For decades, health care providers have worked as though there were a monolithic wall dividing the ailments of the mind from those of the body. Theorists on either side developed separate languages and philosophies to explain symptoms. This distinction has left many clinicians unable to treat successfully patients whose symptoms--such as headaches, conversion paralysis, and seizures--arise from the place where mind and body meet. In this book, the authors describe a powerful narrative therapy, one that relies on the wisdom and everyday language of patients' real-life stories instead of the...
For decades, health care providers have worked as though there were a monolithic wall dividing the ailments of the mind from those of the body. Theori...