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Enmeshment is a concept in psychology and psychotherapy introduced by Salvador Minuchin to describe families where personal boundaries are diffused, sub-systems undifferentiated, and over-concern for others leads to a loss of autonomous development. [1]
This list contains some approaches that may not call themselves a psychotherapy but have a similar aim of improving mental health and well-being through talk and other means of communication. In the 20th century, a great number of psychotherapies were created.
Johnson et al. (1999) conducted a meta-analysis of the four most rigorous outcome studies before 2000 and concluded that the original nine-step, three-stage emotionally focused therapy approach to couples therapy [9] had a larger effect size than any other couple intervention had achieved to date, but this meta-analysis was later harshly ...
Family therapy (also referred to as family counseling, family systems therapy, marriage and family therapy, couple and family therapy) is a branch of psychotherapy focused on families and couples in intimate relationships to nurture change and development.
Interrupting is another sign you're being talked down to. "It might sound like a wife interrupting her husband’s story at a dinner party to say something like, 'What he meant to say was,'" Dr ...
This category is about family therapy, also referred to as couple and family therapy and family systems therapy. It is a branch of psychotherapy related to relationship counseling that works with families and couples in intimate relationships to nurture change and development.
As the term "Cheat Sheet" is commonly used these days (specially around the internet) I suggest that this section would either remain here or if it's moved the term Cheat Sheet is also noted there 78.39.93.4 16:02, 19 September 2008 (UTC)
At the University of Chicago, beginning in 1953, Eugene Gendlin did 15 years of research analyzing what made psychotherapy either successful or unsuccessful. His conclusion was that it is not the therapist's technique that determines the success of psychotherapy, but rather the way the patient behaves, and what the patient does inside himself during the therapy sessions.