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What Changes in Therapy? Who Changes?
Authors:Natalie S Eldridge PhD  Janet L Surrey PhD  Wendy P Rosen PhD  Jean Baker Miller MD
Institution:1. Jean Baker Miller Training Institute;2. JBMTI;3. McLean Hospital/Harvard Medical School;4. McLean Hospital;5. Jean Baker Miller Training Institute at the Stone Center, Wellesley College;6. Boston University School of Medicine
Abstract:SUMMARY

A central component of therapeutic change involves facilitating the capacity to move and be moved by the other. Another way of saying this might be that change entails experiencing a greater freedom of relational movement. The question of who and what actually changes in the process of therapy is the focus of the three vignettes that follow. They highlight, among other things, the recognition and acknowledgment of mutuality as an essential force within the relational matrix and the ever-changing landscape that this creates. Each of these examples of a change process bears, as well, a particular stamp of its own, and thus speaks to the unique personality of every therapeutic dyad.
Keywords:Relational movement  Relational-Cultural Theory  mutuality  change  relationships  images  isolation  growth-fostering  connection  healing  relational images  central relational paradox  condemned isolation
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