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Meta
Tag Archives: DBT
The Scarlet Label: Close Encounters With ‘Borderline Personality Disorder’ (Part 2) Jacqueline Simon Gunn & Brent Potter
http://www.madinamerica.com/2014/11/scarlet-label-close-encounters-borderline-personality-disorder-part-2 Click on the link for the second part of this excellent post by Jacqueline and Brent, drawing on their co-authored book on this subject:- http://www.amazon.co.uk/Borderline-Personality-Disorder-Perspectives-Stigmatizing-ebook/dp/B00PMABJM6/ref=sr_1_2?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1416064246&sr=1-2&keywords=borderline+personality+disorder+potter We think the points they make are valid and important. Here too is the … Continue reading →
Posted in abuse, actualizing tendency, awakening, borderline personality disorder, Brent Potter, childhood abuse, clients' perspective, cognitive, consciousness, cultural questions, Disconnection, emotions, empathy, empowerment, equality, ethics, external locus, fear, Gender & culture, healing, human condition, identity, internal locus of evaluation, Mad in America, medical model, mindfulness, non-directive counselling, paradigm shift, perception, political, power, power and powerlessness, psychiatric drugs, psychiatry, relationship, sadness & pain, scapegoating, self concept, therapeutic growth, therapeutic relationship, trauma, trust, working with clients
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Tagged affordable counselling exeter, axis II, borderline personality disorder, BPD, Brent Potter, case study, consciousness, counselling exeter, counsellor Exeter, counsellors Exeter, DBT, diagnosis, diagnosis and disorder, Dialectical Behavioral Therapy, disorder model, distress, DSM, empathy, gender and culture, gender bias, gender bias in medicine, gender bias in psychiatry, holistic counselling, holistic psychotherapy, Jacqueline Gunn, Karen Horney, low cost counselling exeter, Mad in America, medical model, medicalisation of distress, medicalization of distress, mental illness, metanoia, Palace Gate Counselling Service, Palace Gate Counselling Service Exeter, pathologising distress, pathologizing distress, person centred counselling exeter, person-centered, person-centred, personal growth, psychiatric drugs, psychiatric model, recovery, social constructs in psychiatry, social constructs of mental illness, stigma, stigmatising, stigmatizing, trauma, wholeness, working with clients with diagnosis of BPD, www.palacegatecounselling.org.uk
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