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Therapists and other helping professionals, such as teachers, doctors and nurses, social workers, and clergy, work in highly demanding fields and can suffer from burnout, compassion fatigue, and secondary stress. This happens when they give more attention to their clients’ well being than their own.
Both students and practitioners in these fields will find this book an essential guide to striking an optimal balance between self-care and other-care. The authors describe the joys and hazards of the work, the long road from novice to senior practitioner, the essence of burnout, ways to maintain the professional and personal self, methods experts use to maintain vitality, and a self-care action plan.
Vivid real-life examples and self-reflection questions will engage and motivate readers to think about their own work and ways to enhance their own resilience. Eloquently written and supported by extensive research, helping professionals will find this a valuable resource both when a novice and when an experienced practitioner.
"The authors explicitly state the case for help-giving as an extremely complex, dialectical, and demanding occupation. I have no doubt that students, novices, and professionals in the helping occupations will find this to be a major contribution to their professionalism and well-being." - Moshe Israelashvili, PhD, Tel Aviv University, Israel
"I welcome this book, as a psychotherapist, with my whole heart. The authors have left no stone unturned in identifying the pitfalls which can lead to burnout in practitioners in the business of "other care." - Ursula Somerville, MEAP, MIAHIP, European Psychotherapist and Clinical Supervisor based in Ireland
"Skovholt and Trotter-Mathison have offered well written observations of profound truth, informed largely by the superlative body of research on counselor development by Skovholt and colleagues. A stimulating and validating read for practitioners across the professional lifespan." - Camille DeBell, PhD, Associate Professor of Counseling, Regis University
"The second edition of the Resilient Practitioner is packed with insight and practical tools for mental health professionals. This is a great book for teaching and training, and for periodic self-assessment for the mature professional." - Arnold Spokane, PhD, ABPP, Professor of Counseling Psychology, Lehigh University
| Series Editor's Foreword | p. xiii |
| Preface | p. xv |
| Acknowledgments | p. xvii |
| About the Authors | p. xix |
| Skovholt Practitioner Professional Resiliency and Self-Care Inventory | p. xxi |
| Caring for Others Versus Self-Care: The Great Human Drama | p. 3 |
| Self-Reflection Exercises | p. 7 |
| Joys, Rewards, and Gifts of Practice | p. 9 |
| ... MORE | p. 10 |
| Rewards of Practice | p. 12 |
| Gifts of Practice | p. 14 |
| Self-Reflection Exercises | p. 15 |
| The Cycle of Caring as the Practice Essential | p. 17 |
| Caring as Central in Counseling, Therapy, Teaching, and Health Careers | p. 17 |
| The Cycle of Caring | p. 20 |
| The Cycle in Summary | p. 35 |
| Self-ReflectionExercises | p. 36 |
| The Long, Textured Path From Novice to Senior Practitioner | p. 39 |
| Themes in Professional Development | p. 40 |
| Phases of Practitioner Development | p. 55 |
| The Elevated Stressors of the Novice Practitioner | p. 79 |
| The Ambiguity of Human Interaction | p. 79 |
| Trekking With a Crude Map | p. 80 |
| Acute Need for Positive Mentoring | p. 87 |
| Glamorized Expectations | p. 91 |
| Intense Evaluation and Illuminated Scrutiny by Professional Gatekeepers | p. 95 |
| Porous Emotional Boundaries | p. 97 |
| Ethical and Legal Confusion | p. 99 |
| Acute Performance Anxiety and Fear | p. 100 |
| The Fragile and Incomplete Practitioner Self | p. 101 |
| Summary | p. 103 |
| Self-Reflection Exercises | p. 103 |
| Hazards of Practice | p. 105 |
| The Difficult Nature of the Work With Clients, Students, and Patients | p. 106 |
| Managing Major Professional Stressors | p. 114 |
| Hazards Summary | p. 138 |
| Self-Reflection Exercises | p. 139 |
| Burnout: A Hemorrhaging of the Self | p. 145 |
| Compassion Fatigue | p. 146 |
| Lack of Clarity | p. 147 |
| Work of Maslach | p. 148 |
| Seven Sources of Burnout | p. 149 |
| Meaning and Caring Burnout | p. 152 |
| Self-Reflection Exercises | p. 154 |
| Balancing Caring for Others and Caring for Self | p. 159 |
| Losing One's Innocence About the Assertive Need for Self-Care | p. 159 |
| The Need for More Self-Care at Times of Personal Crisis or Excessive Stress | p. 162 |
| Codependency and Self-Care | p. 164 |
| Psychological Wellness as an Ethical Imperative | p. 166 |
| Self-Reflection Exercises | p. 166 |
| Sustaining the Professional Self | p. 169 |
| Sustained by Meaningful Work | p. 169 |
| Maximizing the Experience of Professional Success | p. 171 |
| Avoid the Grandiosity Impulse and Relish Small I Made a Difference" Victories | p. 175 |
| Think Long Term | p. 176 |
| Creating and Sustaining an Active, Individually Designed Development Method | p. 176 |
| Professional Self-Understanding | p. 178 |
| Creating a Professional Greenhouse at Work | p. 181 |
| Using Professional Venting and Expressive Writing to Release Distress Emotions | p. 184 |
| The "Good Enough Practitioner" | p. 185 |
| Understanding the Reality of Pervasive Early Professional Anxiety | p. 187 |
| Increasing Intellectual Excitement and Decreasing Boredom by Reinventing Oneself | p. 188 |
| Minimizing Ambiguous Professional Loss | p. 190 |
| Learning to Set Boundaries, Create Limits, and Say No to Unreasonable Helping Requests | p. 191 |
| Summary | p. 191 |
| Self-Reflection Exercises | p. 191 |
| Sustaining the Personal Self | p. 195 |
| Constant Investment in a Personal Renewal Process | p. 196 |
| Awareness of the Danger of One-Way Caring Relationships in OneÆs Personal Life | p. 196 |
| Nurturing One's Self | p. 196 |
| Summary: Keeping in Focus One's Own Need for Balanced WellnessùPhysical, Spiritual, Emotional, and Social | p. 215 |
| Self-Reflection Exercises | p. 216 |
| Burnout Prevention and Self-Care Strategies of Expert Practitioners | p. 219 |
| Professional Stressors | p. 220 |
| Emergence of the Expert Practitioner | p. 225 |
| Creating a Positive Work Structure | p. 229 |
| Protective Factors | p. 234 |
| Nurturing Self Through Solitude and Relationships | p. 237 |
| Conclusion | p. 241 |
| Self-Reflection Exercises | p. 242 |
| Epilogue | p. 245 |
| magery Exercise | p. 245 |
| Self-Reflection Exercises | p. 246 |
| Self-Care Action Plan | p. 249 |
| Assess Your Own Other-Care vs. Self-Care Balance | p. 249 |
| Action Plan for Change | p. 258 |
| References | p. 261 |
| Index | p. 275 |
| Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved. |