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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Yildiz SethiPublisher: various Australia publishers Imprint: various Australia publishers Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.70cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.417kg ISBN: 9780648479147ISBN 10: 0648479145 Pages: 312 Publication Date: 11 March 2019 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsProfessor Gordon Emmerson - author of Resource Therapy Charles Darwin, in On the Origin of Species, laid out his view of the evolution of the animal kingdom. Multi-generational change leads to an easily recognisable change in the species. I am amazed at the speed of change in psychotherapy during the past few years. Freud, Jung, Adler, Federn and others distilled some basic views of psychotherapy near the end of the 19th Century and the beginning of the 20th Century. Half a century later, Rogers, Ellis, Skinner, and others took psychotherapy in different directions with their own views of personality and change. None of the views of these early therapists were really complex. While some authors were prolific, their views of personality were rather simple. The early psychodynamic therapists saw that events occurring earlier in life formed psychological health and they believed that to deal with today's issues, was important to become aware of past connected events. The phenomenologists believed that the agent for change was in providing an opportunity for reflection, understanding and acceptance within the walls of the therapy room. The cognitive behaviourists believed that behavioural change came from reframing and homework, changing how one thinks about an issue while using behavioural practices. What is similar in all these approaches is the notion that a core set of interventions would work with every client. This is best exemplified by psychoanalysts. Basically, the same techniques are used with every client, regardless of the issues that are presented. While some cognitive behaviour therapy (CBT) therapists have adopted newer techniques, such as mindfulness, the basic techniques used with each issue, are reframing and homework. Person-centred therapists (phenomenologists) use active listening, self-disclosure and a small number of basic techniques with almost every client. These early therapies are overly simplistic. The human personality is complex and the types of issues that are presented by clients are complex. This complexity eludes the simple vision and techniques of earlier therapeutic approaches. While psychotherapy evolved slowly for the first hundred years, more recently, there has been an explosion of new therapies and new therapeutic techniques. Several new therapies are introduced every year, some simple in nature like the initial ones, and some more complex. Where the evolution of the species has been slow from a human-time perspective, the evolution of therapy has increased in speed exponentially. Many of the new approaches are mutations that will be lost, but some show real promise to evolve further into approaches that can address the complex nature of personality and therapeutic issues. Yildiz Sethi, in Rapid Core Healing Pathways to Growth and Emotional Healing: Using a unique dual approach of Family Constellations and Emotional Mind Integration, presents her contribution to the array of new therapies. Hers is not a simplistic approach. She draws from a number of other approaches to define a set of techniques for clients presenting a vast array of issues. Existentialists see three worlds in which we live: the Eigenwelt, our personal inner world; the Mitwelt, our social world; and the Umwelt, the physical world around us of mountains, stars, and food. Yildiz Sethi sees therapeutic issues springing from the personal world of choice and experience, or from a social world that is sometimes multi-generational. She defines these as: 1. Personal, individual issues that have their source in life events, choices, conflicts, distress and dilemmas. 2. Systemic issues that have their source in the relational, psychological and emotional impacts coming from their experiences in their family-of-origin. "Professor Gordon Emmerson - author of Resource Therapy Charles Darwin, in On the Origin of Species, laid out his view of the evolution of the animal kingdom. Multi-generational change leads to an easily recognisable change in the species. I am amazed at the speed of change in psychotherapy during the past few years. Freud, Jung, Adler, Federn and others distilled some basic views of psychotherapy near the end of the 19th Century and the beginning of the 20th Century. Half a century later, Rogers, Ellis, Skinner, and others took psychotherapy in different directions with their own views of personality and change. None of the views of these early therapists were really complex. While some authors were prolific, their views of personality were rather simple. The early psychodynamic therapists saw that events occurring earlier in life formed psychological health and they believed that to deal with today's issues, was important to become aware of past connected events. The phenomenologists believed that the agent for change was in providing an opportunity for reflection, understanding and acceptance within the walls of the therapy room. The cognitive behaviourists believed that behavioural change came from reframing and homework, changing how one thinks about an issue while using behavioural practices. What is similar in all these approaches is the notion that a core set of interventions would work with every client. This is best exemplified by psychoanalysts. Basically, the same techniques are used with every client, regardless of the issues that are presented. While some cognitive behaviour therapy (CBT) therapists have adopted newer techniques, such as mindfulness, the basic techniques used with each issue, are reframing and homework. Person-centred therapists (phenomenologists) use active listening, self-disclosure and a small number of basic techniques with almost every client. These early therapies are overly simplistic. The human personality is complex and the types of issues that are presented by clients are complex. This complexity eludes the simple vision and techniques of earlier therapeutic approaches. While psychotherapy evolved slowly for the first hundred years, more recently, there has been an explosion of new therapies and new therapeutic techniques. Several new therapies are introduced every year, some simple in nature like the initial ones, and some more complex. Where the evolution of the species has been slow from a human-time perspective, the evolution of therapy has increased in speed exponentially. Many of the new approaches are mutations that will be lost, but some show real promise to evolve further into approaches that can address the complex nature of personality and therapeutic issues. Yildiz Sethi, in Rapid Core Healing Pathways to Growth and Emotional Healing: Using a unique dual approach of Family Constellations and Emotional Mind Integration, presents her contribution to the array of new therapies. Hers is not a simplistic approach. She draws from a number of other approaches to define a set of techniques for clients presenting a vast array of issues. Existentialists see three worlds in which we live: the Eigenwelt, our personal inner world; the Mitwelt, our social world; and the Umwelt, the physical world around us of mountains, stars, and food. Yildiz Sethi sees therapeutic issues springing from the personal world of choice and experience, or from a social world that is sometimes multi-generational. She defines these as: ""1. Personal, individual issues that have their source in life events, choices, conflicts, distress and dilemmas. 