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Focusing and crises-fantasy in experiential group psychotherapy

Weddig, Thomas M.
Psychotherapy: Theory, Research, Practice, Training , Volume 11 (3): 289 PsycARTICLES®Jan 1, 1974

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Focusing and crises-fantasy in experiential group psychotherapy

Abstract

Presents a therapeutic technique for intensive group therapy that is used when a participant is flooded with intense affect or manifests behavior that does not seem meaningfully related to the individual's immediate experience or to the group interaction. The idea is introduced of deepening the experience through allowing a fantasy or image to emerge. The elicited imagery appears to be a useful way of getting around resistances, as opposed to the usual analytic dictum of first analyzing character resistances, or the Gestalt approach of attending to the avoidance responses. (18 ref)
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Title
Focusing and crises-fantasy in experiential group psychotherapy
Author(s)
Weddig, Thomas M.
Journal
Psychotherapy: Theory, Research, Practice, Training , Volume 11 (3): 289 PsycARTICLES® – Jan 1, 1974
Publisher
Division of Psychotherapy (29), American Psychological Association
Copyright
Copyright © 1974 by Division of Psychotherapy (29), American Psychological Association
ISSN
0033-3204
eISSN
0033-3204
D.O.I.
10.1037/h0086361
Publisher site
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