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E-raamat: No Bullshit Therapy: How to engage people who don't want to work with you

(The Bouverie Centre, La Trobe University, Australia)
  • Formaat: 178 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 05-Dec-2023
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781003802303
  • Formaat - EPUB+DRM
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  • Formaat: 178 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 05-Dec-2023
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781003802303

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Do you have clients who do not want to be helped? Clients who don't trust you, your profession, or your service. Clients who don’t want to change, despite needing to and despite your best efforts. Then No Bullshit Therapy (NBT) is for you! Most simply, NBT is about being authentic.



Do you have clients who do not want to be helped? Clients who don’t trust you, your profession, or your service? Clients who don’t want to change despite your best efforts?

Then No Bullshit Therapy (NBT) is for you! Most simply, NBT is about being authentic.

Many people are cajoled, pressured, or mandated to see therapists, counsellors, and other helpers. Hence, they are reluctant, suspicious, and resistant to being helped. This puts professionals in the difficult position of trying to help someone who does not want to be helped. To make things worse, there are few practice models designed to engage people who don’t want to be engaged.

NBT creates a context for mutual honesty and directness in working relationships. Creating a context for mutual honesty and directness can be refreshingly effective, especially with people who are suspicious of counselling or distrustful of the counsellor. When combined with warmth and care, honesty and directness can enhance co-operation, connection, and trust, especially if the practitioner avoids jargon and acknowledges constraints to the work. NBT is ideal for working with people who:

  • Don’t like therapy or the idea of therapy (even if they’ve never had it)
  • Don’t trust warm fuzzy “do-gooders” or “psychologisers”
  • Are suspicious of services because they have experienced trauma and have had abusive institutional experiences or unsatisfactory treatment in the past
  • Don’t see themselves as a client, don’t agree with the referrer’s description of them or their problems, and appear to not want to change

Practical and engaging, this book is an essential guide for therapists, counsellors, and other allied-health professionals who are looking for a more effective way to connect with reluctant clients and ensure they get the support they need. It may also help you create more robust relationships at work and at home.

Arvustused

"No Bullshit Therapy: How To Engage People Who Dont Want to Work with You is excellent. Enjoyable to read, full of good ideas and compelling examples, it is a book our profession and clients need. It will help you to connect and be effective with a range of clients, especially those who are often described as resistant' and difficult to work with. Highly recommended!"

Michael F. Hoyt, Ph.D (USA). Author of Brief Therapy and Beyond: Stories, Language, Love, Hope, and Time and Brief Therapy Conversations: Exploring Efficient Intervention in Psychotherapy (with Flavio Cannistrà).

"This book is not just for therapists trying to work with clients who hate the idea of therapy. It is for all of us who have ever avoided that difficult conversation we know we should have. Jeff Young guides us through the philosophy and practice of NBT, with detailed client transcripts, all exuding his own particular combination of warmth and honesty."

Pam Rycroft, MPsych. (Australia). Co-editor of Single-Session Thinking and Practice in Global, Cultural, and Familial Contexts: Expanding Applications.

"Jeff Young's work on 'No Bullshit Therapy' is, in my view, one of the most important developments in the field of therapy since Single-Session Therapy came onto the scene towards the end of the last century. In fact, the combination of these developments increases the potency of both. Mandatory reading if you have to work with mandated clients...and if you don't".

Windy Dryden, Ph.D (UK). Emeritus Professor of Psychotherapeutic Studies, Goldsmiths University of London, UK.

Chapter 1: Introduction to No Bullshit Therapy 1.1 No Bullshit Therapy
Clinical Guidelines: At a glance 1.2 Aim of this book 1.3 Notes on language
1.4 Notes on clinical examples 1.5 How this book is organised 1.6 References
Chapter 2: The Theory of Bullshit 2.1 Bullshit: History and definitions 2.2
Loss of faith in political leaders in the world of spin, fake news, and
post-truth 2.3 The loss of faith in health professionals 2.4 References
Chapter 3: The Development of No Bullshit Therapy 3.1 References
Chapter 4:
Therapy-Lovers and Therapy-Haters 4.1 Other models designed to engage
therapy-haters 4.2 Engagement: How is it different with therapy-haters? 4.3
References
Chapter 5: NBT Clinical Guidelines and Practice Notes for Working
with Therapy-Haters 5.1 Creating a context to promote mutual honesty and
directness
1. Establish a mandate: How to work, what to work on
2. Marry
honesty and directness with warmth and care
3. Be upfront about constraints
4. Avoid jargon 5.2 References
Chapter 6: NBT Clinical Guidelines: Practice
Notes for Working with Therapy-Lovers 6.1 Creating a context to promote
mutual honesty and directness with therapy-lovers
1. Establishing a mandate
when working with therapy-lovers
2. Marrying honesty and directness with
warmth and care when working with therapy-lovers
3. Being upfront about
constraints when working with therapy-lovers
4. Avoiding jargon when working
with therapy-lovers References
Chapter 7: NBT First Session with Commentary
7.1 The ideal No Bullshit therapist 7.2 References
Chapter 8: NBT Safety
Strategies 8.1 References
Chapter 9: NBT Tools 9.1 Self-supervision for
workers Self-supervision for clients 9.2 The NBT hand for making everyday
requests 9.3 References
Chapter 10: NBT, Power, and Social Identity 10.1
Power 10.2 Social identity 10.3 References
Chapter 11: NBT, Trauma, Blame,
and Shame 11.1 NBT session transcript with neuropsychological commentary 11.2
NBT client commentary 11.3 References
Chapter 12: NBT with Couples, Families,
and at Work 12.1 Couples 12.2 Families 12.3 Work meetings 12.4 Saying the
unsayable in the workplace 12.5 References
Chapter 13: Concluding Comments
13.1 References
Jeff Young, PhD, is Emeritus Professor of Family Therapy and Systemic Practice at La Trobe University, Melbourne, Australia. He was Director of The Bouverie Centre, the worlds largest family therapy agency (20092022). His awards include the ANZJFT Special Award for Distinguished Contributions to Family Therapy (2017) and the THEMHS Exceptional Contributions to Mental Health (2022).