White and Epston base their therapy on the assumption that people
experience problems when the stories of their lives, as they or others
have invented them, do not sufficiently represent their lived
experience. Therapy then becomes a process of storying or restorying the
lives and experiences of these people. In this way narrative comes to
play a central role in therapy. Both authors share delightful examples
of a storied therapy that privileges a person's lived experience,
inviting a reflexive posture and encouraging a sense of authorship and
reauthorship of one's experiences and relationships in the telling and
retelling of one's story.