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:::¼ö·Ã°¨µ¶ ¼ö·Ã °úÁ¤ Çʵ¶°úÁ¦ ¾È³»:::
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1. Àú¼ú ¹× ¹ø¿ªµÈ TA °ü·Ã Àü¹® ¼Àû ¸Å³â 10±Ç
2. ¾Æ·¡ÀÇ ¿µ¾î ¿ø¼ Áß ¸Å³â 4±Ç
3. TA Journal Áß¿¡¼ ¿¡¸¯ ¹ø ±â³äÇмú»óÀ» ¹ÞÀº Àú³Î ¸Å³â 10Æí
4. µ¶¼°úÁ¦´Â ¼ö·ÃÀÚÀÇ »óȲ¿¡ µû¶ó Á¶Á¤ÀÌ °¡´ÉÇÕ´Ï´Ù.
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What Do You Say After You Say Hello <--Click
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What Do You Say After You Say Hello explains what makes the winners win, the losers lose, and the in-betweens so boring... In it, Dr Eric Berne reveals how everyone's life follows a predetermined script - a script they compose for themselves during early childhood. The script may be a sad one, it may be a successful one; it decides how a person will relate to his colleagues, what sort of person he will marry, how many children he will have, and even what sort of bed he will die in... What Do You Say After You Say Hello demonstrates how each life script gets written, how it works and, more important, how anyone can improvise or change his script to make a happy ending...
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No More Drama <--Click
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:::No More Drama: A Practical Guide to Healthy Relationships:::
Extending back in time, people have been drawn to watch and participate in drama. Understood and used by playwrights and authors in all cultures of recorded history, and known in recent times as the triangle of disempowerment, drama triangle, or Karpman's triangle, drama is a compelling but ineffective way of interacting with others that leads to relationship confusion, dysfunction and conflict. It is a pervasive source of suffering between individuals, groups, communities and nations. Psychotherapist Gregory Boyce's book No More Drama shows us the external appearances of drama, the inner workings, why we participate, and most importantly, how to conduct ourselves so we live in what he calls
the Drama Free Zone. His writing is enjoyable and easy to follow; his suggestions, very powerful. It is: A Practical Guide to Healthy Relationships.
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Relational Transactional Analysis <--Click
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:::Relational Transactional Analysis: Principles in Practice:::
'Through different voices and styles of contributions, including papers, edited talks and panel discussion, this collection explores and applies the principles of relational transactional analysis. It sets them in social, cultural and political contexts, and considers a number of important implications of this particular relational turn in psychotherapy. The book advances relational transactional analyses and, in doing so, reflects the creativity and vibrancy of contemporary TA. The editors have skilfully brought together different generations of TA practitioners in an accessible and stimulating volume. I commend the editors and highly recommend the book.'- Dr Keith Tudor, author of a number
of books and co-author of the article "Co-creative transactional analysis" in the Transactional Analysis Journal. He is Associate Professor, Auckland University of Technology, Auckland, Aotearoa, New Zealand.
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Being a Therapist <--Click
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:::Being a Therapist: A Practitioner's Handbook:::
Our contemporary world is one in which 'the customer is always right', and therapists, like many other professionals, are increasingly beset by rules and regulations that undermine their authority and autonomy. While many books emphasize the therapist's duties and obligations in maintaining the wellbeing of his or her clients, this book is intended to redress the balance in favour of emphasizing the wellbeing of the therapist.Mavis Klein draws on her thirty-five years of experience as an individual, group, and family therapist to provide trainee and beginner therapists with confidence in the practice of their profession. As this book includes an outline of the author's original personality t
ypology, it may also add another string to the bow of experienced practitioners.The book is informal, anecdotal, humourously self-revelationary, and jargon-free.
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Therapeutic Journey <--Click
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:::Therapeutic Journey: Practice and :::
This is a collection of papers by two well-known transactional analysts, mental health practitioners, and educators, Jim and Barbara Allen, who spent 40 years integrating mental health principles into their public and private lives and their teaching of medical students, family practice and psychiatry residents, and a variety of other mental health professionals. The topics they write about in this book range widely and include what to do after meeting the patient, types of treatment, trauma, social constructivism, working with children and adolescents, the biological underpinnings of transactional analysis and mental health interventions, family therapy, transference, redecision therapy, an
d social issues related to drug use, American Indian adolescents, the Oklahoma City bombing, war, and the Tulsa race riots of the 1920s. While neither solely a textbook nor a memoir, these papers can be used by beginning practitioners to understand better their interactions with patients and by more experienced practitioners as an invitation to reexamine their practices and their lives.
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