Mental health providers confront emotional suffering every day, yet
working with emotion is rarely explicitly taught in clinical graduate
programs. There is evidence that emotional experience in therapy relates
to therapy outcome across multiple diagnoses. This research has given
rise to strategies that address the core maladaptive processes that
cause distress and dysfunction, rather than specific diagnoses.
This book presents principles and methods for working with emotion in
psychotherapy to target the internal mechanisms that underlie anxiety,
depression, and other common clinical disorders. Chapters in this volume
focus on methods that help clients with all types of disorders to
"arrive at," or fully experience, their painful maladaptive emotions,
and then "leave" these emotions by accessing new, adaptive emotions.
These methods include helping clients sit with painful feelings, access
bodily felt experience, identify unmet needs, and articulate the meaning
of an emotion. Excerpts of moment-to-moment clinical dialogue
demonstrate techniques such as memory reconsolidation, providing
corrective emotional experiences, chair work, and imaginal reentry to
past situations.