Main Menu
Home
Columns
Feature Articles
Latest News
FAQs
News Briefs
Affiliates
Current Issue - Subscribe!

Magazine Issues
April 2008 Issue
February 2008 Issue
December 2007 Issue
October 2007 Issue
August 2007 Issue
June 2007 Issue
Events Calendar
« < July 2008 > »
S M T W T F S
29 30 1 2 3 4 5
6 7 8 9 10 11 12
13 14 15 16 17 18 19
20 21 22 23 24 25 26
27 28 29 30 31 1 2
Counselor Syndication
feed image
feed image
feed image
Columns
Coming to Terms and Accepting Who I Am
First Person
Written by Anonymously Submitted   
Friday, 04 January 2008
“I became insane with long intervals of horrible sanity.” — Edgar Allan Poe

I always thought my bouts of depression were situational. Reflecting on those dark and emotionally painful periods, I realized my depression oftentimes seemed triggered by financial hardships. There was the time I was ordered to pay $10,000 in additional child support; or when I had to refinance my condominium; and the multiple times I overspent at Christmas or during summer vacations.
No comments for this item
Read more...
 
Do Certain People Prefer Certain Drugs?
Research to Practice
Written by Mike Taleff, PhD, CSAC, MAC   
Friday, 04 January 2008
As long I as I have been in this field, I have heard claims that certain types of people seem to like certain types of drugs. You hear this in staff meetings, workshops, books, and even at coffee after 12-Step meetings. But, is any of it true? And, what does this mean for treatment?
No comments for this item
Read more...
 
Get the Facts Straight
On the Web
Written by Stuart. Gitlow, MD   
Friday, 04 January 2008
There was big news on July 16. A news story circulated by the Associated Press (AP) was widely published. The story: one of every 12 full-time workers in the United States acknowledged using illegal drugs at least once in the previous month. A clinical psychologist was quoted in the story as saying that this finding was “very worrisome” because there are too few treatment programs to assist those with dependence on drugs. At that point, I said, “huh?” The story is not about people with addiction or people with dependence, but is rather simply about use. Let’s look at one such person:
No comments for this item
Read more...
 
Buzz Words in Practice (And those that should be)
Clinical Supervision
Written by David J. Powell, PhD   
Friday, 04 January 2008
In today’s parlance, there are certain key buzzwords one must learn to practice, and to receive funding for one’s organization.

For example, if you asked the average counselor what is their model of therapy, almost everyone will say they use cognitive-behavior therapy (CBT) techniques. CBT is the current poster child in counseling, regardless of whether a clinician truly understands or practices CBT, in much the same way as decades ago the “Minnesota Model” (or the Hazelden Model) of counseling was the gold standard for addiction counseling. Humans are mimetic, we’re hero worshippers, which means we need to find models to follow, which is probably a good thing. Remember a decade ago, we all “wanted to be like Mike.”
This item includes 2 comments
Read more...
 
Bringing Our Lives Into Balance
Wellness
Written by John Newport, PhD   
Friday, 04 January 2008
This column expands on a theme I developed in a recent column titled, “From Doing to Being,” which addressed the importance of helping your clients free themselves from their obsessive-compulsive tendencies as part and parcel of a holistic approach to recovery.
No comments for this item
Read more...
 
<< Start < Prev 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next > End >>

Results 26 - 30 of 326
(c) 2007 Counselor Magazine