Mindfulness Meditation in Psychotherapy , livre ebook

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91

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English

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2016

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91

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Ebook

2016

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“ Mindfulness Meditation in Psychotherapy by Steven Alper is a wonderful book that’s wise, scholarly, and practical. For anyone interested in bringing mindfulness into therapy, it is a must- read. This book lies at the intersection of mindfulness and psychotherapy, and clearly illustrates how mindfulness intersects with psychotherapy.” — Bob Stahl, PhD , coauthor of A Mindfulness- Based Stress Reduction Workbook , Living With Your Heart Wide Open , Calming the Rush of Panic , A Mindfulness- Based Stress Reduction Workbook for Anxiety , and MBSR Every Day “This book brings mindfulness literature to a refreshing and academic new depth. Scholarly, yet deeply personal, the writing is clear, readily accessible, and eloquent. Alper’s brilliant presentation of the mindfulness pyramid model illustrates how therapeutic interdependence is alive and creative. This is an essential book for any therapist interested in mindfulness.” — Paula Carmona, MSN, RN, PMHCNS- BC , coauthor of Peaceful Mind “ Mindfulness Meditation in Psychotherapy offers a beautifully integrated model for incorporating mindfulness in psychotherapy. Steven Alper weaves together years of contemplative practice and clinical wisdom with current research on mindfulness, emphasizing it as a way of being and a method for investigating subjectivity. This comprehensive and artful book will benefit therapist and client. I highly recommend it.
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Date de parution

