Description
Foreword. Introduction. Part I. Spirituality in the context of psychotherapy. Chapter 1. Flight, fright or faith? Chapter 2. Groundless or reasonable fear? Chapter 3. Psychological or spiritual trauma? Chapter 4. Vision or hallucination? Chapter 5. Depression or spiritual darkness? Chapter 6. Narcissism or misdirected worship? Part 2. Psychotherapy in the context of spirituality. Chapter 7. The past complicates the present. Chapter 8. Bringing the background to the fore. Chapter 9. Psychotherapy and root metaphors. Chapter 10. Psychotherapy and spiritual root metaphors. Chapter 11. Disconnected spiritual metaphors. Part 3. Existential and cognitive aspects of spiritual change. Chapter 12. Spirituality as a change process. Chapter 13. The existential aspect of spiritual change. Chapter 14. Psychotherapy and the struggle for authentic spirituality. Chapter 15. The cognitive aspect of spiritual change. Chapter 16. Psychotherapy and illuminative experience. Part 4. The analysis of spiritual relationships. Chapter 17. The relational aspect of spiritual change. Chapter 18. Spirituality as a negative therapeutic factor. Chapter 19. Impersonal (or manipulative) relationships. Chapter 20. Mutual agreement (or contractual) relationships. Chapter 21. Mutual love (or fellowship) relationships. Further reading. References. Index.