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| Session 5: Client's family and boss are creating stress in her life | Anonymous | Client 405: Heterosexual single, female between 21-30 manifests dysthymia and symptoms of anxiety | 2006 |
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| Session 6: Client has come into therapy because she is under a lot of pressure to get into graduate school | Anonymous | Client 405: Heterosexual single, female between 21-30 manifests dysthymia and symptoms of anxiety | 2006 |
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| Session 1: Client feels unsure about therapy. He avoids thinking about having to show up to sessions. He is not sure of what to expect. Client does not like to set goals in case he sets the wrong ones for himself | Anonymous | Client 406: Male client between the ages of 21-30 presents with feelings of inadequacy in relationships, depressive disorder, conflict around personal and parental values, and conflict around purpose in life | 2006 |
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| Session 2: Client desires a romantic relationship; he has been single for a few years now. He feels like people just lose interest in him eventually | Anonymous | Client 406: Male client between the ages of 21-30 presents with feelings of inadequacy in relationships, depressive disorder, conflict around personal and parental values, and conflict around purpose in life | 2006 |
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| Session 4: Therapist explains to client that she is leaving the clinic and would like to transfer him to another counselor. She describes what she has learned from him through their therapy sessions to date | Anonymous | Client 406: Male client between the ages of 21-30 presents with feelings of inadequacy in relationships, depressive disorder, conflict around personal and parental values, and conflict around purpose in life | 2006 |
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| Client 408: Client is frustrated and angry with the relationship he has with his father. He is working on self-control and anger resolution. He has been struggling with flashbacks of the sexual abuse he endured as a child | Anonymous | | 2005 |
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| Cognitive Behavioral Family Therapy | Datillio, Frank M. | | |
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| Cognitive Behavioral Therapy With a Family - Live EABCT Conference Prague 2003 | Datillio, Frank M. | | 2003 |
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| Cross Cultural Counseling | Ivey, Allen; Shizuru, Lannette | | |
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| This is an EMDR session with a 45-year-old woman whose son, George, was killed in an automobile accident two years previously. This is her second EMDR session. An observing therapist, Terrie, is present
The client, suffering from traumatic grief, was experiencing extreme pain when she thought of her son's death. The goal of the EMDR session was to further process the trauma associated with her son's death so she could think of him with positive feelings. EMDR is not a short cut through the grief process. Rather, EMDR enables the grief process by processing the obstacles that can complicate the grief.
The moment chosen to start the EMDR session was a moment a few days before when she was driving and experienced a very painful realization that her son was dead.
This is an incomplete session, with the session ending before the Installation Phase was complete because other emotional material was starting to come up. Consequently the Body Scan was skipped as well. After the tape ended, a safe place exercise for to ground and relax the client was provided | Anonymous | EMDR sessions | 2008 |
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| EMDR: Pillars of Life: This specific form of psychotherapy called the "Pillars of Life" focuses on all the positive things in an individual's life instead of dealing with the negatives | Carvalho, Esly R. | EMDR sessions | 2007 |
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| Solution Oriented Family Therapy: This transcript is an initial therapy session with Bill O'Hanlon and a family consisting of a mother, father and adult daughter who lives in the home | O'Hanlon, Bill | Family Therapy with the Experts | 1998 |
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| Internal Family Systems Family Therapy: Schwartz is a fellow of the American Association of Marriage and Family Therapists, serves on the editorial board of five professional journals including the Journal of Marital and Family Therapy and is associated with the Northwestern University Family Institute in Evanston, Illinois | Schwartz, Richard | Family Therapy with the Experts | 1998 |
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| Symbolic/Experimental Family Therapy: This transcript is an initial therapy session with Gus Napier and the family in which Napier and the couple deal with a matter of life and death | Napier, Gus | Family Therapy with the Experts | 1998 |
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| Strategic Family Therapy: This transcript is an initial therapy session with James Coyne and a same sex male couple in which James Coyne and the couple work on issues that create tension between the two | Coyne, James | Family Therapy with the Experts | 1998 |
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| Satir Family Therapy: This transcript is an initial therapy session with Jean McLendon and a mother and son in which Jean McLendon helps the child understand his anger | McLendon, Jean | Family Therapy with the Experts | 1998 |
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| Object Relations Family Therapy: This transcript is an initial therapy session with Jill and David Scharff and a family consisting of the parents, Adrian and Judy, and their adult daughter, Pam. The presenting problem is Pam’s lack of responsibility. In this session the Scharffs touch on an issue that is very difficult for the family to deal with | Scharff, David; Scharff, Jill | Family Therapy with the Experts | 1998 |
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| Culture Sensitive Family Therapy: This transcript is an initial therapy session with Jon Carlson and Mary Arnold and the couple in which Jon and Mary help the couple view their issues from a cultural perspective | Arnold, Mary Smith; Carlson, Jon | Family Therapy with the Experts | 1998 |
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| Structural Family Therapy: Mr. Aponte is a family therapist with a special interest in the treatment of the poor, and many of the problems associated with poverty, including the single parent family, sexual and physical abuse in families, school failure, and crime. His eco-structural approach combines family therapy with a community perspective.
