Narrative Reflections: How Witnessing Their Stories Changes Our Lives

Author:   Lucy S. Raizman ,  Bea Hollander-Goldfein
Publisher:   University Press of America
ISBN:  

9780761862352


Pages:   140
Publication Date:   12 November 2013
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Narrative Reflections: How Witnessing Their Stories Changes Our Lives


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Full Product Details

Author:   Lucy S. Raizman ,  Bea Hollander-Goldfein
Publisher:   University Press of America
Imprint:   Hamilton Books
Dimensions:   Width: 15.10cm , Height: 1.10cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.222kg
ISBN:  

9780761862352


ISBN 10:   0761862358
Pages:   140
Publication Date:   12 November 2013
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements Introduction Chapter One Living with Stories of Pain Kilian Fritsch Chapter Two The Price of Silence Ruthy Kaiser Chapter Three Saved by Living in Fortunate Times Peter Capper Chapter Four An Accident of Birth Lyn Groome Chapter Five Beyond the Screen Door Margaret S. Roth Chapter Six Learning to Survive Michael Izzo Epilogue I Their Stories, Our Lives Lucy S. Raizman Epilogue II The Power of the Group and the Gift of Reflection Bea Hollander-Goldfein About the Editors and Contributors Bibliography

Reviews

This very powerful book highlights the invisible line between broken hearts and open hearts. Painful stories eloquently told invite us to look unflinchingly into the heart of suffering and the humanity beyond. But just as important, we find out that the act of bearing witness, of approaching suffering with an open heart, changes us. And always for the better. -- Daniel Gottlieb Ph.D., Host of Voices in the Family; author of Family Matters In these astonishing chapters, six therapists work through their own pain and suffering through intimate witnessing of the transcripts of three families in the Transcending Trauma Project. The reader encounters the courage that the reflectors movingly present. Positioned as witnesses, we too have an opportunity to observe what openhearted reading can bring to our lives. -- Kaethe Weingarten, PhD, director, The Witnessing Project, Berkeley, California Michael White adapted what the anthropologist Barbara Myerhoff described as 'definitional ceremonies' in her fieldwork with Holocaust survivors in a California Old Folks center to become a central practice-outsider witnessing- of narrative therapy and community work. I find it a wonderful twist of fate that the authors of this book, children of survivors, adapt this and use it for their own purposes as they themselves become 'outsider witnesses' to the stories of their parent's 'survivor' generation. If Michael and Barbara had survived to learn about this, I suspect they would have embraced each other as kindred spirits. -- David Epston, co-author with Michael White of Narrative Means to Therapeutic Ends (1990) and Experience, Contradiction, Narrative and Imagination (1992) The deeply inspiring essays in this volume clearly demonstrate the enormous healing power of human connections and bearing witness to the greatest atrocity of the twentieth century. Instead of focusing on the psychopathology, this group of experts listened and responded with their hearts. The reader will get a rare and invaluable look at the compassionate intertwining of pained lives and its triumphant aftermath. -- Ira Brenner, training and supervising analyst, Psychoanalytic Center of Philadelphia, PA, and co-author with Judith Kestenberg of The Last Witness-The Child Survivor of the Holocaust This remarkably sensitive study reports on mental health therapists venturing to examine their own empathic reactivity in listening to Holocaust survivors' narratives bearing witness to their malignant victimization and suffering. This study richly furthers our understanding of how, if we allow it, our common humanity makes the suffering of another reverberate within oneself-and not only furthers our understanding of the other's experience of trauma, but by allowing our empathic reactivity evoke in us self-exploration and reflectiveness makes us aware of our own traumatization, heightening our own humanity as clinicians. Perhaps a world filled with people willing to listen-for real-to the traumas of others would become a world of diminishing intentional traumatization. This is a welcome addition to our multifaceted study of the Holocaust, of genocide. -- Henri Parens, MD, professor of Psychiatry, Thomas Jefferson University; training and supervising analyst (adult and child), Psychoanalytic Center of Philadelphia, PA; author of Renewal of Life-Healing from the Holocaust Human beings have a deep need to tell our stories of suffering and survival, but there is something in our stories that can't be told-something in us that transcends any story, but that, paradoxically, emerges and comes more clearly into focus precisely in the telling of and bearing witness to each other's stories as the authors in Narrative Reflections have done. -- Elio Frattaroli, MD, psychoanalyst, author of Healing the Soul in the Age of the Brain: Becoming Conscious in an Unconscious World


