Fryszer / Schwing | Handbook of Systemic Psychotherapy | E-Book | sack.de
E-Book

E-Book, Englisch, 333 Seiten

Fryszer / Schwing Handbook of Systemic Psychotherapy

E-Book, Englisch, 333 Seiten

ISBN: 978-3-647-40453-0
Verlag: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: Kein



This book was written for systemic practitioners in all psychosocial fields. It provides a set of practical everyday tools as well as being a reference book full of specific and helpful information – of particular importance to anyone learning the trade or in their first years of practice. The authors, experienced in training, consultation, therapy and supervising, take the reader step by step through the various phases of systemic work: observation, understanding, recording of information, clarification, forming hypothesis, defining aims, planning and application.
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Weitere Infos & Material


1;Cover
;1
2;Title Page
;4
3;Copyright
;5
4;Table of Contents
;6
5;Body
;12
6;Preface;12
7;Foreword;15
8;1 Peeking Inside the Box: What’s There and What’s Where;17
8.1;1.1 An Outline;17
8.2;1.2 The Formal Layout of the Texts – Notes for the Reader;18
8.3;1.3 Our Position: Shish Kebab Yes, Goulash No;19
9;2 Exploring, Observing, Beginning;22
9.1;2.1 What to Expect: The Initial Phase;22
9.2;2.2 What Is a System and Who Belongs to the System?;23
9.2.1;Background Text: The Term “System” and Its Constructions;23
9.3;2.3 Preparing for a Conversation: Facts, Positions;27
9.3.1;2.3.1 Facts;27
9.3.2;Background Text: Facts – Is There Such a Thing as Objectivity?;29
9.3.3;2.3.2 Points of View;30
9.3.4;Background Text: Differences Provide Information – and Information Makes Change Possible;31
9.4;2.4 From Contact to Contract: Initial Interactions;33
9.4.1;2.4.1 Structure and Possible Questions;33
9.4.2;2.4.2 Joining: Warm-up, Becoming Acquainted and Introduction;33
9.4.3;2.4.3 The Referral to Counseling, Clarifying the Contracts and Concerns;35
9.4.4;2.4.4 Exploring Problems and Resources;38
9.4.5;2.4.5 A Contract for Continued Cooperation;39
9.4.6;2.4.6 Evaluating the Initial Contact;40
9.4.7;Background Text: Is It Possible to Observe Without Acting?;40
9.5;2.5 Observing Behavior and Interactions;43
9.5.1;Background Text: To Interview or to Facilitate Enactment?;43
9.5.2;2.5.1 Behavioral Patterns;45
9.5.3;2.5.2 Interactions: The Social Dynamics of a System;48
9.5.4;Background Text: What Are Interactions? ;48
9.5.5;2.5.3 The Group as a System: Interaction as the Key to Social Dynamics;49
9.5.6;2.5.4 Behavioral and Interaction Sequences;51
9.5.7;2.5.5 Roles;53
9.6;2.6 Observing One’s Own Physical and Emotional Reactions;55
10;3 Processing, Analyzing and Visualizing Information;58
10.1;3.1 The Genogram;59
10.1.1;3.1.1 Notes on Constructing a Genogram;59
10.1.2;3.1.2 Genograms: Two Examples;61
10.1.3;Background Text: Contextualization;64
10.2;3.2 Map;66
10.2.1;3.2.1 Functional and Dysfunctional Relationship Structures According to Minuchin;66
10.2.2;Background Text: What Is a Structural Approach?;67
10.2.3;Background Text: Normative or Neutral Perspectives;70
10.2.4;3.2.2 Remarks on Using the Map;72
10.2.5;3.2.3 Action Possibilities: Dealing Creatively with Difficult Triads;73
10.3;3.3 Family-Helper Map;75
10.3.1;Background Text: First- and Second-Order Cybernetics;76
10.3.2;3.3.1 Drawing Up a Family-Helper Map;79
10.3.3;3.3.2 Notes on Registering the Informal Helpers;80
10.3.4;3.3.3 Notes on Registering the Professional Helpers in the Map;80
10.3.5;3.3.4 Key to the Family-Helper Map;81
10.3.6;Background Text: On Neutrality;82