Focusing on the social disadvantaged has led him to explore and write about the relationship between therapist’s personal lives and their therapy. He trains therapist to work with the differences between themselves and their clients in ethnicity, values, socioeconomic status and personal life experience | Aponte, Harry J. | Family Therapy with the Experts | 1998 |
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| Bowenian Family Therapy: This family has been struggling with communication and closeness issues between the parents and the daughter. They have previously seen five other therapists and are hoping for some real change to come of this session with Dr. Guerin | Guerin, Philip | Family Therapy with the Experts | 1998 |
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| Adlerian Therapy: This transcript is an initial therapy session with James Bitter and the family in which James Bitter helps the parents explore new ways of managing the family | Bitter, James | Family Therapy with the Experts | 1998 |
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| The Forgiveness Pattern: Steve Andreas demonstrates this process, developed by Steve and Connirae Andreas, with a woman who was angry and estranged from an ex-boyfriend. She learns how to forgive him, while maintaining her own values, and in a one-month follow-up interview she relates how he had changed in the ways that she wanted, and they had set a wedding date. Recorded at a Denver Colorado NLP Conference in 1990. | Andreas, Connirae; Andreas, Steve | | 1990 |
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| Forgiving Parents - Virginia Satir - Families & Relationships | Satir, Virginia, 1916-1988 | | |
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| Group Adolescent Panel: Psychologists interview adolescents who have experienced trauma. They intend to develop a questionnaire that can be useful to mental health personnel working with adolescent trauma survivors | Anonymous | Glicken Collection | 2003 |
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| Dr. Glicken: Cognitive Therapy using Bibliotherapy | Glicken, Morley | Glicken Collection | |
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| Session 2: Group therapy session. The clients discuss recovery themes and grief. One client discusses how her brother abused her as a child and then they both turned in to addicts, now both in recovery | Anonymous | Group therapy 301: This group is made up of four women ranging in age from late twenties to late fifties. The length of abstinence ranges from over one year to less than one year | 2006 |
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| Session 1: Group therapy session. One client talks about losing abstinence from her eating disorder. They discuss the importance of group especially for those at a distance | Anonymous | Group therapy 301: This group is made up of four women ranging in age from late twenties to late fifties. The length of abstinence ranges from over one year to less than one year | 2006 |
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| Session 3: Group therapy session. clients talk to each other about recovery from their addiction to eating disorders | Anonymous | Group therapy 301: This group is made up of four women ranging in age from late twenties to late fifties. The length of abstinence ranges from over one year to less than one year | 2007 |
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| Session 1: Group therapy session. The clients go over past "homework" assignments given by the therapist. They discuss their addictions to the eating disorder. They discuss spirituality | Anonymous | Group therapy 302: This group is made up of 8 women ranging in age from mid-twenties to late fifties. They range in length of abstinence from over 7 years to less than 1 year | 2006 |
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| Session 2: Group therapy session. Clients discuss staying abstinent from their eating disorders. Clients talk about their diets and eating behavior | Anonymous | Group therapy 302: This group is made up of 8 women ranging in age from mid-twenties to late fifties. They range in length of abstinence from over 7 years to less than 1 year | 2006 |
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| Session 3: Group therapy session. Clients in the group all go over their last weeks struggles with staying abstinent from their eating disorders. The participants are apt to keeping in touch with each other even when they cannot make the group meeting times | Anonymous | Group therapy 302: This group is made up of 8 women ranging in age from mid-twenties to late fifties. They range in length of abstinence from over 7 years to less than 1 year | 2006 |
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| Session 6: Group therapy session. Therapist is proud of the group reaction to help one of the clients through a recent relapse. They are all concentrating on their abstinence from the disorder | Anonymous | Group therapy 302: This group is made up of 8 women ranging in age from mid-twenties to late fifties. They range in length of abstinence from over 7 years to less than 1 year | 2006 |
