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The Guild of Psychotherapists,
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Blackfriars Road,
London SE1 0QA
Tel: 020 7401 3260

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Number 1093686

 

Publications by Guild members

The following members have published books and papers. Most are available to buy on-line from Karnac books.
On-line link to Karnac Books

 

 

 

Anne Gray

An Introduction to the Therapeutic Frame - Anne GrayAn Introduction to the Therapeutic Frame
Published by Routledge. 1994.

Designed for psychotherapists and counsellors in training, An Introduction to the Therapeutic Frame clarifies the concept of the frame - the way of working set out in the first meeting between therapist and client. The author, an experienced psychotherapist and teacher, uses lively and extensive case material to show how the frame can both contain feelings and further understanding within the therapeutic relationship. She takes the reader through each stage of the therapeutic work, from the first meeting to the final contact, and looks at those aspects of management that beginners often find difficult, such as fee payment, letters and telephone calls, supervision and evaluation. Her practical advice on how to handle these situations will be invaluable to trainees, as well as to those involved in their training.

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Marika Henriques

The Honeysuckle Man

Tales of Psychotherapy ed Jane RyanMarika contributed a chapter called “The Honeysuckle Man” in:

Tales of Psychotherapy. Edited by Jane Ryan. Karnac, 2007. Pp.288.
Chapter 3: Healing.
The Honeysuckle Man. By Marika Henriques.

"I looked at the man in front of me. He was tall, thin, slightly stooped, with deep-set eyes and masses of black hair. I thought he had a lonely face, like a desolate and ravaged landscape. He sat with his arms crossed over his chest, his hands resting lightly on his shoulders as if shielding himself from an imaginary blow. He often sits like this, I thought."

The 'Honeysuckle Man' is the true and moving story of a deeply injured man "Only the others exist, I don't", is how he matter-of-factly informs his therapist. The story portrays the developing relationship of two people sitting in a room, one listening the other telling as well as discovering his story. It tells of the deep effect they have on each other. It tells of the struggle and painstaking journey towards understanding and the gradual healing of the patient's hidden woundedness. It informs of what psychotherapy truly is or can be, without the hype, the jargon, the assumptions and preconceptions. It is also a story of a plant and a poem, both of which helped the reclamation of a lost self.

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Marika Henriques has also written a paper called

"The Lions are Coming": The Healing Image In Jungian Dreamwork,

which can be found in: British Journal of Psychotherapy, 20(4) Pp.513-526

        "Here we are all, by day;
        by night we're hurled
        By dreams, each one,
        into a several world."

This article demonstrates a Jungian interpretation of dreams by describing the working through of four dreams of a patient. She came to therapy deeply depressed and suicidal. She gradually gained good experiences of the unconscious through her vivid dreams. The paper describes how the transformative power of dream images brought healing for her, how as the images changed she changed with them.

The first part of the article outlines some Jungian concepts as an introduction to the actual dreamwork. Jung observed that the psyche does not work with concepts but manifests through images. They are the language of the psyche, the living aspects of a person's innermost being. As Jung put it:"concepts are coined and negotiable values, images are life." While concepts can be discussed and talked about images speak for themselves.

Therefore the dreamwork is approached in a poetic way and reads more like a story than an academic exposition.

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© Guild of Psychotherapists 2008