This very powerful book highlights the invisible line between broken hearts and open hearts. Painful stories eloquently told invite us to look unflinchingly into the heart of suffering and the humanity beyond. But just as important, we find out that the act of bearing witness, of approaching suffering with an open heart, changes us. And always for the better. -- Daniel Gottlieb, Ph.D., Host of Voices in the Family, and author of Family Matters, and Voices of Conflict; Voices of Healing. In these astonishing chapters, six therapists work through their own pain and suffering through intimate witnessing of the transcripts of three families in the Transcending Trauma Project. The reader encounters the courage that the reflectors movingly present. Positioned as witnesses, we too have an opportunity to observe what openhearted reading can bring to our lives. -- Kaethe Weingarten, PhD, director, The Witnessing Project, Berkeley, California Michael White adapted what the anthropologist Barbara Myerhoff described as 'definitional ceremonies' in her fieldwork with Holocaust survivors in a California Old Folks center to become a central practice-outsider witnessing- of narrative therapy and community work. I find it a wonderful twist of fate that the authors of this book, children of survivors, adapt this and use it for their own purposes as they themselves become 'outsider witnesses' to the stories of their parent's 'survivor' generation. If Michael and Barbara had survived to learn about this, I suspect they would have embraced each other as kindred spirits. -- David Epston, co-author with Michael White of Narrative Means to Therapeutic Ends (1990) and Experience, Contradiction, Narrative and Imagination (1992) The deeply inspiring essays in this volume clearly demonstrate the enormous healing power of human connections and bearing witness to the greatest atrocity of the twentieth century. Instead of focusing on the psychopathology, this group of experts listened and responded with their hearts. The reader will get a rare and invaluable look at the compassionate intertwining of pained lives and its triumphant aftermath. -- Ira Brenner, training and supervising analyst, Psychoanalytic Center of Philadelphia, PA, and co-author with Judith Kestenberg of The Last Witness-The Child Survivor of the Holocaust This remarkably sensitive study reports on mental health therapists venturing to examine their own empathic reactivity in listening to Holocaust survivors' narratives bearing witness to their malignant victimization and suffering. This study richly furthers our understanding of how, if we allow it, our common humanity makes the suffering of another reverberate within oneself-and not only furthers our understanding of the other's experience of trauma, but by allowing our empathic reactivity evoke in us self-exploration and reflectiveness makes us aware of our own traumatization, heightening our own humanity as clinicians. Perhaps a world filled with people willing to listen-for real-to the traumas of others would become a world of diminishing intentional traumatization. This is a welcome addition to our multifaceted study of the Holocaust, of genocide. -- Henri Parens, MD, professor of Psychiatry, Thomas Jefferson University, training and supervising analyst (adult and child), Psychoanalytic Center of Philadelphia, PA, author of Renewal of Life-Healing from the Holocaust Human beings have a deep need to tell our stories of suffering and survival, but there is something in our stories that can't be told-something in us that transcends any story, but that, paradoxically, emerges and comes more clearly into focus precisely in the telling of and bearing witness to each other's stories as the authors in Narrative Reflections have done. -- Elio Frattaroli, MD, psychoanalyst, author of Healing the Soul in the Age of the Brain: Becoming Conscious in an Unconscious World


Author Information

Lucy S. Raizman, MSW, LCSW, LMFT, is a licensed clinical social worker and marriage and family therapist, AAMFT-approved supervisor, AASECT-approved sex therapist, EMDR-trained therapist, and EFT-certified couple therapist. Since 2001, she has been a senior staff clinician at the Council for Relationships, a not-for-profit educational, counseling, and research center and postgraduate training program in couple and family therapy in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Raizman has been a research associate and interviewer for the Transcending Trauma Project since 1992. She received her MSW from the University of Pittsburgh and completed her postgraduate training at the Council for Relationships. Bea Hollander-Goldfein, PhD, LMFT, is a licensed psychologist and marriage and family therapist. Since 1991, she has been the director of the Transcending Trauma Project at the Council for Relationships. Hollander-Goldfein is the director of the Post Graduate Certificate Program in Marriage and Family Therapy accredited by the AAMFT (American Association for Marriage and Family Therapy), the director of research, and the director of supervision at the Council for Relationships. She is an instructor and supervisor in the Postgraduate Training Program and a clinical assistant professor at Jefferson Medical College. Hollander-Goldfein received her doctorate in psychology from Teachers College, Columbia University.

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