Part I: Our individual and cultural relationship to time; 1: The lure of time; 2: Being a "self-in-time"; 3: Lived time, remembered time and the brain; 4: Our quest for meaning and the age of meaninglessness; Part II: The therapeutic journey and its temporal shape; 5: Time in the consulting room; 6: Time-related themes and issues: Life-stage transitions; 7: Facing the late life transition and the first challenge of living in time; 8: Telling stories and interlocking time-zones; Part III: Ruptured time; 9: When the past haunts the present: The impact of trauma on our relationship to time; 10: Sharing the untold story: Always? Sometimes? Never?; 11: The impact of loss and life crises on our relationship to time; 12: Journeying in time: Psychotherapy and the change process; Epilogue: Towards an appreciation of time
Sue Wright is an Integrative Psychotherapist working in private practice in the UK as a therapist, supervisor, trainer and writer with a specialization in working with the survivors of complex trauma.
"Psychotherapy has seen various ‘turns’ in how we view the process
of change, but in this tour de force, psychotherapist and historian
Sue Wright sets them against the backdrop of Old Father Time, the
great leveller. What are the existential challenges of living in
Time, and how can therapists help their clients meet and come to
terms with them? We hear how the therapeutic hour provides the
‘book ends’ of a ‘relational and temporal idiom’ in which the dance
between Kairos and Chronos is heightened. Using a neurobiologically
informed approach – essential for working with trauma survivors –
Sue illustrates how time heals, and how our experience of past
events is altered, allowing new ways of experiencing the present
and imagining the future. The book will be useful for students in
training as well as seasoned practitioners."Tree Staunton, UKCP
Honorary Fellow, Director of Bath Centre for Psychotherapy and
Counselling
Psychotherapy has seen various ‘turns’ in how we view the process
of change, but in this tour de force, psychotherapist and historian
Sue Wright sets them against the backdrop of Old Father Time, the
great leveller. What are the existential challenges of living in
Time, and how can therapists help their clients meet and come to
terms with them? We hear how the therapeutic hour provides the
‘book ends’ of a ‘relational and temporal idiom’ in which the dance
between Kairos and Chronos is heightened. Using a neurobiologically
informed approach – essential for working with trauma survivors –
Sue illustrates how time heals, and how our experience of past
events is altered, allowing new ways of experiencing the present
and imagining the future. The book will be useful for students in
training as well as seasoned practitioners.Tree Staunton, UKCP
Honorary Fellow, Director of Bath Centre for Psychotherapy and
Counselling
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