Going, Going, Gone
A young boy finds his Charon for the final journeyAn ill child finds his place among a group of other boys in again men's bodies. Read more
Lions Without a Cause
Men's animal instincts don't fit the modern worldLet's face it: love means something quite different to men and women. A look at other species of social mammals offers some remarkable insights into the... Read more
Women Treating Men
Therapy across the gender divideGender shapes relationship from the very first moment therapist meets client, especially when the client is male and the therapist is female. Read more
The Way To Say It...
What to do when your hot buttons get pushedSome practical guidelines for handling confrontive and critical clients. Read more
Shame-O-Phobia
Why Men Fear TherapyShame is the least understood dimension of men's inner experience—by both men themselves and the people who live with them. This lack of understanding may be... Read more
From the Editor: May/June 2010
It seems odd that after nearly 50 years of focusing on gender norms and how they affect women, the inner world of men would remain as dimly understood as it... Read more
Movie Magic
The Search for Transcendence in a Celluloid WorldOn the handful of channels that constituted the still-primitive medium that was television in the 1950s and early ’60s—before talk shows metastasized... Read more
Bright-Sided
A Naysayer's Guide to Positive PsychologyA naysayers look at Martin Seligman and the Positive Psychology industry he helped create. Read more
Glorious Food
Ambivalence and Guilt Take Up a Lot of Space at Today's Dinner TablesNever before has the simple act of eating been so fraught with ethical, spiritual, and psychological issues. Read more
Recession-Proofing Mantras
How to Stay Calm When Your Practice Seems to Be Under SiegeSome highly practical mantras that can help even the more business-phobic practitioner keep afloat in these tough economic times. Read more
The Trauma Myth
Understanding the true dynamics of sexual abuseTwenty-five years ago, it was considered a great advance when therapists first began to approach childhood abuse as a form of trauma. Now new research suggests... Read more
Tough Love
They Don't Make Fathers Like They Used ToFond memories of an old-fashioned father who believed in practicing tough love with his fists. Read more
Virtual Reality Therapy
He’s back in Iraq, on foot patrol, nervously walking down a street that suggests Basra, when it happens again—an explosion right across the street... Read more
Take a Breath
Using Yoga to Create a Sense of Well-Being in Your OfficeA variety of easy-to-use yogic breathing techniques can add a new dimension to treatment with depressed and anxious clients. Read more
Therapy in the Danger Zone
Breaking the cycle of family traumaThere's no more emotionally demanding work than that with an incestuous family. A therapist offers an uncensored look at the fear, loathing, and fascination of... Read more
The Long Shadow of Trauma
Childhood Abuse May Be Our Number One Public Health IssueAs the battles and controversies over the forthcoming DSM-V heat up, a determined group of trauma experts and researchers are mounting a passionate challenge... Read more
Addicted to Sex
There are no shortcuts in treating SAEffective work with sex addicts must address deep-seated attachment wounds. Read more
From the Editor: March/April 2010
Readers whose preferred clinical stance is one of safe therapeutic neutrality be forewarned—this provocative issue on the growing debate over the legacy of... Read more
From the Editor: January/February 2010
This issue examines whether our increasing knowledge of all those multisyllabic brain processes has really made us more effective practitioners. Read more
Old Habits Die Hard
Making couples therapy stickIt's one thing to make change happen in a couples session; it's quick another to make those changes tick over time. Read more
The Age of the Über–Parent
Can science really help us raise better adjusted kids?Can science really help us raise better-adjusted kids? Read more
Educating Theresa
Sometimes therapy means total commitmentTreating depression requires a commitment to working with mind, body, and spirit. Read more
Ecological Intelligence
A new awareness for our timeOur collective survival depends on a shift in our most basic assumptions and perceptions, one that'll drive changes in commerce and industry, as well as in our... Read more
Complexity Choir
The eight domains of self-integrationAs unlikely as it may sound, the mathematics of complexity theory could offer us the key to the elusive secrets of mental health and personal well-being. Read more
Big Squeeze
No research? No reimbursementA tipping point has been reached in the impact that psychotherapy research results, no matter of interest only among a small circle of academic, are going to... Read more
Swept Away
Discovering the world of the sensesA young woman discovers the world of the senses. Read more
The Brain's Rules for Change
Translating cutting-edge neuroscience into practiceFor the firs time, we're beginning to understand how to directly delete emotional meanings attributed to disturbing past events. Read more
The Rise and Fall of PaxMedica
Welcome to the new era of brain-based therapyIn the 1970s, the rise of Prozac, the DSM-III, and "evidence-based" therapies brought the appearance of coherence and order to mental health professions under... Read more