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Living well and dying well : tales of counselling older people / Helen Kewell ; [foreword by Emmy Van Deurzen].

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublisher: Monmouth, UK : PCCS Books Ltd, 2019Description: x, 157 pages ; 22 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 1910919411
  • 9781910919415
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 618.9768914 23
LOC classification:
  • RC480.54 .K49 2019
Contents:
Introduction -- 1. How to say goodbye – Maggie -- 2. Rewriting narratives – Bobby -- 3. Keeping up appearances – Joan -- 4. Her indoors – Kate -- 5. The dolls’ house – Alice -- 6. So long and thanks for the fish – Cliff -- 7. Finding Frankl – Susan -- 8. Waiting for the Southsea bus – Tom -- Conclusion
Summary: Older people rarely feature in counselling literature, and the very old barely at all. Helen Kewell seeks to address this often overlooked topic with a vibrant collection of resonant case studies describing her encounters with some of the old and very old clients with whom she has worked as a counsellor. Woven into these accounts are her personal reflections on how working with these clients has changed her and contributed to her own growth as a counsellor and as a human being. She also describes the theoretical and philosophical works that have influenced her practice – looking to humanistic, existentialist and person-centred approaches to guide her in this largely uncharted territory. Among the people described in this book, we meet Maggie, for whom death is very close and whose day-to-day experiencing is insular, private and diminished to one room and a few hours of wakefulness. We meet Kate, for whom reawakened feelings from long ago and the challenge to strongly held beliefs prove too much to face. We meet Bobby, who valiantly engages in reassessing and reconstructing his life narrative and through this finds some release, and Susan, who finds herself facing life transitions much earlier than expected and learns to transcend her circumstances and find a new way of living. And last, we meet Tom who, despite the loss of all he holds dear, manages also to transcend his circumstances and face death on his own terms. Helen’s aim in this book is to use story-telling about real people living real lives to inspire others to consider this work as possible, necessary and meaningful.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Book South Campus South Campus Main Collection 618.9768914 KEW (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available A550276B

Includes bibliographical references.

Introduction -- 1. How to say goodbye – Maggie -- 2. Rewriting narratives – Bobby -- 3. Keeping up appearances – Joan -- 4. Her indoors – Kate -- 5. The dolls’ house – Alice -- 6. So long and thanks for the fish – Cliff -- 7. Finding Frankl – Susan -- 8. Waiting for the Southsea bus – Tom -- Conclusion

Older people rarely feature in counselling literature, and the very old barely at all. Helen Kewell seeks to address this often overlooked topic with a vibrant collection of resonant case studies describing her encounters with some of the old and very old clients with whom she has worked as a counsellor. Woven into these accounts are her personal reflections on how working with these clients has changed her and contributed to her own growth as a counsellor and as a human being. She also describes the theoretical and philosophical works that have influenced her practice – looking to humanistic, existentialist and person-centred approaches to guide her in this largely uncharted territory. Among the people described in this book, we meet Maggie, for whom death is very close and whose day-to-day experiencing is insular, private and diminished to one room and a few hours of wakefulness. We meet Kate, for whom reawakened feelings from long ago and the challenge to strongly held beliefs prove too much to face. We meet Bobby, who valiantly engages in reassessing and reconstructing his life narrative and through this finds some release, and Susan, who finds herself facing life transitions much earlier than expected and learns to transcend her circumstances and find a new way of living. And last, we meet Tom who, despite the loss of all he holds dear, manages also to transcend his circumstances and face death on his own terms. Helen’s aim in this book is to use story-telling about real people living real lives to inspire others to consider this work as possible, necessary and meaningful.

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