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| Session 1: Group therapy session. The clients discuss how they deal with their anger. One client is explaining her pending divorce problems. They are all worried about one client who has not come to this session. They discuss spirituality | Anonymous | Group therapy 306: This group is made up of 7 women between the ages of early thirties to late fifties. Six of the seven women have remained abstinent for over 2 years now | 2006 |
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| Session 2: Group therapy session where the members talk about the physical dangers of eating disorders. They also discuss techniques of not over eating when at a restaurant | Anonymous | Group therapy 306: This group is made up of 7 women between the ages of early thirties to late fifties. Six of the seven women have remained abstinent for over 2 years now | 2007 |
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| Session 3: The group discusses their weekly diet "homework" assignment. Some of the group members are absent from the session due to shame from their addiction | Anonymous | Group therapy 306: This group is made up of 7 women between the ages of early thirties to late fifties. Six of the seven women have remained abstinent for over 2 years now | 2007 |
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| Session 4: Group therapy session. Clients discuss their individual issues affecting their lives at present and how those stresses effect their eating behaviors | Anonymous | Group therapy 306: This group is made up of 7 women between the ages of early thirties to late fifties. Six of the seven women have remained abstinent for over 2 years now | |
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| Person Centered Therapy: This transcript is an initial therapy session with Dr. Rogers and Robin, a white female, where the presenting issues are areas of dissatisfaction Robin finds in her present situation | Rogers, Natalie | Psychotherapy with the Experts | 1997 |
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| Feminist Therapy: This transcript is an initial therapy session with Dr. Walker and Gina, a black female, where the presenting issue is Gina’s relationship with her ex-husband | Walker, Leonore | Psychotherapy with the Experts | 1997 |
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| Cognitive-Behavior Therapy: This is an initial therapy session with Donald Meichenbaum in which Meichenbaum demonstrates Cognitive-Behavior Therapy with a woman whose father has a mental illness | Meichenbaum, Donald | Psychotherapy with the Experts | 1997 |
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| Existential-Humanistic Therapy: This transcript is an initial therapy session with James Bugental and Gina, an African-American female, where the presenting issue is Gina's self-evaluation and need to be perfect | Bugental, James F. | Psychotherapy with the Experts | 1997 |
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| Multimodal CBT Therapy: This transcript is an initial therapy session with Arnold Lazarus and Juan where Juan presents various issues that reflect his frustration with the contrast between what is and what should be | Lazarus, Arnold A., 1932- | Psychotherapy with the Experts | 1997 |
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| Object Relations Therapy: David Scharff, MD is co-founder and co-director of the International Psychotherapy Institute and Clinical Professor of Psychiatry at Georgetown University. He is one of the most internationally recognized figures in psychoanalysis and Object Relations therapy. He has written and edited 19 books with his wife, Jill Scharff, on individual, family and couples Object Relations therapy, including Object Relations Theory and Practice and Object Relations Family Therapy | Scharff, David | Psychotherapy with the Experts | 1997 |
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| Cognitive-Therapy: This transcript is an initial therapy session with Dr. Krumboltz and Robin, a white female, where the presenting issue is Robin’s relationship with her mother-in-law | Krumboltz, John D. | Psychotherapy with the Experts | 1997 |
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| Existential-Humanistic Part One: Client struggles with her sense of control and her feelings of helplessness as her father is ailing | Bugental, James | Psychotherapy with the Experts | 2009 |
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| Integrative Therapy: In this session, Dr. Kottler clearly practices what he preaches, demonstrating a high degree of interpersonal authenticity as well as pragmatic flexibility. His approach demonstrates the power of human qualities and the usefulness of operating according to what clients need at any moment in time. He shows integrative therapy in action, but with a uniquely personal flavor that inspires practitioners to be more creative, flexible and synthesizing in their work.
