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affectphobia.org,
the web site for
Affect Phobia Therapy
Treating Affect Phobia
Reviews
"This work is an extraordinary synthesis of depth and practicality.
It is as clear, concrete, and richly exampled a treatment manual as I
have seen, yet it depicts not a simple or mechanistic therapy but one
that goes to the very heart of human feeling and experience. Incorporating
a profoundly integrative vision, Treating Affect Phobia will be of great
value not only to psychodynamically oriented therapists but to anyone
in the field who appreciates the accumulating evidence for the central
role of affect--and fear of affect--in our lives."
-Paul L. Wachtel, PhD, Doctoral Program in Clinical Psychology, City
College and the CUNY Graduate Center, NYC
"Treating Affect Phobia: A Manual for Short-Term Dynamic Psychotherapy
is a treatment manual with a number of fabulous characteristics: it takes
the astute clinical observations of psychodynamic therapists and sets
them within modern principles of learning and behavioral change, it draws
from the best of the behavior therapy treatments for phobias, it is beautifully
clear and easy to follow, it has comprehensive learning exercises at the
end of each chapter to help the clinician actually learn how to apply
the treatment in clinical practice. I plan to have my students read it."
-Marsha Linehan, PhD, Department of Psychology and Behavioral Research
& Therapy Clinics, University of Washington
"This is the training manual that teachers and practitioners of
short-term dynamic therapy have been eagerly anticipating. It is the first
psychodynamically oriented volume that expertly guides the novice through
emotion-focused, time-sensitive psychotherapy in an explicit, step-by-step
fashion. The manual is enhanced by very useful exercises that allow therapists
to try out their interventions and compare them to the authors' expert
responses. This volume represents a new and exciting development in the
teaching, learning, and practice of psychodynamic/integrative therapy
in general, and brief psychotherapy in particular."
-Stanley B. Messer, PhD, Graduate School of Applied and Professional
Psychology, Rutgers--The State University of New Jersey
"This carefully reasoned and researched manual starts with the simple
assumption that many people are afraid of their own emotions, offers easy
ways to identify whatever is being expressed or even suppressed, and explains
clearly the authors' suggestions for treatment."
-Donald L. Nathanson, MD, The Silvan S. Tomkins Institute and Department
of Psychiatry and Human Behavior, Jefferson Medical College
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