
Gifting Made Simple
Give the Gift of ChoiceClick below to purchase a Pine Centre eGift Card that can be used at participating retailers at Pine Centre.Purchase HereHome
Understanding Self-Worth: A Guide to Worth-Conscious Theory and Psychotherapeutic Practice
Coles
Loading Inventory...
Understanding Self-Worth: A Guide to Worth-Conscious Theory and Psychotherapeutic Practice
By None
Current price: $333.50

Coles
Understanding Self-Worth: A Guide to Worth-Conscious Theory and Psychotherapeutic Practice
By None
Current price: $333.50
Loading Inventory...
Size: Hardcover
*Product information and pricing may vary - to confirm current pricing, availability, shipping, and return information please contact Coles. In the event of a pricing discrepancy, the retailer's price will apply.
Understanding Self-Worth: A Guide to Worth-Conscious Theory and Psychotherapeutic Practiceis a guide for psychotherapists confounded by the struggle of working with clients who present with a pervasive pattern of denied self-worth.When self-worth is perceived as conditional or denied altogether, clients may become complicit in creating a lost-worth story-the story they tell that keeps them denying their own worth. The denial may include generational abusive and/or intrusive injunctions that go against their lived truth.Psychotherapists will come away from this book with a deep understanding of the importance of attending to the degree of trauma experienced when the client's self-worth is separated from their individual truth. Moreover, where there is worth-based trauma, the psychotherapist will learn models both for helping clients gently and honestly reestablish a worthy and true sense of self and for consciously guiding clients toward recovery of human worth as a birthright.
Understanding Self-Worth: A Guide to Worth-Conscious Theory and Psychotherapeutic Practiceis a guide for psychotherapists confounded by the struggle of working with clients who present with a pervasive pattern of denied self-worth.When self-worth is perceived as conditional or denied altogether, clients may become complicit in creating a lost-worth story-the story they tell that keeps them denying their own worth. The denial may include generational abusive and/or intrusive injunctions that go against their lived truth.Psychotherapists will come away from this book with a deep understanding of the importance of attending to the degree of trauma experienced when the client's self-worth is separated from their individual truth. Moreover, where there is worth-based trauma, the psychotherapist will learn models both for helping clients gently and honestly reestablish a worthy and true sense of self and for consciously guiding clients toward recovery of human worth as a birthright.





















