5942 Results
Article March 1, 2011

The Verdict Is In

The Case for Attachment Theory

Fifty years of research has confirmed that the emotional quality of our earliest attachment relationships is central to our well-being as adults. Read more

Article March 1, 2011

Hidden in Plain Sight

Adult AD/HD is Too Often Unrecognized

Adult ADHD too often goes unrecognized. Read more

Article March 1, 2011

The Specter of the Big "C"

A Modern Look at an Age-Old Malady

A modern look at cancer treatment through the ages. Read more

Article March 1, 2011

You've Got Mail!

A Cyber Relationship Sparks New Discovery

A cyber relationship revives a marriage in the doldrums. Read more

Article March 1, 2011

Gender and the Brain

Louann Brizendine's Work Stirs New Controversy

Neuropsychiatrist Louann Brizendine has stirred up plenty of controversy by arguing that men and women have very different brains. Read more

Article March 1, 2011

The Nightgown

In Search of the Answerman

A determined patient searches for therapeutic insight from an unlikely source. Read more

Article March 1, 2011

The Attuned Therapist

Does Attachment Theory Really Matter?

In recent years, attachment theory, with its emphasis on early bonding, connection and relationship, has exerted as much influence over the field of... Read more

Article March 1, 2011

Breaking Free

A Mind-Body Approach to Retraining the Brain

Putting the power of neuroplasticity to work in the consulting room. Read more

Article March 1, 2011

Editor's Note: March/April 2011

Creating a 21st-Century Learning Community

This issue is noteworthy not only for its subject—tracking the influence of attachment research on psychotherapy theory and practice—but also because it... Read more

Article March 1, 2011

Bringing Up Baby

Are We Too Attached?

While therapists may consider some intuitively appealing ideas about human development---like attachment theory---beyond dispute, the researcher's job is to... Read more

Magazine Issue March 1, 2011

The Great Attachment Debate

How Important Is Early Experience?

Extra Feature Read more

Article January 1, 2011

Coming Full Circle

Learning to Choose Where You Look

Understanding your place in the great circle of life is often a matter of where you choose to look. Read more

Article January 1, 2011

Whatever Became of Feminism?

Harriet Lerner on the Legacy of the Women's Movement

Psychologist and bestselling author Harriet Lerner speaks about her body of work and addresses the question of the continuing impact of feminism on... Read more

Article January 1, 2011

First Impressions

Getting Off to the Right Start is Crucial in Therapy

That first session with a new client can be crucial to the success or failure of treatment. Read more

Article January 1, 2011

Chew Wisely

The Joy of Playing With Your Food

Remember as a kid being scrupulously taught that eating was a serious business that brooked no nonsense? A lifetime later, this author discovered that---as... Read more

Article January 1, 2011

I Think, Therefore I Eat

Skills for Successful Dieting

From the viewpoint of Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy, the reason that dieters so frequently fail to stick to their healthy eating plans is simple: knowing what... Read more

Article January 1, 2011

It's Not About The Food

The Truth About Eating Disorders

The key to working effectively with eating disorders is understanding that starving, bingeing, and purging aren't simply bad habits. For treatment to work, it... Read more

Article January 1, 2011

Cyberspaced

Sherry Turkle Sees e-Life at the Crossroads

MIT professor Sherry Turkle has spent the last 30 years studying what our machines have come to mean to us, and how they're altering—sometimes... Read more

Article January 1, 2011

Recipe For Life

Is Attuned Eating the Answer to Diet Failure?

Despite the common cultural notion that anyone can successfully lose weight---constantly reinforced by the $60 billion-a-year diet industry---at least 95... Read more

Article January 1, 2011

Misstating the Obvious

The Pitfalls of Doing What Comes Naturally

While many therapists like to trust their intuition, research shows how often "gut instinct" can lead us astray. Read more

Article January 1, 2011

Editor's Note: January/February 2011

Eating To Live, Not Living To Eat

The old maxim "You should eat to live, not live to eat" may sound wise, but it's based on a profound misreading of the fundamental facts of human biology. Read more

Magazine Issue January 1, 2011

Diets and Our Demons

Does Anything Really Work

Extra Feature Read more

Article November 1, 2010

Deconstructing Depression

A Therapeutic Road Map for Effective Treatment

Depression is an ill-defined diagnosis encompassing conditions with a variety of underlying causes. Recognizing different forms of depression is the key to... Read more

Article November 1, 2010

The Puzzle of PTSD

Does the PTSD Diagnosis Do More Harm Than Good?

Does the diagnosis of PTSD actually hamper therapists' ability to help combat veterans do the hard work of coming to terms with their war experiences? Read more

Article November 1, 2010

Listening to Your Heart

Sometimes Life's Greatest Gifts are Disguised as Disappointments

A mother deals with the news that her child will have a lifelong impairment. Read more

Article November 1, 2010

Rules of Engagement

A Civilian Therapist’s Guide to the Military Mindset

What civilian therapists need to know about military culture and life in a combat zone to best serve veterans struggling with war trauma. Read more

Article November 1, 2010

Telling It Like It Is

Donald Meichenbaum Doesn't Mince Words

Long an acerbic critic of the trendy and faddish, Don Meichenbaum, one of the founders of CBT, is still determined to separate myth from reality in the world... Read more

Article November 1, 2010

Therapy in the Round

Group Therapy Offers a Larger Arena for Change

How the skills of the group therapist differ from those of the individually-oriented practitioner. Read more

Article November 1, 2010

Stop the Merry-Go-Round

Strategies for Angry Couples

While partners caught in the anger merry-go-round invariably blame the other, both typically pass the anger back and forth like a shared virus. Read more