Jason Aronson, Inc.
Pages: 164
Trim: 6 x 9¼
978-0-7657-0726-0 • Hardback • December 2009 • $102.00 • (£78.00)
978-0-7657-0727-7 • Paperback • December 2011 • $46.00 • (£35.00)
Gary G. Forrest, EdD, PhD, is a licensed clinical psychologist and executive director of Psychotherapy Associates, PC, and the Institute for Addictive Behavioral Change in Colorado Springs.
1 Contents
2 Foreword
3 Preface
4 Acknowledgments
Chapter 5 1. Introduction
Chapter 6 2. Self-Disclosure in Counseling and Psychotherapy
Chapter 7 3. Therapist Theoretical Orientation and Self-Disclosure in Psychotherapy
Chapter 8 4. The Effects of Therapist and Client Self-Disclosure in Psychotherapy
Chapter 9 5. Ethics and Self-Disclosure in Psychotherapy
Chapter 10 6. Self-Disclosure, Addiction and the Recovery Process
Chapter 11 7. Therapist and Client Self-Disclosure in Chemical Dependency Counseling
Chapter 12 8. Client and Therapist Perspectives on Self-Disclosure and Recovery
13 Bibliography
14 Index
15 About the Author
Self-Disclosure in Psychotherapy and Recovery should be required reading for all psychotherapists and counselors. Therapists and clinicians who treat alcoholics and people with various drug problems and other addictions will especially benefit from reading this book. Dr. Forrest writes with clarity, insight, and an incisive understanding of the therapeutic uses and management of therapist and client self-disclosure in effective psychotherapy relationships. This text presents the first in-depth and comprehensive examination of therapist and client self-disclosure in psychotherapy relationships and therapeutic work with chemically dependent people. Counselor trainees, graduate psychology students, supervisors and faculty, and experienced therapists and clinicians from diverse professional backgrounds alike will find this book to be stimulating, provocative, thought provoking, and helpful.
— William Glasser M.D, Reality Therapy Institute
Dr. Forrest's book is a pioneering effort to explore the difficult and controversial arena of therapist self-disclosure in the treatment setting. He examines the range of options suggested by different approaches to therapy for how, when, and how much self-disclosure is therapeutically beneficial and looks at the ethical issues inherent in counselor self-disclosure. This book is recommended for students and counselors/therapists early in their careers and will serve as a refresher for seasoned veterans of the therapy arena.
— Bruce Carruth, PhD, San Miguel de Allende, GTO, Mexico
[T]he book by Gary G. Forrest represents an essential resource for counselors and psychotherapists: it is the first so informed and comprehensive examination of client and therapist self-disclosure and of their interdependence in therapeutic relationships. ... Forrest's book can be considered a well-informed personal research expanding Jourard's provoking view on effective therapists, who avoid compulsion to silence, to reflection, to interpretation, to impersonal technique, but instead are striving to know their patient, involve themselves in his situation and employ their powers in the service of his well-being and growth.
— Metapsychology Online