67th
Annual Conference
Friday, February 26
Morning Workshops
10:00 A.M.-12:30 P.M.
Workshop
45
Knowing
and Being Known: Considerations for the Use of Self
Chair:
Robin Good,
Ph.D., CGP, FAGPA, Faculty, EGPS Group Therapy Training
Program, New York, New York
How do group
therapists use themselves to know what is going on in the group? A
review of important concepts and literature kicks off this
workshop. Via the fishbowl, observers help study an experiential
group in which the leader's inner experience is made explicit and,
when possible, channeled into relevant interventions.
demonstration-didactic-experiential-sharing of work experiences
Learning
Objectives:
The attendee will
be able to:
1. Describe
potential positive and negative clinical repercussions of the
therapist's self-disclosure in the group.
2. Explain the
characteristics of groups that keep participation active and members
emotionally present.
3. Discuss the
distinction between deliberate and inadvertent self-disclosure by
the therapist.
Course References:
Aaron, L. (1996).
A meeting of minds: mutuality in psychoanalysis. Hillsdale, NJ:
Analytic Press.
Wachtel,
P.(1986).On the limits of therapeutic neutrality. Contemp.
Psychoanal.,22: 60-70.
Cohen, B. D. and Schermer, V. L.(2001). Therapist
self disclosure in group psychotherapy from an intersubjective and
self psychological standpoint. Group: the Journal of the Eastern
Group Psychotherapy Society, 25 (1/2), June, 2001 pp.41 57. |