Good Goodbyes: Knowing How to End in Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis

Type
Book
Authors
ISBN 13
9780765704122 
Category
Medical Books; Psychology; Education & Training  [ Browse Items ]
Publication Year
2006 
Publisher
Tags
Description
Life is full of comings and goings, helloes and goodbyes, meetings and partings. Good Goodbyes highlights the crucial importance of how the end of therapy is structured and experienced. Bad endings can destroy good therapies. Good endings can consolidate the work accomplished, transform relationships, and foster growth in both patient and therapist. Within the framework of the therapeutic relationship and a clearly articulated set of goals for therapy, Jack Novick and Kerry Kelly Novick describe how to recognize and respond to termination themes from the very beginning of treatment. Each phase of treatment brings its own challenges, as well as the risk of premature ending by patient or therapist. Each chapter in this book addresses specific danger signals to look out for and helpful techniques to support treatment. With vivid clinical examples from all diagnostic groups and all stages of development, the Novicks demonstrate how to engage each patient in building the "emotional muscle" needed to master life's challenges, transform early losses, and integrate new experiences of joy and sadness into the personality. Editorial Reviews Review Good Goodbyes is a fitting culmination of the Novicks' esteemed contributions to the literatures on termination, child and adult psychotherapies, and the 'two systems' model of self-esteem regulation. This thorough, practical, and wise volume on how to productively approach the ending of psychotherapies will be a great resource for experienced therapists and an invaluable guide to clinicians in training. (James Hansell, Ph.D, Department of Psychology, University of Michigan) With generously supplied illustrative clinical vignettes, Kerry Kelly and Jack Novick have assembled a most valuable presentation concerning treatment termination. They demonstrate how the prospect of termination shapes the work of the entire collaboration, from its very onset through and beyond the final day that patient and analyst meet. Their detailed exposition, organized along the lines of a reader's expectable questions, throws clarifying light on an aspect of the treatment enterprise hitherto accorded but meager attention. (Stephen K. Firestein, M.D.) The Novicks have produced an excellent and most original book on termination in psychoanalysis and psychotherapy...At last we have an approach that conceives termination so fully, that it includes the concerns, and reasonable preparations for the patient self care after termination. (Henry Krystal, M.D., Professor Emeritus of Psychiatry, Michigan State University) Jack and Kerry Kelly Novick have written a very interesting book that grapples with the difficult issue of termination. I highly recommend this book to both beginning and advanced therapists and analysts. It will give them many ideas about many different ways to think about termination. (Fonya Lord Helm, PhD, ABPP Psychologist-Psychoanalyst) Deciding when to end clinical therapy and how to end it well can be a mystifying process. In Good Goodbyes: Knowing How to End in Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis, Jack Novick and Kerry Kelly Novick share insights from their vast combined experienceto diminish the mystery of therapeutic closure. The book, which is firmly based in psychoanalytic theory, uses a question format to explore the many hows, whys, whats, and whens of termination. The authors outline treatment stages along the path to the therapeutic conclusion, all the while fine-tuning a constructive approach for supplying the good in goodbye. As psychoanalysts, teachers, and supervisors, the Novicks bring a refreshing perspective to ?endings, beginnings, and the work needed for a goodgoodbye? (p. xi), filling in gaps not previously addressed. The layout is especially helpful for locating information to apply in practice settings. Fortunately, each chapter includes illustrations that allow practitioners with little training in psychoanalysis to understand key concepts without a deep grounding in psychoanalytic theory. Some of the new insights into termination do generalize across theoretical orientations. Although it is comprehensively psychoanalytic, Good Goodbyes presen (PsycCRITIQUES) Deciding when to end clinical therapy and how to end it well can be a mystifying process. In Good Goodbyes: Knowing How to End in Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis, Jack Novick and Kerry Kelly Novick share insights from their vast combined experience to diminish the mystery of therapeutic closure. The book, which is firmly based in psychoanalytic theory, uses a question format to explore the many hows, whys, whats, and whens of termination. The authors outline treatment stages along the path to the therapeutic conclusion, all the while fine-tuning a constructive approach for supplying the good in goodbye.As psychoanalysts, teachers, and supervisors, the Novicks bring a refreshing perspective to "endings, beginnings, and the work needed for a good goodbye" (p. xi), filling in gaps not previously addressed. The layout is especially helpful for locating information to apply in practice settings.Fortunately, each chapter includes illustrations that allow practitioners with little training in psychoanalysis to understand keyconcepts without a deep grounding in psychoanalytic theory. Some of the new insights into termination do generalize across theoretical orientations.Although it is comprehensively psychoanalytic, Good Goodbyes presents a solid contribution to understanding theprocess of properly ending psychotherapy. Applying the lessons set forth in this text will enhance thelong-term positive changes that are possible through effective psychotherapy. (PsycCRITIQUES) Nearly every therapist has watched in helpless agony when the good work of a patient's therapy is spoiled by a bad ending. In Good Goodbyes, the Novicks help us to minimize the possibility of such painful occurrences. Through an easy-to-follow series of questions and answers they walk us through the phases of intensive analytic treatment: from evaluation to beginning; from middle to pre-termination; and finally, from the much neglected phases of termination to post-termination. Through vivid and compelling child and adult clinical vignettes, they illuminate the challenges and satisfactions inherent in such work. Moreover, they demonstrate that when a treatment culminates in a "good, goodbye", a patient's system of self regulation can be transformed from one that is joyless, constricted and closed to one that is healthy, alive and open. (William B. Meyer, MSW, BCD, Department of Social Work, Duke University Medical Center) From the Publisher PRAISE: "The Novicks have produced an excellent and most original book on termination in psychoanalysis and psychotherapy…At last we have an approach that conceives termination so fully, that it includes the concerns, and reasonable preparations for the patient self care after termination." --Henry Krystal, M.D., Professor Emeritus of Psychiatry, Michigan State University "With generously supplied illustrative clinical vignettes, Kerry Kelly and Jack Novick have assembled a most valuable presentation concerning treatment termination. They demonstrate how the prospect of termination shapes the work of the entire collaboration, from its very onset through and beyond the final day that patient and analyst meet. Their detailed exposition, organized along the lines of a reader's expectable questions, throws clarifying light on an aspect of the treatment enterprise hitherto accorded but meager attention." --Stephen K. Firestein, M.D. "GOOD GOODBYES is a fitting culmination of the Novicks' esteemed contributions to the literatures on termination, child and adult psychotherapies, and the 'two systems' model of self-esteem regulation. This thorough, practical, and wise volume on how to productively approach the ending of psychotherapies will be a great resource for experienced therapists and an invaluable guide to clinicians in training." --James Hansell, Ph.D, Department of Psychology, University of Michigan "Nearly every therapist has watched in helpless agony when the good work of a patient's therapy is spoiled by a bad ending. In GOOD GOODBYES, the Novicks help us to minimize the possibility of such painful occurrences. Through an easy-to-follow series of questions and answers they walk us through the phases of intensive analytic treatment: from evaluation to beginning; from middle to pre-termination; and finally, from the much neglected phases of termination to post-termination. Through vivid and compelling child and adult clinical vignettes, they illuminate the challenges and satisfactions inherent in such work. Moreover, they demonstrate that when a treatment culminates in a "good, goodbye", a patient's system of self regulation can be transformed from one that is joyless, constricted and closed to one that is healthy, alive and open." --William B. Meyer, MSW, BCD, Department of Social Work, Duke University Medical Center 
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