This transcript is an initial therapy session with Jeffrey Kottler and the client in which Kottler and the client discuss her problems with relationships | Kottler, Jeffrey | Psychotherapy with the Experts | 1997 |
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| Integrative Therapy: This transcript is an initial therapy session with Allen E. Ivey and Robin in which Ivey helps Robin examine her strengths and spiritual base and look at future possibilities | Ivey, Allen E. | Psychotherapy with the Experts | 1997 |
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| Existential-Humanistic Part Two: Client strives to keep herself busy in order to feel that she holds some purpose in life | Bugental, James | Psychotherapy with the Experts | 2009 |
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| Family Systems Therapy: This transcript is an initial therapy session with Ken Hardy and Phil where Ken helps Phil explore his relationships | Hardy, Kenneth V. | Psychotherapy with the Experts | 1997 |
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| Adlerian Therapy: This transcript is an initial therapy session with Jon Carlson and Gina, in which Jon demonstrates Adlerian assessment techniques such as "early memories" and helps Gina gain some helpful insight into how she deals with issues in her life | Carlson, Jon | Psychotherapy with the Experts | 1997 |
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| Solution Focused Therapy: This transcript is an initial therapy session with Insoo Kim Berg and Robin, a white female, where the presenting issue is Robin's relationship with her husband | Berg, Insoo Kim | Psychotherapy with the Experts | 1997 |
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| Mind-Body Therapy with Ernest Rossi, PhD
Introduction
Advances in neuroscience confirm the importance of the mind-body connection.
Ernest Rossi brings to light important new research indicating that the brain is constantly growing and changing, and, with this, the profound realization that our mind and its responses can also change. In this session, Dr. Rossi works with Robin, who says she is constantly analyzing but doesn’t know how to imagine. Dr. Rossi endeavors to elicit a sense of wonder in Robin, leading her in mind-body exercises that challenge her to think in new ways. In so doing, Robin uncovers a belief that she always needs to have control, as well as a previously unknown desire to find some mental peace and quiet | Rossi, Ernest | Psychotherapy with the Experts | |
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| Transactional Analysis with Mary Goulding, MSW
Introduction
Redecision Therapy combines elements of Transactional Analysis and Gestalt Therapy. Using positive strokes, encouragement, and bringing the past into the present, Ms. Goulding helps her clients change paths from decisions made at a young age. In this session, she helps her client Beverly act out pivotal childhood moments, return to her recently passed mother’s graveside for a final goodbye, and speak directly to her 12-year-old self, helping Beverly mourn losses and open new doors for the future | Goulding, Mary | Psychotherapy with the Experts | |
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| Session 1: The SAEB System In the Treatment of Panic Disorder | Datillio, Frank M. | The SAEB System In the Treatment of Panic Disorder | |
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| Session 2: The SAEB System In the Treatment of Panic Disorder | Datillio, Frank M. | The SAEB System In the Treatment of Panic Disorder | |
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| Session 3: The SAEB System In the Treatment of Panic Disorder | Datillio, Frank M. | The SAEB System In the Treatment of Panic Disorder | |
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| Session 5: The SAEB System In the Treatment of Panic Disorder | Datillio, Frank M. | The SAEB System In the Treatment of Panic Disorder | |
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| Solution-Based Brief Counseling, Session 1: The client in this session is a 10-year-old boy. His symptoms are as follows: he worries about his family members’ health to the extent that it interferes with his ability to be successful in school | Sklare, Gerald | Solution-Based Brief Counseling | 1998 |
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| Solution-Based Brief Counseling, Session 2: The client in this session is a 10-year-old boy. His symptoms are as follows: he worries about his family members’ health to the extent that it interferes with his ability to be successful in school. In this session he explains how his symptoms have decreased and he is able to concentrate better at school | Sklare, Gerald | Solution-Based Brief Counseling | 1998 |
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| Building Self-concept: Steve Andreas demonstrates this process, which he developed, with a man who didn’t think he was lovable. The client learns how to assemble his experiences of being cared for into a stable inner sense of being loved. Includes a two-week follow-up interview with the client, and also with the client’s wife, who had not been told of the process he went through. Recorded at an NLP Master Practitioner training in 1992 | Andreas, Steve | Steve Andreas Collection | 1992 |
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| Resolving Grief: Connirae Andreas demonstrates how to resolve a man’s grief over the death of a newborn child, using a method developed by Steve and Connirae Andreas. In a one-day follow-up interview, the client talks about enjoying playing "peekaboo" with a small child at a restaurant, and later follow-up reports confirm that the changes lasted. Recorded at an NLP Master Practitioner Training in 1987 | Andreas, Connirae; Andreas, Steve | Steve Andreas Collection | 1987 |
