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This important new book explores the nature of the divided brain
and its relevance for contemporary psychotherapy. Citing the latest
neuroscientific research, it shows how the relationship between the
two hemispheres of the brain is central to our mental health, and
examines both the practical and theoretical implications for
therapy. Disconnections, dissociations, and imbalances between our
two hemispheres underlie many of our most prevalent forms of mental
distress and disturbance. These include issues of addiction,
autism, schizophrenia, depression, anorexia, relational trauma,
borderline and personality disorders, psychopathy, anxiety,
derealisation and devitalisation, and alexithymia. A contemporary
understanding of the nature of the divided brain is therefore of
importance in engaging with and treating these disturbances.
Featuring contributions from some of the key authors in the field,
The Divided Therapist suggests that hemispheric integration lies at
the heart of the therapeutic process itself, and that a better
understanding of the precise mechanisms that underlie and enable
this integration will help to transform the practice of
psychotherapy and psychoanalysis in the twenty-first century. The
book will be essential reading for any therapeutic practitioner
interested in how the architecture of the brain informs and effects
their client's issues and challenges.
This important new book explores the nature of the divided brain
and its relevance for contemporary psychotherapy. Citing the latest
neuroscientific research, it shows how the relationship between the
two hemispheres of the brain is central to our mental health, and
examines both the practical and theoretical implications for
therapy. Disconnections, dissociations, and imbalances between our
two hemispheres underlie many of our most prevalent forms of mental
distress and disturbance. These include issues of addiction,
autism, schizophrenia, depression, anorexia, relational trauma,
borderline and personality disorders, psychopathy, anxiety,
derealisation and devitalisation, and alexithymia. A contemporary
understanding of the nature of the divided brain is therefore of
importance in engaging with and treating these disturbances.
Featuring contributions from some of the key authors in the field,
The Divided Therapist suggests that hemispheric integration lies at
the heart of the therapeutic process itself, and that a better
understanding of the precise mechanisms that underlie and enable
this integration will help to transform the practice of
psychotherapy and psychoanalysis in the twenty-first century. The
book will be essential reading for any therapeutic practitioner
interested in how the architecture of the brain informs and effects
their client's issues and challenges.
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