Psychotherapy Networker, a resource to be on psychotherapy
4 March 2015
Tags: Focusing, Psychotherapy, Therapy, Other Texts, Webs
psychotherapy It has an essential part of training in depth, and at the same time is very enriching to learn new approaches, new techniques, new ways to raise emerging issues. Updating and continuing training are part of the good practice of psychotherapy.
Psychotherapy Networker It is for me a very useful resource to be the day psychotherapy. Apart from other resources (videos, texts, specific numbers…), This organization publishes a journal that appears bimonthly in both paper and electronic format (Free access for two years), and each number has a thread, with articles by professionals who have worked on the topic of the month, and with very interesting references (in fact I have already bought several books after reading some articles, and I am very satisfied).
The website has many resources, and from here I want to recommend some articles and issues that seem particularly novel.
- The November and December 2013, with the theme “Our Habits, Ourselves. Can the Circle Be Broken?” (“our habits, and ourselves. Can you break the circle?”), a number with ideas on how to break the vicious circles in psychotherapy, with an article Ann Weiser Cornell, Psychotherapy specialist orientation Focusing with whom I have formed, “Something New, Here and Now. Breaking Free of Habitual” (“Something new, here and now. Getting rid usual”).
- The May and June 2014, with the theme “Treating Trauma. What Are We Missing?” (“Treating trauma. What we are missing?”), with innovative lines for intervention in trauma as the article Janina Fisher “Putting the Pieces Together. 25 Years of Learning Trauma Treatment” (“Piecing together. Twenty-five years learning to treat trauma”).
- The September and October 2014, with the theme “There and Not There. Growing Up in an Age of Distraction” (“There and not there. How to grow in the age of distraction”), with essential items like “Getting Unhooked. Connecting with Traumatized Kids Who Push Your Buttons” (“Disengaging from the hook. How you connect with children and traumatized girls that make you jump defenses”) the Martha Straus.
I leave you with good reading and I hope you enjoy it.
Xavier