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| Resolving Shame -Steve Andreas demonstrates this process, developed by Steve and Connirae Andreas, with a woman who had had many experiences of shame starting in adolescence due to her obesity. She first learns how to experience those memories without shame, and then learns how to review her standards when they are different from those of others, in order to decide what she wants to do. Six-month and eleven-year follow-up reports demonstrate how the changes lasted. Recorded at an NLP Master Practitioner training in 1990. | Andreas, Connirae; Andreas, Steve | Steve Andreas Collection | 1990 |
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| Six Step Reframing: The NLP six-step reframing process is demonstrated with a woman who
wanted to stop smoking, in a workshop setting, with extensive discussion of
the method. The 15-minute session was successful, as demonstrated by three
month follow-up interview | Andreas, Steve | Steve Andreas Collection | 1985 |
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| The Brief Therapy-Eliminating a Compulsion: In a large psychotherapy conference demonstration, a woman's compulsion to hoard things is resolved using an NLP intervention called the ""Compulsion Blowout." Her grief over several losses (which probably initiated her compulsion) is also resolved. | Andreas, Steve | Steve Andreas Collection | |
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| Decision Destroyer: Steve Andreas demonstrates this method, developed by Richard Bandler, in which a positive imprint memory is created and placed before a traumatic memory. Then the client brings this positive memory up through time as a part of their self-concept, reevaluating and transforming the traumatic one. Includes a three-month follow-up report demonstrating that the changes lasted. Recorded at an NLP Master Practitioner Training in 1988 | Andreas, Steve | Steve Andreas Collection | 1989 |
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| Eliminating Allergies | Andreas, Steve | Steve Andreas Collection | 1984 |
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| Changing Timelines: How we represent events in time has a large impact on many of our limitations and skills, particularly our ability to respond appropriately to past events, and to anticipate and plan for future ones. Connirae Andreas demonstrates the process of eliciting the structure of a timeline, a process developed by her and her husband Steve Andreas, and then demonstrates how to assist two people in changing their timelines so that they are more satisfactory. Recorded at a Denver Colorado NLP Conference in 1993. | Andreas, Connirae; Andreas, Steve | Steve Andreas Collection | 1993 |
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| Changing Beliefs - Steve & Connierae Andreas | Andreas, Connirae; Andreas, Steve | Steve Andreas Collection | 1985 |
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| Aligning Perceptual Positions: The idea of stepping into someone else's experience in order to understand them better is a very old one. However, when most people attempt this, they bring along their own viewpoints, biases, self-talk, and feelings, making it very difficult and confusing--something that is particularly evident in cases of co-dependence or enabling. This transcript demonstrates a systematic, pure process intervention, Aligning Perceptual Positions, that sorts out the three fundamental perceptual positions--Self, Observer, and Other, so that each one is organized, integrated, and cleanly separated from the others, clarifying relationships with others | Andreas, Steve | Steve Andreas Collection | 1989 |
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| Brief Therapy - Diffusing Reflexive Anger - A Neuro-Linguistic Programming Approach - In this client demonstration, a young college student is helped to resolve her frequent anger outbursts, resulting from a recent angry breakup with her boyfriend. The NLP forgiveness process teaches her how to reach a congruent full-body forgiveness, eliminating her angry outbursts | Andreas, Steve | Steve Andreas Collection | |
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| Brief Therapy - Essence and Evolution - NLP Eye Movement Integration - EMI is NLP's faster, gentler, and much more respectful version of EMDR. It uses a wider variety of eye movements, a theoretical basis to guide the sequence of different movements, and built-in feedback mechanisms for the client to assist in guiding the process, making sure the it is mostly comfortable. In this complete demonstration, a Vietnam Veteran resolves his PTSD of many years duration | Andreas, Steve | Steve Andreas Collection | 1993 |
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| Fast Phobia Cure: A woman's 22-year intense phobia of bees is successfully resolved in a 7-minute session in a workshop setting. Includes summary of 10-month follow-up interview including "in vivo" testing to verify that her phobia is gone | Andrea, Steve; Andreas, Connirae | Steve Andreas Collection | 1984 |
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| The Swish Pattern, an NLP method for changing habits
quickly, is used to help a woman stop biting her nails | Andreas, Connirae; Andreas, Steve | The Swish Pattern | 1986 |
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| The Swish Pattern, an NLP method for changing habits quickly, is used to help a woman change her anger at her daughters when they used a particular defiant voice and posture. This session illustrates how to gather and test information so that a swish can be designed for an individual, in
this case in the auditory system, rather than the visual system. The sound of the daughter's voice, high pitched and stereophonic, decreased to a
point, while the woman's evolved self voice went from a point to stereophonic, linking the two representations | Andreas, Connirae; Andreas, Steve | The Swish Pattern | 1986 |
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| Verilogue session: Client has been drinking alcohol regularly and has been bullied often at school. He thinks he is bisexual | Anonymous | Verilogue Transcript Series | 2009 |
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| Verilogue session: Client is having problems getting her work done | Anonymous | Verilogue Transcript Series | 2009 |
