Language and Connection in Psychotherapy

Words Matter

Nonfiction, Health & Well Being, Psychology, Cognitive Psychology, Interpersonal Relations
Cover of the book Language and Connection in Psychotherapy by Mary E. Davis, Jason Aronson, Inc.
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Mary E. Davis ISBN: 9780765708748
Publisher: Jason Aronson, Inc. Publication: November 21, 2012
Imprint: Jason Aronson, Inc. Language: English
Author: Mary E. Davis
ISBN: 9780765708748
Publisher: Jason Aronson, Inc.
Publication: November 21, 2012
Imprint: Jason Aronson, Inc.
Language: English

Language plays a major role in our daily lives. Humans are specialized to live in a social environment, and our brains are “designed” to manage interactions with others which are, for the most part, accomplished through words. Language allows us to function both cognitively and interpersonally, and without language there are constraints on our ability to interact with others.

Language also plays a major role in that specialized form of interpersonal interaction that we call psychotherapy or psychoanalysis. In that setting we use words to express and communicate meaning clearly, and through spoken language we help our patients to organize and modify their experiences of self and of the world, fostering adaptive change.

Like the air we breathe, when our language serves its function it is transparent to us. We notice it most when it fails. When it does fail its basic function, in life and in psychotherapy, it fails to reliably, effectively, and comfortably help us to connect with others, as we deal with the world around us. In Language and Connection in Psychotherapy: Words Matter, Dr. Mary Davis addresses the role of language in our lives, both internally, in creating psychic structure and regulating affect, and interpersonally, in facilitating relationships with the figures that have shaped our development and that inhabit our adult lives. Using clinical material to illustrate, Davis looks at the development of language and its role in creating our personalities, at the life events which can distort our use of language to interact with others, and the ways that language can lead to misunderstanding as well as to understanding.

Throughout, Language and Connection in Psychotherapy: Words Matter explores various facets of the ways in which words matter as well as the times when words are important but not sufficient to our ability to communicate interpersonally. Davis suggests that the psychotherapist is a master in bridging the gap between being and saying: she can be conceptualized as an “interpreter,” one who turns behavioral language into verbal language, action language into words, emotions into thoughts, who focuses and uses the capacity of words to help us connect both with our internal selves and with others.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Language plays a major role in our daily lives. Humans are specialized to live in a social environment, and our brains are “designed” to manage interactions with others which are, for the most part, accomplished through words. Language allows us to function both cognitively and interpersonally, and without language there are constraints on our ability to interact with others.

Language also plays a major role in that specialized form of interpersonal interaction that we call psychotherapy or psychoanalysis. In that setting we use words to express and communicate meaning clearly, and through spoken language we help our patients to organize and modify their experiences of self and of the world, fostering adaptive change.

Like the air we breathe, when our language serves its function it is transparent to us. We notice it most when it fails. When it does fail its basic function, in life and in psychotherapy, it fails to reliably, effectively, and comfortably help us to connect with others, as we deal with the world around us. In Language and Connection in Psychotherapy: Words Matter, Dr. Mary Davis addresses the role of language in our lives, both internally, in creating psychic structure and regulating affect, and interpersonally, in facilitating relationships with the figures that have shaped our development and that inhabit our adult lives. Using clinical material to illustrate, Davis looks at the development of language and its role in creating our personalities, at the life events which can distort our use of language to interact with others, and the ways that language can lead to misunderstanding as well as to understanding.

Throughout, Language and Connection in Psychotherapy: Words Matter explores various facets of the ways in which words matter as well as the times when words are important but not sufficient to our ability to communicate interpersonally. Davis suggests that the psychotherapist is a master in bridging the gap between being and saying: she can be conceptualized as an “interpreter,” one who turns behavioral language into verbal language, action language into words, emotions into thoughts, who focuses and uses the capacity of words to help us connect both with our internal selves and with others.

More books from Jason Aronson, Inc.

Cover of the book 101 More Favorite Play Therapy Techniques by Mary E. Davis
Cover of the book Love and Hate in the Analytic Setting by Mary E. Davis
Cover of the book The Wish for Power and the Fear of Having It (Master Work Series) by Mary E. Davis
Cover of the book Technique and Practice of Listening in Intensive Psychotherapy by Mary E. Davis
Cover of the book Above the Zodiac by Mary E. Davis
Cover of the book Fostering Healing and Growth by Mary E. Davis
Cover of the book Meditation and Kabbalah by Mary E. Davis
Cover of the book Object Relations Individual Therapy by Mary E. Davis
Cover of the book The Psychology of Beauty by Mary E. Davis
Cover of the book The Road to Unity in Psychoanalytic Theory by Mary E. Davis
Cover of the book Redecision Therapy by Mary E. Davis
Cover of the book Broken Structures by Mary E. Davis
Cover of the book Stress Response Syndromes by Mary E. Davis
Cover of the book Multimedia Psychotherapy by Mary E. Davis
Cover of the book Multicultural/Multiracial Psychology by Mary E. Davis
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy