Narrative Means to Sober Ends: Treating Addiction and Its Aftermath

Author:   Jonathan Diamond (private practice, United States) ,  David C. Treadway
Publisher:   Guilford Publications
ISBN:  

9781572305663


Pages:   386
Publication Date:   31 August 2000
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available.

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Narrative Means to Sober Ends: Treating Addiction and Its Aftermath


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Full Product Details

Author:   Jonathan Diamond (private practice, United States) ,  David C. Treadway
Publisher:   Guilford Publications
Imprint:   Guilford Publications
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 3.20cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.714kg
ISBN:  

9781572305663


ISBN 10:   1572305665
Pages:   386
Publication Date:   31 August 2000
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available.

Table of Contents

Prologue Introduction: Remembering Addiction I. Writing for Our Lives 1. A Sobriety of Literary Merit 2. Letters of Invitation and Dismissal 3. Bargaining: Controlled Drinking and Other Negotiated Settlements 4. Telegrams from God: Reauthoring Spirituality 5. Epilogues: Letting Go II. Detoxing the Theory 6. Becoming 12-Step Literate III. Stories for Our Times 7. Trauma and Recovery 8. Reality Bytes: Narrating Food Addictions 9. Writing Home: Applications to Family Therapy 10. Sobering Up Ophelia: Therapy with Children and Adolescents 11. Narrating Our Own Stories: Therapists in Recovery IV: No Conclusions 12. A Less Convenient Fiction Postscript: Muddling Through

Reviews

This fluent, engrossing book takes us to the heart of the therapeutic relationship, into the experience of the therapist and the inner lives of clients. Powerful elements of 12-step approaches are interwoven with narrative therapy's brilliant use of letter writing. The poetic energy of Diamond's voice ties these strands together as he provides his own vivid commentary and reflections. Therapists, teachers, students, and concerned general readers should find in this book instruction without tears. --Lynn Hoffman, ACSW, author of Exchanging Voices <br> Ever wonder how therapy feels to a recovering addict? Then you'll want to read this book and its many accounts of pain, loss, suffering, and recovery. Stories of survival tell more than any diagnosis about what has gone wrong in a person's life--some of the more impressive letters included in this book are addressed to the substance that started the addiction. Reading these stories and learning of their role in treatment, we begin to see how the images and metaphors that go into their telling are healing in their own right. Instead of punctuating his sessions with interpretations, Diamond weaves a coherent account that tries to make sense of an often-interrupted past, and his clients are clearly grateful. This book should be useful both in doctoral clinical programs and in workshops for experienced practitioners. --Donald P. Spence, PhD, Clinical Professor of Psychiatry, Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, UMDNJ; author of Narrative Truth and Historical Truth <br> Poignantly describing the experience of the addict and of the therapist working with addiction, this book provides good advice for acting quickly and therapeutically with clients. Diamond draws extensively on his own experience to model a therapeutic stance that is open, direct, and egalitarian, without ever abdicating the importance of knowledge and clinical skill. He is always reality-based, whether dealing with behavior, affect, or unconsciousr


This fluent, engrossing book takes us to the heart of the therapeutic relationship, into the experience of the therapist and the inner lives of clients. Powerful elements of 12-step approaches are interwoven with narrative therapy's brilliant use of letter writing. The poetic energy of Diamond's voice ties these strands together as he provides his own vivid commentary and reflections. Therapists, teachers, students, and concerned general readers should find in this book instruction without tears. --Lynn Hoffman, ACSW, author of Exchanging Voices <br> Ever wonder how therapy feels to a recovering addict? Then you'll want to read this book and its many accounts of pain, loss, suffering, and recovery. Stories of survival tell more than any diagnosis about what has gone wrong in a person's life--some of the more impressive letters included in this book are addressed to the substance that started the addiction. Reading these stories and learning of their role in treatment, we begin t


