ABSTRACT

Counsellors and psychotherapists are faced with ever-increasing complexity in their work with adolescents. In this book, Bronagh Starrs offers an understanding of developmental and therapeutic process from a relational-phenomenological Gestalt perspective.

Starrs shows how the adolescent’s presenting symptom issues are statements of compromised lifespace integrity and demonstrates therapeutic sensibility to the adolescent’s first-person experience. Throughout the book, the clinician is offered extensive relational and creative strategies to support integrity repair for the adolescent. The developmental impact of various lifespace contexts are discussed, including parental separation, complex family configuration, grief, adoption, and emerging sexual orientation and gender experience. Therapeutic responses to common creative adjustments are explored including anxiety, school refusal, depression, self-harm, suicide, eating disorders, alcohol and drug use, and sexual trauma.

Adolescent Psychotherapy: A Radical Relational Approach will help counsellors and psychotherapists to develop deeper levels of competency in their work as adolescent psychotherapists, as they navigate the complex and fascinating experience of therapy with teenagers. This exceptional contribution is highly suitable for both experienced practitioners and students of counselling and psychotherapy.

chapter 2|16 pages

Contact assessment

chapter 3|13 pages

Ongoing parental involvement

chapter 4|19 pages

One-to-one engagement with the adolescent

chapter 6|16 pages

Complex parenting spaces

Adoption, fostering and loss

chapter 7|17 pages

Anxiety, depression, self-harm and suicide

chapter 8|14 pages

Eating disorders

chapter 9|8 pages

Alcohol and drugs

chapter 10|12 pages

Sexuality and gender

Emerging identity and boundary development

chapter 11|13 pages

Sexual trauma

chapter 12|11 pages

The diagnosed adolescent

chapter 13|5 pages

Case management