The world has long awaited compelling and unmistakable evidence for the
validity of dynamic psychotherapy. A review in the present book shows
that such evidence has been accumulating over the past ten years. It
comes from clinical trials, process research, case studies, and
objective physiological measurements concerned with the importance of
expressing emotions. This book extends the evidence. It provides an
in-depth examination of therapy in action, based on verbatim accounts of
the treatment of seven patients by the author, using the technique of
Intensive Short-term Dynamic Psychotherapy (at times extending to
medium-term). This technique has been shown to be both effective and
cost-effective with a wide range of patients, including some who are
notoriously resistant to psychotherapeutic intervention. The raw data of
psychotherapeutic sessions enables the reader to trace the origin of
therapeutic effects, which occur immediately in response to the direct
experience of hitherto buried feelings and impulses.