I know of no other book that so boldly strives to build bridges between the recovery movement and the innovative developments of collaborative family therapies....Throughout the book, Diamond demonstrates creative ways to help clients explore their relationship to drugs and alcohol by using 12-step approaches interwoven with narrative therapy's externalizing practices and uses of letter writing....With the combination of these two paradigms, Diamond brings together allied methods with which to break free of the stranglehold of addiction and address the havoc left in its wake. -- Journal of Systemic Therapies <br> Alcoholics Anonymous has become the forum for recovering people to share their experience, strength, and hope with each other in an effort to maintain lives of sobriety and balance. Narrative Means to Sober Ends extends on the methods on which all self-help rests: telling our stories. Jonathan Diamond is able to share his own experience, strength, and hope with his audience, bringing to them a sense of hopefulness and serenity and gives providers useful tools for helping their clients to find healing and hope. Well done, Dr. Diamond. -- Psychiatric Rehabilitation Journal <br>.,. a worthy addition to addiction treatment literature. -- Employee Assistance Quarterly <br> With eloquence, clarity, skill, and artistry, Diamond opens up a whole new perspective on the process of therapy for client and clinician, and on how narrative techniques can help in achieving recovery. Without abandoning biological or neurological research findings, he demonstrates innovative, flexible ways to help clients understand their lives and the role that drugs and alcohol play. -- Readings <br> Diamond....exhibits good knowledge of psychotherapy's theoretical underpinnings in his lucid explanations of analytic concepts such as transference and countertransference....what comes through is the experience of a compassionate, successful therapist who integrates 12-step and psychotherapeutic principles in the treatment of his patients....because he is such a good writer, the reader feels his and his patients' joys and sorrows.... Narrative Means to Sober Ends will appeal both to new addiction treaters and to experienced therapists. With its integrated approach, the book should likewise attract a multidisciplinary readership. -- Psychiatric Services <br> Strongly recommended for anyone interested in (or concerned about) addiction and substance abuse, this is one of the most interesting books on addiction treatment to come out in years. Diamond provides a fresh approach to the topic in a highly readable format....All libraries need to purchase this book for the use of undergraduates, researchers, and general readers. -- Choice <br>


This fluent, engrossing book takes us to the heart of the therapeutic relationship, into the experience of the therapist and the inner lives of clients. Powerful elements of 12-step approaches are interwoven with narrative therapy's brilliant use of letter writing. The poetic energy of Diamond's voice ties these strands together as he provides his own vivid commentary and reflections. Therapists, teachers, students, and concerned general readers should find in this book instruction without tears. --Lynn Hoffman, ACSW, author of Exchanging Voices Ever wonder how therapy feels to a recovering addict? Then you'll want to read this book and its many accounts of pain, loss, suffering, and recovery. Stories of survival tell more than any diagnosis about what has gone wrong in a person's life--some of the more impressive letters included in this book are addressed to the substance that started the addiction. Reading these stories and learning of their role in treatment, we begin to see how the images and metaphors that go into their telling are healing in their own right. Instead of punctuating his sessions with interpretations, Diamond weaves a coherent account that tries to make sense of an often-interrupted past, and his clients are clearly grateful. This book should be useful both in doctoral clinical programs and in workshops for experienced practitioners. --Donald P. Spence, PhD, Clinical Professor of Psychiatry, Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, UMDNJ; author of Narrative Truth and Historical Truth Poignantly describing the experience of the addict and of the therapist working with addiction, this book provides good advice for acting quickly and therapeutically with clients. Diamond draws extensively on his own experience to model a therapeutic stance that is open, direct, and egalitarian, without ever abdicating the importance of knowledge and clinical skill. He is always reality-based, whether dealing with behavior, affect, or unconscious motivation. The narrative method is well presented, and best of all is the sense the reader gets of the therapist's real presence and engagement. This book is a basic primer to help therapists become bicultural and bilingual--to become 12-step literate without giving up their own beliefs, theories, or first therapeutic language. Diamond moves away from a narrow, rule-bound, 'fix-it' mentality to offer a much-needed expansion in thinking, attitude, and principle. --Stephanie Brown, PhD, Director, Addictions Institute, Menlo Park, CA; author of The Alcoholic Family in Recovery I strongly urge anyone interested in understanding addiction to take this journey with Jonathan Diamond. This is an engaging and richly diverse guide to understanding the complexities of recovery. Diamond is a kind and creative advocate for the multitude of addicted adults and adolescents asking to be heard. --Dusty Miller, EdD, author of Women Who Hurt Themselves


Author Information

Jonathan Diamond, PhD, received his doctorate from Smith College School of Social Work, his MSW from the University of Connecticut, and his postgraduate training in marital and family therapy at the Brattleboro Family Institute in Brattelboro, Vermont. His previous experience includes establishing and directing outpatient substance abuse and inpatient dual diagnosis treatment programs for children, adolescents, adults, and their families. Dr. Diamond has been teaching and training in the fields of addiction and psychotherapy for the past 15 years. He is currently in private practice in Northampton and Greenfield, Massachusetts.

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