DBT
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Addressing the Myth of Shame
As it were, the myth of shame emerges as a mirage from our collective imaginations—an amalgamation of half-truths and misplaced identities, as tangled as the emotion it misrepresents. The drama unfolds on the stage of public perception, where shame often dresses itself in the costume of guilt. In this role, the spectre of shame loses… Continue reading
Acceptance-based, ACT, Analyses, analytical history, Attachment-Based Therapy (ABT), Authenticity, Bernard Williams, Brene Brown, CG Jung, Clinical, Cognitive, Compassion focused therapy, Criticism, DBT, Ethics of shame, Existentialism, Guilt, Humanistic psychology, integrationist, interdisciplinary, Linehan, mentalisation-based therapy (MBT), Myth, Myth of Shame, Paul Wadey, Philosophy, Psychoanalytic psychotherapy, Psychoanalytical History, Psychology, Relational psychoanalytic, Shame, Shame and guilt, Shame and guilt dialectic, Shame and Necessity, Systemic -
Acceptance in Kubler-Ross and Beyond: An Introduction | w4dey
The future trajectory of the language of acceptance in clinical practice, research, and philosophy of mind might plausibly encompass a diverse and dynamic array of developments, including the refinement of existing therapies, the emergence of novel approaches, and the exploration of interdisciplinary connections. Continue reading
ABC model, Acceptance, Acceptance-based, ACT, Analyses, Clinical, Cognitive, Cognitive Development, Communication, Criticism, DBT, Death, emotional development, Epictitus, Freud, Human Condition, integrationist, interdisciplinary, Kubler-Ross, Linehan, Loss, MBCT, moral, On Death and Dying, Paul Wadey, Psychology, therapy