-Caveat Lector-   <A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/">
</A> -Cui Bono?-

Hi !

Below please find resources.

Sincerely,  Neil Brick

Our listing these resources does not necessarily constitute our endorsement
of them. Resources mentioned in this resource list are mentioned for
educational value only. Using these resources may or may not help your
recovery process, so use caution when reading anything or contacting anyone
mentioned in this resource list.
May be triggering for survivors.

For info on psychotherapy, please see:
http://www.trauma-pages.com/pg4.htm#MH-Trt

Psychotherapy (links include):

Theories and Approaches in Psychotherapy
Michael Gournaris' summary of psychotherapeutic approaches covers their
concepts, contributions, limitations, etc.

Quality in Therapy
Richard Ebling's assorted ideas, links, tools, and references for providing
high quality therapy.

Creative Arts Therapies
Various creative arts therapies are described at this site, including music,
art, dance & poetry.

Art Therapy in Canada
This site focuses on Art Therapy, including trauma-related applications along
with other links.

Michael White
Website focusing on Michael White's Narrative Therapy approach, including
workshops and links.

Narrative Therapy
Describes Michael White's Narrative Therapy in context of other theroretical
approaches.

Silvan Tomkins Institute
The Tomkins Institute is dedicated to understanding human emotion, affect
theory, and related therapy approaches.

Non-Mainstream Psychotherapy Resources
Extensive listing of links to many non-traditional counseling, therapy, and
self-healing sites.


Excerpt from http://idealist.com/wounded_healer/wills.shtml

Copyright ©1996 by Sharon Wills, Ph.D., and Jean M. Goodwin, M.D.
Violence Recovery Program, University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston, TX
77555-0428

Many people who have survived traumatic events often continue, even many
years later, to re-experience elements of the trauma whenever they are
confronted with situations in which they have emotional and physical feelings
similar to ones experienced during the traumatic event. Re-experiencing may
occur in a number of different ways, including unwanted thoughts and images,
distressing dreams or nightmares, flashbacks, panic attacks, and physical
complaints. It is easier to make sense of these experiences when you
understand how our brains process, store, and retrieve information under
normal circumstances and how trauma can disrupt this process.

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