THOV1.jpg 256 pages
8 CE credits

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$200.00
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THERAPY OVER 50
Aging Issues in Psychotherapy and the Psychotherapist's Life

Jeffrey Kottler and Jon Carlson
Oxford University Press, 2016

DESCRIPTION

Traditional training in counseling and psychotherapy makes minimal distinctions on the ages of the client and therapist in the treatment process. Therapy Over 50: Aging Issues in Psychotherapy and the Therapist's Life highlights how therapy is frequently a very different process for the older client and therapist. Specifically, this book explores: a) how therapists over 50 (or approaching that life transition) experience, struggle, and enjoy doing therapy in ways that are different from when they were younger (this includes their special challenges, adaptations, fears, and joys); and b) the landscape related to working clinically with aging clients, and those approaches and strategies that work best with this population. The text also includes both current research and classic literature on the subject of aging issues in therapy, as well as current excerpts from interviews the authors will conduct with some of the most notable aging figures in the fields of counseling, social work, marriage and family therapy, and clinical psychology.

Therapy Over 50 ultimately deals with the inevitable and unrelenting changes that take place along with corresponding lost and reconfigured dreams as well as the approaches and strategies that are most effective for working with this population. With an optimistic tone, Kottler and Carlson promote a philosophy of positive aging and development for the therapist and client, thereby offering hope and inspiration for both parties

EDUCATIONAL OBJECTIVES
The reader will be able to:
• Describe significant aging issues in psychotherapy and the therapist's life
• Analyze the varied and sometimes polarized theories on the meaning of aging
• Describe some issues and impacts of culture on aging, and how self-perception in the aging is influenced by culture
• List some key age and life experiences that the senior therapist can bring to the table
• Analyze aging losses and gains and outline adaptation strategies for changes and losses due to aging
• Discuss some of the most common myths and misconceptions of aging, such as those dealing with senility, rigidity and unproductiveness
• List common issues and challenges of the elderly
• Compare common strategies with some specialized strategies for working with the elderly, such as issues dealing with family systems, loneliness and isolation

AUTHOR

Jeffrey A. Kotler, PhD, is Professor of Counseling at California State University, Fullerton, and President of Empower Nepali Girls, an organization that provides educational scholarships for at-risk children in Nepal. He has served as a Fulbright Scholar and Senior Lectururer in Peru (1980) and Iceland (2000), and worked as a Visiting Professor in New Zealand, Australia, Hong Kong, Singapore, and Nepal. Jon Carlson, PsyD, EdD, is Distinguished Professor of Psychology and Counseling at Governors State University, and a practicing psychologist in Wisconsin. He has received lifetime achievement awards from several professional associations, including the American Psychological Association and the American Counseling Association

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