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The Reality Between: A Buddhist Approach to Addiction, Grief, and Psychotherapy
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The Reality Between: A Buddhist Approach to Addiction, Grief, and Psychotherapy
By None
Current price: $17.44


By None
The Reality Between: A Buddhist Approach to Addiction, Grief, and Psychotherapy
Current price: $17.44
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Size: Paperback
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In The Reality Between , author Ken Lucas takes up where Elisabeth Kübler-Ross left off. Lucas elegantly makes the case that although psychotherapists have limited the use of Kübler-Ross's "Five Stages of Grief" to physical death, patients can be taught to see anger, depression, and even addiction in their own grief context. The Reality Between shows how therapists can train themselves to hear the dozens of grief states their patients are experiencing at every single moment! Most psychotherapists fail to see their patients drowning in grief.
Anger and depression are grief stages, not simply "stressors" or stand-alone issues.
Most people die unhappily in the middle of Kübler-Ross's grief stages.
As humans, we have a duty to become just as fluid and dynamic as the ever-changing world around us.
Placing grief into a much larger, more fundamental Eastern context is a must for every psychotherapist.
In The Reality Between , author Ken Lucas takes up where Elisabeth Kübler-Ross left off. Lucas elegantly makes the case that although psychotherapists have limited the use of Kübler-Ross's "Five Stages of Grief" to physical death, patients can be taught to see anger, depression, and even addiction in their own grief context. The Reality Between shows how therapists can train themselves to hear the dozens of grief states their patients are experiencing at every single moment! Most psychotherapists fail to see their patients drowning in grief.
Anger and depression are grief stages, not simply "stressors" or stand-alone issues.
Most people die unhappily in the middle of Kübler-Ross's grief stages.
As humans, we have a duty to become just as fluid and dynamic as the ever-changing world around us.
Placing grief into a much larger, more fundamental Eastern context is a must for every psychotherapist.


















