Chapter 1 - Foundations for a relational therapy
Chapter 2 - Psychological distress: a relational understanding
Chapter 3 - Relational depth in therapy: what it is and why it may
help
Chapter 4 - A continuing relationship at depth: ′reaching the
parts...′
Chapter 5 - Working with Dominic: a ′partial′ drunk
Chapter 6 - Earning the right to work with Rick: a traumatised
client
Chapter 7 - Facilitating a meeting at relational depth
Chapter 8 - The therapist′s developmental agenda
Chapter 9 - Towards a revolution
Dave Mearns is formerly Director of the Counselling Unit and
Professor of Counselling at the University of Strathclyde, Glasgow.
Dave is author or co-author of four other counselling books
published by SAGE: Person-Centred Counselling in Action, Second
Edition, Experiences of Counselling in Action, Person-Centred
Counselling Training and Person-Centred Therapy Today: New
Frontiers in Theory and Practice.
Mick Cooper is Professor of Counselling Psychology at the
University of Roehampton, where he is Director of the Centre for
Research in Social and Psychological Transformation (CREST). Mick
is a chartered psychologist, a UKCP registered psychotherapist, and
a Fellow of the BACP. Mick is author and editor of a range of texts
on person-centred, existential and relational approaches to
therapy; including Working at Relational Depth in Counselling and
Psychotherapy (2005, SAGE, with Dave Mearns), Pluralistic
Counselling and Psychotherapy
2011, SAGE, with John McLeod) and Existential Therapies (2nd edn,
2017, SAGE). Mick has led a series of research studies exploring
the processes and outcomes of humanistic counselling with young
people. Mick is the father of four children and lives in Brighton
on the south coast of England.
Only occasionally do books change the very way we think about
practice and introduce concepts that have the power to redefine
some of our work, the first edition of Working at Relational Depth
did just that, and this second edition takes us several steps
further. Entirely updated, refreshed and contemporary in its
approach this is, once again, a tour de force in the literature; a
further critical development in our understanding of the
relationship in counselling and psychotherapy.
*Dr Andrew Reeves*
Working at Relational Depth in Counselling and Psychotherapy 2nd
Edition, co-authored by Mick Cooper and Dave Mearns, is a wonderful
book which should be on every counsellor’s and counsellor training
course’s reading list.
*Moira Bishop*
This book reminds us that therapy is both an art and a science. The
struggle to find words to describe moments of deep healing between
two people is balanced by an absorbing look at the neuroscience,
developmental psychology and evidence that underpin relational
depth. This is both poetry and prose which speak across the
different modalities to all therapists who care about their
clients.
*Fiona Ballantine Dykes, Intergrative Therapist and Head of
Professional Standards BACP*
The illustrative examples, client accounts and research meshed
together into an enjoyable, informative and thought provoking read.
It enabled me to realize that, fundamentally, working at relational
depth means two human-beings allowing themselves to be seen exactly
as they are. Human. With flaws and fears and needs and desires.
*Heather Rimmer*
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