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Oriental Stories as Tools in Psychotherapy: The Merchant and the Parrot

Autor N. Peseschkian
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 31 oct 1985
If you give someone a fish, you feed him only once. If you teach him how to fish, he can feed himself forever. ---Oriental wisdom When a German or American comes home in the evening, he wants his peace and quiet. That, at least, is the general rule. He sits down in front of the television, drinks his hard-earned beer and reads his newspaper, as if to say, "Leave me in peace. After working so hard, I have a right to it." For him, this is relaxation. In the East, a man relaxes in a different way. By the time he comes home, his wife has already invited a few guests, relatives, or family and business friends. By chatting with his guests, he feels relaxed, as though freely translating the motto "Guests are a gift from God." Relaxation can thus mean many things. There is no set definition for everything that relaxation comprises. People relax in the way they have learned how, and the way they hav~earned is what is customary in their family or group, or in the social circle to which they belong.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9783540157656
ISBN-10: 3540157654
Pagini: 188
Dimensiuni: 133 x 203 x 10 mm
Greutate: 0.2 kg
Ediția:Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 1986
Editura: Springer
Colecția Springer
Locul publicării:Berlin, Heidelberg, Germany

Public țintă

Research

Descriere

If you give someone a fish, you feed him only once. If you teach him how to fish, he can feed himself forever. ---Oriental wisdom When a German or American comes home in the evening, he wants his peace and quiet. That, at least, is the general rule. He sits down in front of the television, drinks his hard-earned beer and reads his newspaper, as if to say, "Leave me in peace. After working so hard, I have a right to it." For him, this is relaxation. In the East, a man relaxes in a different way. By the time he comes home, his wife has already invited a few guests, relatives, or family and business friends. By chatting with his guests, he feels relaxed, as though freely translating the motto "Guests are a gift from God." Relaxation can thus mean many things. There is no set definition for everything that relaxation comprises. People relax in the way they have learned how, and the way they hav~earned is what is customary in their family or group, or in the social circle to which they belong.

Cuprins

I. Introduction to the Theory of Stories.- 1. About the Courage to Risk a Test.- 2. Folk Psychotheraphy in the Mideast.- 3. The Thousand and One Nights.- 4. Positive Psychotherapy.- 5. Transcultural Psychotherapy.- 6. Stories as Instruments in Psychotherapy.- 7. The Functions of Stories.- 8. Guidelines for the Reader.- 9. Sources of the Stories.- 10. The Favorite Character in Mideastern Literature.- 11. Self-Discovery.- II. The Stories in Practice.- 1. Parables.- 2. Physicians’ Perplexity and Hope.- 3. Sexuality and Marriage.- 4. Stories in Psychotherapy.- 5. A Collection of Stories to Think About.- Biographical Sketches.