Wk1 Discussion -Therapist Resilience

Wk1 Discussion -Therapist Resilience

Wk1 Discussion -Therapist Resilience

Thinking about the three components of therapist resilience.  What steps would you take if you found yourself struggling in any of these areas, as a family counselor?  In which aspect(s) of therapist resilience do you currently feel you are the strongest and which area do you believe requires more attention?  Remember to cite the readings in your posts and include a reference list.

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According to Table 1.1 on page 11 of Goldenberg and Goldenberg (2013), Therapist Resilience consists of Trust in Self, Career Development, and Practice of Therapy.  This is included in the eighth edition of the textbook.

Trust in Self deals with emotional self-awareness, as well as a committment to personal growth.  Career Development refers to the idea that becoming a therapist is indeed a calling, and not something that you gravitate towards, simply because you have been told that you give good advice.  Lastly, Practice of Therapy is a consistent enjoyment of watching clients overcome difficulties. Wk1 Discussion -Therapist Resilience

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  1. Each answer must be at least two paragraphs.
  2. Make sure that your initial posting to any discussion question is your answer to the question. Your instructor needs to know that you are thinking, analyzing, and concluding. It must be a substantive comment.
  3. Your discussion posting should reflect;deep thought; and not be done without deliberation.
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    Resiliencyinthepracticingmarriageandfamilytherapist.pdf
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    Goldenberg_2017_Chapter_1_Edition_9th1.pdf
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    Goldenberg_2017_Chapter_2_Edition_9th.pdf
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    Week_1_chapter_12.pdf

    Goldenberg/Goldenberg, Family Therapy, 8th

    edition © Brooks/Cole Cengage 2013 1

    Family Therapy: An Overview

    8th edition

    Goldenberg/Goldenberg © 2013 Brooks/Cole Cengage Learning

    The following slides follow a rough outline of each chapter in the text. We recommend that you use these as a skeleton outline for your lectures and amend them to fit your personal teaching

    style and pedagogical preferences.

     

     

    Goldenberg/Goldenberg, Family Therapy, 8th

    edition © Brooks/Cole Cengage 2013 2

    Adopting a Family Relationship Framework

    • What Is a Family?

    • Family Systems: Fundamental Concepts • Enabling

    • Disabling

    • Today’s Families: A Pluralistic View

     

     

    Adopting a Family Relationship Framework

    • Family Structure • Basic characteristics

    • Interactive patterns

    • Family Narratives and Assumptions

    • Family Resiliency/Therapist Resiliency

    Goldenberg/Goldenberg, Family Therapy, 8th

    edition © Brooks/Cole Cengage 2013 3

     

     

    Goldenberg/Goldenberg, Family Therapy, 8th

    edition © Brooks/Cole Cengage 2013 4

    Adopting a Family Relationship Framework

    • Gender Roles and Gender Ideology • Men

    • Women

     

     

    Goldenberg/Goldenberg, Family Therapy, 8th

    edition © Brooks/Cole Cengage 2013 5

    Adopting a Family Relationship Framework

    • Cultural Diversity and the Family

    • Ethnicity

    • Social Class

    • Impact of Race, Ethnicity, Class on Therapist

     

     

    Goldenberg/Goldenberg, Family Therapy, 8th

    edition © Brooks/Cole Cengage 2013 6

    Adopting a Family Relationship Framework

    • The Family Therapy Perspective • Origins of family therapy

    • A paradigm shift

    • Cybernetics and Epistemology • First order

    • Second order/postmodernism

     

     

    Goldenberg/Goldenberg, Family Therapy, 8th

    edition © Brooks/Cole Cengage 2013 7

    Family Development: Continuity and Change

    • The Family Life Cycle • Developmental tasks in each stage

    • The cautious approach to the family life cycle • Why?

    • The Framework • Stage theory

    • Transitions between stages

     

     

    Goldenberg/Goldenberg, Family Therapy, 8th

    edition © Brooks/Cole Cengage 2013 8

    Family Development: Continuity and Change

    • Developing a Life-Cycle Perspective

    • Developmental Tasks

     

     

    Family Development: Continuity and Change

    • Life-Cycle Stages: Continuity and Change • Leaving home

    • Joining of families (partnership/marriage)

    • Families with young children

    • Families with adolescents

    • Launching children

    • Families in later life

    Goldenberg/Goldenberg, Family Therapy, 8th

    edition © Brooks/Cole Cengage 2013 9

     

     

    Family Development: Continuity and Change

    • Family Transitions and Symptomatic Behavior

    • Negotiations Among Members

    • Transition Points Through the Life Cycle

    • Stressors: Horizontal and Vertical

    Goldenberg/Goldenberg, Family Therapy, 8th

    edition © Brooks/Cole Cengage 2013 10

     

     

    Family Development: Continuity and Change

    Stages of Adulthood

    • Becoming an adult/Emerging adulthood

    • Middle adulthood

    • Late adulthood

    Stages of family development

    • Coupling/Preparing for parenthood

    • Creating a family

    • Beginning a family

    • Coping with Adolescence

    • Leaving home

    • Reorganizing generational boundaries

    • Retirement, illness, widowhood

    Goldenberg/Goldenberg, Family Therapy, 8th

    edition © Brooks/Cole Cengage 2013 11

     

     

    Goldenberg/Goldenberg, Family Therapy, 8th

    edition © Brooks/Cole Cengage 2013 12

    Family Development: Continuity and Change

    • Developmental Sequences in Other Families • Single-parent-led families

    • Remarried and blended families

    • Gay and lesbian families

     

     

    Family Development: Continuity and Change

    • Divorce • The decision to divorce

    • Planning the breakup of the system

    • Separation

    • The divorce

    • Post-Divorce Family • Single parent, custodial

    • Single parent, noncustodial

    Goldenberg/Goldenberg, Family Therapy, 8th

    edition © Brooks/Cole Cengage 2013 13