ACT and RFT in Relationships
eBook - ePub

ACT and RFT in Relationships

  1. English
  2. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  3. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

About this book

Even if you are not a couples therapist, chances are you have dealt with clients whose problems are based in relationship issues. In order to successfully treat these clients, you must first help them understand what their values are in these relationships, and how their behavior may be undermining their attempts to seek intimacy and connection.

Combining elements of acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT) and relational frame theory (RFT), ACT and RFT for Relationships presents a unique approach for therapists to help clients develop and experience deeper, more loving relationships. By exploring personal values and expectations, and by addressing central patterns of behaviors, therapists can help their clients establish and maintain intimacy with their partner and gain a greater understanding of their relationship as a whole.

ACT is a powerful treatment model that teaches clients to accept their thoughts, identify their core values, and discover how these values are extended to their relationships with others. RFT focuses on behavioral approaches to language and cognition, and can help clients identify their own expectations regarding relationships and how they might communicate these expectations with their loved ones more effectively.

This book aims to shed light on the thought processes behind intimate relationships—from the attraction phase to the end of intimacy—from a functional, contextual perspective.

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Information

Publisher
Context Press
eBook ISBN
9781608823369
Year
2013

Table of contents

  1. Contents
  2. Foreword
  3. Acknowledgments
  4. Introduction to Romantic Love
  5. The Roots of Our Approach
  6. Relational Frame Theory
  7. Acceptance and Commitment Therapy
  8. Language Traps and Self-as-Content
  9. Psychological Rigidity
  10. Valuing Intimate Relationships
  11. Self-Compassion
  12. Couples Therapy
  13. Summary and Conclusions
  14. References