Encountering the Sacred in Psychotherapy: How to Talk with People about Their Spiritual Lives

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James L. Griffith, Melissa Elliott Griffith
Guilford Press, 29 jul 2003 - 320 páginas
This volume guides therapists and students in exploring the creative and healing possibilities in people's spiritual and religious experience, while countering ways it can do harm. The authors integrate ideas from a range of therapeutic perspectives--as well as wisdom gleaned from over 20 years of work in the field--to help therapists listen and respond when spiritual or religious themes are invoked; ask appropriate questions about beliefs, practices, and communities; and work collaboratively to identify personally meaningful resources for change. Applications are discussed for a wide variety of clinical situations, including helping people resolve relationship problems, manage psychiatric symptoms, and cope with medical illness. Key Features: * Filled with evocative personal accounts and therapeutic dialogues. * Religion and spirituality are the subjects of increased interest across the full range of mental health fields. * Provides concrete guidance on dealing with issues that are challenging for many therapists. * Applicable to a wide range of religions and belief systems.
 

Índice

New Ways of Hearing Sacred Stories
1
Opening the Door
28
Metaphor and Spirituality
53
Stories of Spiritual Experience
81
Conversations between Person and God
103
Spiritual and Religious Beliefs
137
Rituals Ceremonies and Spiritual Practices
164
The Community in Spirituality
189
When Spirituality Turns Destructive
215
Living beyond Medical and Psychiatric Illnesses
258
References
301
Index
313
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Sobre el autor (2003)

James L. Griffith, MD, is Professor of Psychiatry and Neurology at The George Washington University Medical Center, where he directs the psychiatry residency training program and the consultation-liaison psychiatry service. Melissa Elliott Griffith, CNS, LMFT, serves on the psychiatry clinical faculty at The George Washington University Medical Center and practices psychotherapy in Vienna, Virginia. They are both affiliated with the Center for Multicultural Human Services in Falls Church, Virginia.

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