01 février 2016

Nombre de lectures

0

EAN13

9781626252776

Langue

English

Poids de l'ouvrage

2 Mo

“ Mindfulness Meditation in Psychotherapy by Steven Alper is a wonderful book that’s wise, scholarly, and practical. For anyone interested in bringing mindfulness into therapy, it is a must- read. This book lies at the intersection of mindfulness and psychotherapy, and clearly illustrates how mindfulness intersects with psychotherapy.”
— Bob Stahl, PhD , coauthor of A Mindfulness- Based Stress Reduction Workbook , Living With Your Heart Wide Open , Calming the Rush of Panic , A Mindfulness- Based Stress Reduction Workbook for Anxiety , and MBSR Every Day
“This book brings mindfulness literature to a refreshing and academic new depth. Scholarly, yet deeply personal, the writing is clear, readily accessible, and eloquent. Alper’s brilliant presentation of the mindfulness pyramid model illustrates how therapeutic interdependence is alive and creative. This is an essential book for any therapist interested in mindfulness.”
— Paula Carmona, MSN, RN, PMHCNS- BC , coauthor of Peaceful Mind
“ Mindfulness Meditation in Psychotherapy offers a beautifully integrated model for incorporating mindfulness in psychotherapy. Steven Alper weaves together years of contemplative practice and clinical wisdom with current research on mindfulness, emphasizing it as a way of being and a method for investigating subjectivity. This comprehensive and artful book will benefit therapist and client. I highly recommend it.”
— Shauna Shapiro , coauthor of The Art and Science of Mindfulness and Mindful Discipline
“Steven Alper has poured his deep understanding of practice and of psychotherapy into this wise and accessible book. His candor about his own struggles ground the book in humility and wisdom, and he speaks directly to his reader in a voice that is reassuring, confident, and deeply humane. Psychotherapists with established meditation practices, as well as those who want to begin, will both find much of value here.”
— Barbara Davenport, LCS , graduate of the Chicago Institute for Psychoanalysis Program in Child Psychotherapy, and author of The Worst Loss and Grit and Hope: 5 Latino Students & the Program That Helped Them Get to College (UC Press, 2016)
“Mindfulness in psychotherapy has often been reduced to a cognitive tool or a stress reduction technique, missing the deepest and most liberating levels of this ancient practice. In this important contribution, Steven Alper presents an original model that integrates different domains and levels of mindfulness in the therapeutic relationship, offering a clear, step- by- step training to integrate mindfulness in therapy— starting from the necessary foundation of the therapist’s own mindfulness practice. For its depth and applicability, this book will bring clarity and inspiration to new and experienced therapists alike.”
— Gonzalo Brito Pons, PhD , psychotherapist and coauthor of The Mindfulness- Based Emotional Balance Workbook
“Steven Alper has created an excellent and practical mindfulness guide for the psychotherapist who wishes to bring mindfulness forward more intentionally and explicitly in their own life and work. I strongly recommend this comprehensive and accessible book. It is a treasure for any therapist who is seeking to build a personal mindfulness practice, planning to deliver mindfulness- based psychotherapy, or who wishes to directly explore the profound power of mindfulness for healing and transformation.”
— Jeffrey Brantley, MD, DFAPA , director of the Mindfulness Based Stress Reduction Program at Duke Integrative Medicine, author of Calming Your Angry Mind , and coauthor of Daily Meditations for Calming Your Angry Mind
“Moving persuasively beyond diagnosis and technique, this accessible and sure- footed guide reveals the more general and enduring gains that come from incorporating mindfulness into your psychotherapy practice.”
— Zindel V. Segal, PhD , coauthor of The Mindful Way Workbook
“What a lovely book. Steven Alper manages to artfully weave three important tales into one— detailing the importance of mindfulness practice, guiding the reader on how to bring such practice into one’s own life, and illustrating how to then deepen and enliven the practice of psychotherapy with the art of mindfulness. For any psychotherapist, this is critical and valuable stuff!”
— William H. Polonsky, PhD, CDE , president of the Behavioral Diabetes Institute; associate clinical professor at the University of California, San Diego; and author of Diabetes Burnout
“Reading Steven Alper’s book, I was impressed by its thoroughness and comprehensibility. He takes the complicated task of weaving mindfulness meditation into the therapeutic process and makes it philosophical and practical. The model he creates is dynamic, clear, and relational, and reflects his embodiment of mindfulness. I appreciated the range of meditations included in the book and the depth of understanding and clarity he brings to their usage. The breadth of the book makes it indispensable as a resource for all serious- minded therapists who want to maintain the integrity of meditation and deepen not only their own practice, but healing itself.”
— Elana Rosenbaum, LICSW , certified mindfulness- based stress reduction (MBSR) teacher, psychotherapist, speaker, and author of Being Well (Even When You’re Sick) and Here for Now
“Steve Alper has given the world a remarkable synthesis that will be profoundly beneficial for therapists both personally and professionally if engaged in wholeheartedly as a way of being. How could their clients not benefit as well?”
— Jon Kabat- Zinn , founder of mindfulness- based stress reduction (MBSR), and author of Full Catastrophe Living and Coming to Our Senses
“Drawing on decades of personal mindfulness practice, dedicated exploration of wisdom traditions, and thoughtful psychotherapeutic work, Steven Alper offers us a detailed, comprehensive, well- researched, and up- to- date exploration of how mindfulness practices can enrich and inform virtually any form of psychotherapy.”
— Ronald D. Siegel, PsyD , author of The Mindfulness Solution , coeditor of Mindfulness and Psychotherapy , and part- time assistant professor of psychology at Harvard Medical School
“Every once in a while a book comes along that exactly fits a need for our profession. Alper’s Mindfulness Meditation in Psychotherapy is one of those books. With the burst of energy and popularity of mindfulness meditation, this book guides therapists to integrating these skills into our own self- awareness and into a toolbox for our clients. Packed with sophisticated depth applications, as well as handy little tips, this book belongs on every clinician’s shelf.”
— David B. Wexler, PhD , author of When Good Men Behave Badly and Is He Depressed or What?
“This is the sine qua non book for any psychotherapist who integrates mindfulness into their psychotherapy practice, or wishes to and desires a road map. To the best of my knowledge, there is no one out there in the field that has put the pieces together in quite this unique fashion. Steven Alper has synthesized three major theoretical paradigms extant in contemporary psychotherapy: Buddhist psychology and practice, the mindfulness movement, and relational psychotherapy. However imposing that may sound, all of it is highly readable and immediately applicable to an ongoing psychotherapy practice.”
— Richard F. Avery, LCSW , assistant professor in the department of psychiatry at the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine; and certified teacher of Compassion Cultivation Training (CCT) through the Center for Compassion and Altruism Research and Education (CCARE) at Stanford University
“Steven Alper has written the best set of guidelines I have read for integrating mindfulness meditation into psychotherapy, in a format that will benefit the beginning and the experienced meditator. He writes with great integrity to the spaciousness and nonverbal wisdom of meditation practice, at the same time that he offers essential practical advice and integration of evidence- based approaches. As an experienced meditator, I have already benefited from using his illuminating ‘pyramid’ model in my work with clients and in teaching students how the therapist’s embodied meditation practice stabilizes the client’s capacity for emotional experience.”
— Roberta Isberg, MD , assistant professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School, teacher of psychotherapy— including dialectical behavior therapy (DBT) and parent- child interaction therapy— in the Child Fellows program at Boston Children’s Hospital, and graduate and current member of the Boston Psychoanalytic Society and Institute
“Brilliant and highly accessible, this book is not only about how to bring mindfulness into your practice of psychotherapy, it’s about how to be a great therapist. In other words, mindfulness as described in this book is not a specialized form of therapy; it constitutes a basis for the foundational ingredients that make for excellent psychotherapy, such as authenticity, present- moment attention, curiosity, compassion, and unconditional positive regard. I hope this book is integrated into basic training for psychotherapists.”
— Cassandra Vieten, PhD , president and CEO of the Institute of Noetic Sciences, author of Mindful Motherhood , and coauthor of Spiritual and Religious Competencies in Clinical Practice


Publisher’s Note
This publication is designed to provide accurate and authoritative information in regard to the subject matter covered. It is sold with the understanding that the publisher is not engaged in rendering psychological, financial, legal, or other professional services. If expert assistance or counseling is needed, the services of a competent professional should be sought.
Distributed in Canada by Raincoast Books
Copyright © 2016 by Steven A.

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