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| Verilogue session: Client and therapist discuss all the medications he is currently taking and those he has tried in the past. He is still struggling with fatigue and low energy levels | Anonymous | Verilogue Transcript Series | 2007 |
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| Verilogue session: In this session, the patient, his caregiver and his doctor discuss his extreme feelings of depression and helplessness | Anonymous | Verilogue Transcript Series | 2007 |
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| Verilogue session: Client is feeling much less depressed but is suffering from fatigue | Anonymous | Verilogue Transcript Series | 2007 |
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| Verilogue session: Client has been getting so wrapped up in her family conflicts that she forgets to take her medication for depression. She is thinking about attending a support group for family members of an alcoholic | Anonymous | Verilogue Transcript Series | 2007 |
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| Verilogue session: Client feels rejected by her children and repeatedly plays the role of the victim in her family relationships | Anonymous | Verilogue Transcript Series | 2007 |
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| Verilogue session: Client is not sleeping well and has been feeling a bit more depressed than usual | Anonymous | Verilogue Transcript Series | 2007 |
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| Verilogue session: Client suffers from depression. He feels like he was discriminated against in his job where he was forced to retire due to his mental state | Anonymous | Verilogue Transcript Series | 2007 |
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| Verilogue session: Client has been spending money out of control and over drawing her bank accounts. Her husband is leaving her and they need to find suitable living arrangements for her | Anonymous | Verilogue Transcript Series | 2007 |
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| Verilogue session: Client is extremely manic in this session he also suffers from schizophrenia | Anonymous | Verilogue Transcript Series | 2007 |
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| Verilogue session: Client discusses her husband and the stress in her life | Anonymous | Verilogue Transcript Series | 2007 |
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| Verilogue session: Client describes his feelings when he first started to suffer from bipolar disorder at the age of fourteen | Anonymous | Verilogue Transcript Series | 2007 |
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| Verilogue session: Client's mood and psychotic disorder had been stable up until recently when she began feeling extremely anxious and creating conflicts with people in her life | Anonymous | Verilogue Transcript Series | 2007 |
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| Verilogue session: Client describes where he is now with his mood swings; he has been in a depressive state for awhile | Anonymous | Verilogue Transcript Series | 2007 |
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| Verilogue session: Client has had severe insomnia and has been trying multiple sleep medications but, nothing has proven successful for her | Anonymous | Verilogue Transcript Series | 2007 |
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| Verilogue session: Client is currently experiencing severe depression and contemplating suicide as he feels that he is beyond repair | Anonymous | Verilogue Transcript Series | 2007 |
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| Verilogue session: Client is suffering from depression; her current antidepressant is not easing it much. They discuss other medications to try | Anonymous | Verilogue Transcript Series | 2007 |
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| Verilogue session: Client has been suffering from an array of symptoms and does not know if they stem from anxiety, depression, or medications | Anonymous | Verilogue Transcript Series | 2007 |
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| Verilogue session: Client has been feeling overwhelmed and overworked. She suffers from Fibromyalgia and is finding it difficult to get through the day when the pain and exhaustion get to be too much | Anonymous | Verilogue Transcript Series | 2007 |
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| Verilogue session: Client discusses her medications with the psychiatrist | Anonymous | Verilogue Transcript Series | 2007 |
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| Verilogue session: Client is unhappy with being overweight. They discuss the possibility of hypothyroidism as the cause of her weight issues | Anonymous | Verilogue Transcript Series | 2007 |
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| Verilogue session: Client has been extremely physically ill recently; it's been causing her to lack concentration and her work performance is suffering | Anonymous | Verilogue Transcript Series | 2007 |
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| Verilogue session: Client is having problems with some of her family members. She has angry outbursts due to the stress of family conflict | Anonymous | Verilogue Transcript Series | 2007 |
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| Verilogue session: Client's depressed mood has increased recently. She finds that all she wants to do is sleep | Anonymous | Verilogue Transcript Series | 2007 |
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| Verilogue session: Client was recently assaulted and he quit his job after an injury; these events have been anxiety provoking for him | Anonymous | Verilogue Transcript Series | 2007 |
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| Verilogue session: Client suffers from insomnia and severe mood swings | Anonymous | Verilogue Transcript Series | 2007 |
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