[Audio Only] EP95 Invited Address 03a – Shame: How to Bring a Sense of Right and Wrong Into the Family – Cloe Madanes, Lic Psychol
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- Invited Address Category: Evolution of Psychotherapy | Evolution of Psychotherapy 1995
Cloe Madanes, HDL, LIC | James Bugental, PhD Faculty Course Levels: Master’s Degree or Higher in a Health-Related Field
Duration:\s1:27:24
Audio-Only Format
Original air date: December 13, 1995
DescriptionDescription:
Cloe Madanes, Lic Psychol; with discussant James FT Bugental, PhD. Invited Address Session 3 Part 1 from the Evolution of Psychotherapy 1995 – Shame: How to Bring a Sense of Right and Wrong Into the Family.
Betty is the moderator. MS. Alice EricksonMadanes will provide suggestions for using shame constructively in couples and families. Stories from therapy will be shared in order to illustrate complex issues in which guilt, sex, power, and love are all intertwined. Examining severe incidents of violence can provide light on when it is okay to feel shame and how to recover from the anguish that shame conveys. In our families and in society, we employ shame as a covert weapon to prevent power abuse and the manifestation of violence. However, there are numerous aspects to shame. It can be felt by victims rather than perpetrators, and it can inspire compassionate actions or lead to remorse and failure. Shame frequently conceals fundamental, hidden flaws inside a family, an organization, or a nation. The most fundamental concept of Madanes’ approach to violence therapy is the redistribution of blame and guilt, such that the victimizer bears responsibility and shame rather than the victim. Violence is a severe problem in the family, just as it is a serious one between nations, ethnic groups, and on our city streets. The most insidious, common, and devastating mental health problem that therapists are required to handle today is the abuse of wives by husbands and children by parents. Madanes will provide some solutions to these issues.
Objectives of Education:
To provide three criteria for determining when shame is an appropriate feeling.
To outline three methods for redistributing who bears shame in the family.
List four strategies for transforming shame into restitution.*Content and confidentiality may be modified during sessions*
Cloe Madanes, HDL, LIC, Professor 89 related lectures and goods
Cloé Madanes, HDL, LIC, is a world-renowned family and strategic therapy inventor and instructor, as well as one of the pioneers of the strategic approach to family therapy. Strategic Family Therapy; Behind the One-Way Mirror; Sex, Love, and Violence; The Violence of Men; The Secret Meaning of Money; The Therapist as Humanist, Social Activist, and Systemic Thinker; and Relationship Breakthrough are among her masterpieces. She has given keynote talks at The Evolution of Psychotherapy Conference, the American Association of Marriage and Family Therapy, the National Association of Social Workers, The Erickson Foundation, the California Psychological Association, and many other national and international conferences. Madanes has received several accolades for her contributions to psychology and has advised great individuals from all areas of life.
Cloe Madanes.com
Dr. James Bugental 32 related lectures and goods
James Bugental, PhD, was a key thinker and champion of the Existential-Humanistic Therapy movement. He got his Ph.D. from Ohio State University in 1948, was elected a Fellow of the American Psychological Association in 1955, and was the first recipient of the Rollo May Award from the APA’s Division of Humanistic Psychology. James devoted his life to teaching and writing; he was also an Emeritus Professor at Saybrook Institute and an Emeritus Clinical Lecturer (previously Associate Clinical Professor) at Stanford University Medical School’s Department of Psychiatry. In 1987, he received the Mentor Society’s first annual Rollo May Award “for contributions to the literary pursuit,” and in 1986, he received a certificate from the American Psychological Association’s Division of Clinical Psychology “in recognition of the distinguished contribution to the discipline of Clinical Psychology.” He served on the editorial boards of eight professional publications and was a previous president of the Association for Humanistic Psychology. Bugental has contributed 150 articles, reviews, comments, and chapters to books that have been edited by others.
Bugental.com has a profile for James F.T. Bugental.
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