Other-Centred TherapyCaroline Brazier offers an introduction to an innovative therapeutic approach which is founded on an understanding of human process that is both practical, and honoring of our place in an experiential world. |
Contents
Notes on exercises | 1 |
Roots Ethics and Society | 10 |
Grounding the Counsellor | 33 |
Object Related Identity | 53 |
Conditioned View | 76 |
A Sense of Place | 100 |
Closeness and Distance | 127 |
Developing Exploration of Rupa | 157 |
Moving into Action | 184 |
Working with Physical Objects | 211 |
Rupa Mindfulness and Reality | 236 |
Real Others | 262 |
Meeting Others from the Past | 290 |
The Truth is Friendly | 319 |
Living in the Real World | 344 |
Common terms and phrases
action aspects associations attention aware become behaviour Brazier bring Buddha Buddhist Psychology Carl Rogers chair client client’s world coloured counselling counsellor create Dependent Origination described develop distance distraction emotional empathy example EXERCISE experience explore feel flashbacks focus focused frightened happened human identity imagine invite involves lives look Mary Mary’s means memories mental methods mind Miss Richards Morita therapy move Naikan Notice object world object-related observer offer particular past perceived perception person person’s perspective position possible powerful practice present probably psychodrama psychological Psychotherapy reaction reality reflect response Rogers role reversal samjna Samyutta Nikaya Sanskrit scene sculpt seen self-building self-world sense significant simply sitting situation skandha someone sometimes sort space spiritual story Susan talk tense therapeutic relationship therapist therapy room therapy session Thich Nhat Hanh things thought Tony under-distanced understanding Whilst