Product Descriptionbeauty Is Often An Invisible Yet Potent Presence In Clinical Work. The Psychology Of Beauty: Creation Of A Beautiful Self, By Ellen Sinkman, Lcsw, Addresses The Vital Importance Of Beauty, Its Sources, And Manifestations In Everyones Lives-Including Psychotherapy Patients. The Ability To Be Mesmerizingly Beautiful And Beautifully Creative, Strivings Toward Mastering Beauty, And Wishes To Be Transformed Are Universal Desires. During Psychotherapy, Patients Manifest Or Defend Against These Forces. So It Is Striking That Patients As Well As Therapists Often Overlook Or Dismiss Issues About Creating Beauty In Themselves.The Book Introduces This Seeming Contradiction With The Ancient Myth Of Pygmalion And His Sculpture Of A Beautiful Woman. These Enduring Mythic Figures Represent The Wish To Emerge As A Beautiful Being And The Wish For The Power To Create Beauty In Another. Patients In Psychotherapy Often Pursue These Elusive Goals Outside Clinical Work, Rather Than Within Treatment. Manifold Venues Enticingly Promise Reinvention. These Activities May Involve Plastic Surgery, Beauty Salon Make-Overs, Diet Gurus, Elocution Coaches, Tattooing, And Athletic Training. Seekers Of Beauty Engage With People Whom They See As Agents Offering Them Ravishing Physical Or Charismatic Attractiveness. Psychotherapists May Or May Not Be Among Agents Seen As Having The Power To Transform.The Quest For Beauty Is Widespread And In Many Instances Non-Pathological. Sinkman Looks At Multiple Avenues Of Understanding And Appreciation Of Efforts Toward Beauty, Including Artistic Creativity And Political Activities. However There Is A Spectrum Of Investment In Creating Beauty. Pursuing Beauty Can Become Pathological. Therapists Need To Watch Out For Its Appearance Outside The Psychoanalytic Arena. Such Material Can Be Missed When The Analyst Falls Into Counter-Transference Difficulties Such As Feeling Invested In Transforming The Patient, Identifying With The Patients Narcissistic Injuries And/Or Needs To Compete, Or Enacting Battles With The Patient. Such Difficulties Interfere With Attunement To Patients Experiences. The Psychology Of Beauty Considers Definitions Of Beauty, Gender Identity Themes, And Origins Of Beauty In The Mother-Infant Relationship. It Investigates Ugliness, Sadomasochistic Beauty Pursuits, Evolutionary Factors, And Aspects Of Aging. The Book Highlights Emerging Clinical Material Which Has Yet To Gain Notice And Suggests What Analysts May Be Missing, And Why.Reviewthe Psychology Of Beauty: Creation Of A Beautiful Self Is A Comprehensive, Insightful, And Extremely Well-Integrated Exploration Of The Meanings And Uses Of Beauty Both Inside And Outside The Clinical Encounter. Ellen Sinkman Draws Heavily On Myth And Fable, Particularly Ovids Rendering Of The Classic Myth Of Pygmalion, To Introduce Her Central Idea Of A Universal And Timeless Unconscious Wish To Be Transformed Into A Beautiful Being And Have The Power To Create Beauty In Another. . . .Ellen Sinkmans Wonderful Book Is A Real Pleasure To Read. She Has Produced An Exceptionally Well-Integrated, Intellectually Lively Volume About The Compelling Yet Often Overlooked And Hence Unaddressed Meaning Of Beauty In Clinical Work.,Journal Of The American Psychoanalytic Associationthe Psychology Of Beauty Is A Book Of Substantial Practical Value. I Believe The Author Goes A Long Way In Highlighting The Very Important Issue Of Beauty In The Treatment Setting. As I Read, I Found Myself Thinking About Different Individuals Whom I Have Seen, Wondering...How To Address Such Concerns In Order To See What Emerges. For It Is In This Way That The Psychology Of Beauty Does What All Good Books Aimed At Analysts And Therapists Do: It Gets Us Thinking About Patients And How To Bring To Light What Seems A Frequently Overlooked Issue In Our Field. I Imagine Sinkmans Book Will Provide A Similar Function For Others; And I Expect That This Text Will Pave The Way For
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