2. Systemic issues that have their source in the relational, psychological and emotional impacts coming from their experiences in their family-of-origin." Professor Gordon Emmerson - author of Resource Therapy Charles Darwin, in On the Origin of Species, laid out his view of the evolution of the animal kingdom. Multi-generational change leads to an easily recognisable change in the species. I am amazed at the speed of change in psychotherapy during the past few years. Freud, Jung, Adler, Federn and others distilled some basic views of psychotherapy near the end of the 19th Century and the beginning of the 20th Century. Half a century later, Rogers, Ellis, Skinner, and others took psychotherapy in different directions with their own views of personality and change. None of the views of these early therapists were really complex. While some authors were prolific, their views of personality were rather simple. The early psychodynamic therapists saw that events occurring earlier in life formed psychological health and they believed that to deal with today's issues, was important to become aware of past connected events. The phenomenologists believed that the agent for change was in providing an opportunity for reflection, understanding and acceptance within the walls of the therapy room. The cognitive behaviourists believed that behavioural change came from reframing and homework, changing how one thinks about an issue while using behavioural practices. What is similar in all these approaches is the notion that a core set of interventions would work with every client. This is best exemplified by psychoanalysts. Basically, the same techniques are used with every client, regardless of the issues that are presented. While some cognitive behaviour therapy (CBT) therapists have adopted newer techniques, such as mindfulness, the basic techniques used with each issue, are reframing and homework. Person-centred therapists (phenomenologists) use active listening, self-disclosure and a small number of basic techniques with almost every client. These early therapies are overly simplistic. The human personality is complex and the types of issues that are presented by clients are complex. This complexity eludes the simple vision and techniques of earlier therapeutic approaches. While psychotherapy evolved slowly for the first hundred years, more recently, there has been an explosion of new therapies and new therapeutic techniques. Several new therapies are introduced every year, some simple in nature like the initial ones, and some more complex. Where the evolution of the species has been slow from a human-time perspective, the evolution of therapy has increased in speed exponentially. Many of the new approaches are mutations that will be lost, but some show real promise to evolve further into approaches that can address the complex nature of personality and therapeutic issues. Yildiz Sethi, in Rapid Core Healing Pathways to Growth and Emotional Healing: Using a unique dual approach of Family Constellations and Emotional Mind Integration, presents her contribution to the array of new therapies. Hers is not a simplistic approach. She draws from a number of other approaches to define a set of techniques for clients presenting a vast array of issues. Existentialists see three worlds in which we live: the Eigenwelt, our personal inner world; the Mitwelt, our social world; and the Umwelt, the physical world around us of mountains, stars, and food. Yildiz Sethi sees therapeutic issues springing from the personal world of choice and experience, or from a social world that is sometimes multi-generational. She defines these as: ""1. Personal, individual issues that have their source in life events, choices, conflicts, distress and dilemmas. 2. Systemic issues that have their source in the relational, psychological and emotional impacts coming from their experiences in their family-of-origin. Author InformationYildiz has a passion for growth and development. She runs a private practice in Brisbane where she practices Rapid Core Healing (RCH), Emotional Mind Integration (EMI) and Family Constellations private sessions and workshops. She provides training in RCH, EMI and Family Constellations. Yildiz started her professional life as a physics and chemistry school teacher and transitioned into counselling at a crossroads in her life. She was interested in discovering how to enhance wellbeing in herself and facilitate change and wellbeing in others. In entering the profession she was driven to find the most effective ways to work so as to facilitate effective, permanent change in her clients. She became a hypnotherapist, NLP practitioner, Ego State Therapist and Family Constellations practitioner and trainer. She is a supervisor and was a part time Educator at the Australian College of Applied Psychology for eight years specializing in Methods of Counselling. Her deep knowledge of therapeutic methodologies and clinical practice and her strong curiosity for what really made a difference with clients informed her developing practice. Her introduction to hypnotherapy was a pivotal point in her professional development in allowing her to work with the unconscious mind in 2002. While she was happy with this she was introduced to Family Constellation sin 2005. This was transformative in being introduced to a very different way of working that addressed many levels of human consciousness simultaneously in a brief and powerful process that proves an avenue for self-healing for issues that come from their family system. This is a transformative brief, psychotherapeutic approach that may take in workshops or individual sessions that in effect allow clients to repair faulty attachments to their parents and resolve transgenerational patterns and trauma that may be reducing self esteem, relationships. Mental health or wellness. Yildiz realized that when she went back to counselling and psychotherapy for non systemic issues with clients in her private practice that it felt slow, cumbersome and was not as effective for her clients. Over several years she developed a modality called Emotional Mind Integration that is designed to locate the core of issues consisting of disturbances, conflicts and trauma stored in the unconscious mind. These are issues that arise from life experiences and choices in that they are not systemic. This resulted in a modality called Emotional Mind Integration for personal issues, conflicts and recovery of trauma. Through her practice she discovered that issues could generally be divided into two categories. Personal and systemic. Over 16 years of clinical practice Yildiz developed two new modalities from the range of skills under her belt. These are Rapid Core Healing and Emotional Mind Integration and is presented in her latest book Rapid Core Healing (2016). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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