10.4;3.4 Timeline;84
10.4.1;Background Text: Contextualization – The Temporal Dimension;86
10.4.2;3.4.1 Designing the Timeline;87
10.4.3;3.4.2 Working Together with the Client on a Timeline;87
10.5;3.5 Sociograms: The Group as System;89
10.5.1;Background Text: Sociometry and Group Dynamics Were the Earliest Approaches to Systemic Thought;91
10.6;3.6 Reports;94
10.6.1;3.6.1 Criteria for a Good Report;94
10.6.2;3.6.2 What Dimensions to Include in the Report;95
10.6.3;3.6.3 Progress Reports for Evaluation Purposes and Planning of Interventions;97
11;4 Making Decisions: Preparing a Contract, Setting Goals, Planning Interventions;100
11.1;4.1 The Contract Is the Basic Guiding Principle of Systemic Work;100
11.1.1;Background Text: Why Do Systemic Therapists Speak of Contracts and Concerns?;101
11.1.2;4.1.1 How to Set up a Contract;103
11.1.3;4.1.2 What Does a Contract Contain?;103
11.1.4;Background Text: Noncompliance with the Contract;106
11.1.5;4.1.3 System Politics: Open, Hidden, Contradictory and Ambivalent Mandates;107
11.1.6;Background Text: In Praise of Hidden Mandates; or: How to Slowly Melt an Iceberg;110
11.1.7;4.1.4 Complaining Clients: Listening as Mandate;112
11.1.8;4.1.5 Draftees: When Others Are More Motivated than the Clients;115
11.1.9;4.1.6 Control as Mandate: When Counselors Must Be More Motivated than their Clients;117
11.1.10;4.1.7 A Method for Resolving the Mandate Matter: The Carousel;119
11.1.11;4.1.8 Does the Mandate Match the Offer?;120
11.2;4.2 Generating Hypotheses and Summarizing a Working Hypothesis;123
11.2.1;Background Text: Why Do Systems Theorists Prefer to Speak of Hypotheses and Not of Diagnoses?;124
11.2.2;4.2.1 The Sources and Themes of Hypotheses;127
11.2.3;4.2.2 How to Construct Hypotheses;128
11.2.4;4.2.3 Three Practical Tips;131
11.2.5;Background Text: In Praise of Hypotheses – and the Demonizing of Hypotheses by the Followers of “Not-knowing”;131
11.3;4.3 Preparing Hypotheses When Working with Foreigners;135
11.4;4.4 Defining Good Goals;138
11.4.1;Background Text: Goal-Oriented Approaches – or: Does Perturbation Stimulate Open Processes?;139
11.4.2;4.4.1 Criteria for Formulating Goals;141
11.4.3;4.4.2 Goals for Placing Children in Foster Homes;144
11.4.4;4.4.3 Describing and Using Goals: Two Instruments;145
11.4.5;4.4.4 Planning and Evaluating Interventions;147
11.5;4.5 The Group as a System: Constructing Hypotheses;150
11.5.1;4.5.1 Different Group Contexts, Different Demands on Counselors;150
11.5.2;4.5.2 Hypothesis: Too Little or Too Much Cohesion;151
11.5.3;4.5.3 Hypothesis: Destructive Group Dynamics;153
11.5.4;4.5.4 Hypothesis: Too Few or Too Many External Limitations;154
11.5.5;4.5.5 Hypothesis: Different, Contradictory Values and Interests;155
11.5.6;4.5.6 Hypothesis: “Alpha” Stands for the “Wrong” Values and Interests;156
11.5.7;4.5.7 Why Develop Such Normative Hypotheses? ;157
12;5 Acting: Intervening and Accompanying Processes;160
12.1;Background Text: Inducing the New – Where Does Change Begin?;162
12.2;Background Text: Solutions Are Important – And so Are Problems;163
12.3;5.1 Sculptures: Three-Dimensional Metaphors;167
12.3.1;5.1.1 Sculpture as a Metaphor for Relationships;168
12.3.2;Background Text: The Value of a Sculpture;175
12.3.3;5.1.2 Verbal Metaphors as Sculptures;181
12.3.4;5.1.3 Sculpture as a Metaphor for Time: Memory Lane;185
12.4;5.2 Extensions: Sculptures in Different Settings;188
12.4.1;5.2.1 In Individual Therapy: Social Atom and Chair Sculptures;188
12.4.2;5.2.2 The Family Board;191
12.4.3;5.2.3 Symbol Sculptures;193
12.4.4;5.2.4 Working with Sculptures in Case Reviews;194
