author Jeffrey Kottler

For more than twenty-five years, On Being a Therapist has inspired generations of mental health professionals to explore the most private and sacred aspects of their work helping others. In this thoroughly revised and updated fourth edition, Jeffrey Kottler explores many of the challenges that therapists face in their practices today, including pressures from increased technology, economic realities, and advances in theory and technique. He also explores the stress factors that are brought on from managed care bureaucracy, conflicts at work, and clients' own anxiety and depression. This new edition puts the spotlight on the therapist's role and responsibility to promote issues of diversity, social justice, human rights, and systemic changes within the community and the world at large.

Praise for the Previous Editions

"This is one of those rare and exciting books that reaches deep into the heart of a profession and discloses not only its day-to-day workings but also the very personal satisfaction, problems, doubts, and joys its practitioners experience."—Booklist

"Written in an engaging style and filled with examples from the writings of well-known therapists. It should be required reading for those considering entering the profession."—Choice

Booknews

Kottler's candid account of the profound ways in which therapists are influenced by their interactions with clients, originally published in 1986, has been revised and updated to add recent anecdotal and empirical research on the subject. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

Table of Contents

Preface
1Client and Therapist: How Each Changes the Other1
2Struggles for Power and Influence25
3Personal and Professional Lives43
4Hardships of Therapeutic Practice75
5Patients Who Test Our Patience119
6Boredom and Burnout147
7Lies We Tell Ourselves183
8Alternative Therapies for Therapists207
9Toward Creativity and Personal Growth241
References259
About the Author271
Name Index275
Subject Index281

Subjects