12.4.5;5.2.5 Sculptures in Family Reconstructions;195
12.4.6;Background Text: Systemics and History;197
12.4.7;5.2.6 Systemic Structural Constellations;198
12.5;5.3 Circular Questioning;199
12.5.1;5.3.1 How to Construct Circular Questions;200
12.5.2;Background Text: What’s So Circular About Circular Questioning?;201
12.5.3;Background Text: How Circular Questioning Works;209
12.5.4;5.3.2 Problem and Resource Contexts: Using Circular Questions;212
12.5.5;5.3.3 Two Suggestions for Dealing with Circular Questions;225
12.6;5.4 Comments;226
12.6.1;5.4.1 Normalizing;227
12.6.2;5.4.2 Paying Compliments and Activating Resources;228
12.6.3;5.4.3 Reframing: Changing Your Reality by Changing Your Description;230
12.6.4;5.4.4 Ambivalent Comments (Paradoxical Intention);236
12.6.5;Background Text: On Paradoxical Mandates and Paradoxical Interventions;237
12.7;5.5 Witnessing;241
12.7.1;5.5.1 Expanding the Perspective of the Client System;242
12.7.2;5.5.2 Inner Authorities, Role Models and Critics;244
12.7.3;5.5.3 Sympathetic Companions;246
12.7.4;5.5.4 Cultural Perspectives in Intercultural Counseling;246
12.7.5;Background Text: Studying, Creating and Deconstructing Constructions;248
12.8;5.6 Modeling Behavior: Behavior-Oriented Interventions ;251
12.8.1;Background Text: Helping in Word and Deed: Is That Still Systemic?;251
12.8.2;5.6.1 Personnel: Who Gets Invited?;253
12.8.3;5.6.2 Initial Encounter: The First Few Minutes;254
12.8.4;5.6.3 Using Vehicles: Working Directly on the Scene;255
12.8.5;5.6.4 Changing Spatial Constellations – Working with Limits;259
12.8.6;5.6.5 Presenting the Situation: Staging and Enactment;262
12.9;5.7 Modelling Contexts: Network;266
12.10;5.8 Externalization;269
12.10.1;Background Text: How Do Externalizations Work? Plus: A Warning!;272
12.11;5.9 Metaphors and Stories;273
12.11.1;Background Text: Using Stories in Therapy and Counseling;273
12.11.2;5.9.1 Joining: Stories Can Be Useful;275
12.11.3;5.9.2 Illustrating Stories, Encouraging Insights, Mirroring;275
12.11.4;5.9.3 Encouraging a Change of Perspective;276
12.11.5;5.9.4 Stories Cause Searching Behavior and Open up Lost Resources;277
12.11.6;5.9.5 Introducing Possible Solutions Indirectly Through Models;277
12.12;5.10 Between Sessions;280
12.12.1;5.10.1 Observational Tasks;282
12.12.2;5.10.2 Ambivalence Tasks: “Do nothing!” or “More of the same!”;283
12.12.3;5.10.3 Change Tasks;284
12.12.4;5.10.4 Rituals;286
12.12.5;5.10.5 Practicing New Behaviors;289
12.13;5.11 Accompanying and Supporting Changes;290
12.13.1;5.11.1 How to Be Supportive;290
12.13.2;5.11.2 Cheerleading and Asset Growth;291
12.13.3;5.11.3 A Climate of Change;293
12.13.4;5.11.4 On Relapses and Incidents;293
12.14;5.12 Leave-Taking and Final Phases;297
12.14.1;5.12.1 The Dynamics of Parting Processes;297
12.14.2;Background Text: Phases in the Process of Leave-Taking;299
12.14.3;5.12.2 Shaping the Final Phases;300
12.15;5.13 When Is it Best to Do What? Is There Such a Thing as a Typical Course?;303
13;6 Positions, Values and Roles in the Systemic Trade;308
13.1;6.1 Positions and Values;308
13.2;6.2 Control ;312
13.3;6.3 The Role of the Counselor: Teacher, Facilitator, Consultant, Evaluator;316
13.3.1;6.3.1 Teacher;316
13.3.2;6.3.2 Facilitator;317
13.3.3;6.3.1 Consultant;318
13.3.4;6.3.1 Evaluator;318
14;References;322
15;Index ;330
16;Back Cover
;338


Andreas Fryszer, Diplom-Psychologe, Psychologischer Psychotherapeut und Kinder- und Jugendlichenpsychotherapeut, ist freiberuflich als Trainer, Supervisor, Organisationsberater und Coach tätig.


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