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#822 From: "arnold.kaufman" <arnold.kaufman@...>
Date: Wed Jul 15, 2009 11:47 pm
Subject: adlerian psychology and the self
arnold.kaufman
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Dear Members of Classical Adlerian Psychology,

I would very much appreciate getting your input on this topic.

Your responses to this survey will be completely confidential. No one other than
the researchers will have access to the data. It will be reported in the
aggregate, combined with hundreds of other responses. I will be happy to provide
you with the results of the survey.

If you have any questions or comments, please contact me.

In advance, thank you very much for your cooperation.

Dr. Arnold Kaufman, Director of Research

TO RESPOND TO THE QUESTIONNAIRE:
1. hit Reply
2. Please be sure to select the message author (arnold.kaufman@ …) and NOT the
group email address

QUESTIONNAIRE

Type your area of expertise (psychologist, therapist, life coach, etc.)

1. _______________

      Place the letter X next to the best answer(s) -

2. If you believe you are more than a body and a brain – which term(s) do you
use,
a)     Self - _____
b)     Other - _____  Please name it_________
c)     I believe we are only body and brain - _____

Answer Yes or No

3. I have a clear and useful definition of self     _______

For the definition please give a brief, spontaneous answer -

4. The definition of self I use
is___________________________________________________________



For a copy of the results please give us the following information;

Name/title - ___________________________________________

E-mail - _______________________________________________

School Affiliation - _________________________________________________
________________________________________

Ps. I would very much appreciate if you forwarded this questionnaire to any
professional group/association or individual who would be interested in
participating.

#819 From: "lockertaylor" <lockertaylor@...>
Date: Tue May 26, 2009 10:45 pm
Subject: Request for Participation!
lockertaylor
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Hello members of Classical Adlerian Psychology group,

I am a graduate student at the University of Florida. Under the
supervision of Martin Heesacker, Ph.D., I am investigating mental health
professionals' evaluations of clients, treatment conceptualizations
and demographic information. I am seeking participation by practicing
mental health professionals.  Please consider participating or
forwarding this email to your colleagues.

You will be able to access the online survey from the following
hyperlink:


http://survey2.psych.ufl.edu/survey103/start.htm
<http://survey2.psych.ufl.edu/survey103/start.htm>
   <http://survey2.psych.ufl.edu/survey103/start.htm>

The online survey contains informed consent, questions regarding
treatment recommendations, measures pertaining to different aspects of
your personality, and questions regarding your demographic
characteristics.

You will remain anonymous in the current study. Identifiable information
will not be asked as a part of the study. The length of the survey is
approximately 5 to 10 minutes. Participation in the study is voluntary
and you are free to withdraw from the study at any time. Furthermore,
any individual's information collected through this study will be
kept confidential. Only group scores will be presented.

If you have any questions regarding this study, please do not hesitate
to contact Taylor Locker (taylor.locker@...
<mailto:taylor.locker@...> ) or Martin Heesacker, Ph.D.
(heesack@... <mailto:heesack@...> ). Furthermore, this study has
been approved by the Institutional Review Board at the University of
Florida. If you have questions or concerns regarding your or your
students' participation in this study, you may contact the IRB02
Office, Box 112250, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL 32611-2250,
phone (352) 392-0433. All reports or correspondence will be kept
confidential.

I thank you in advance for your time and support.

Sincerely,

Taylor Locker
Martin Heesacker, Ph.D.
Counseling Psychology Program
University of Florida



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

#817 From: drstein_aaisf
Date: Fri Apr 24, 2009 12:11 am
Subject: New Adlerian Publication: "Educating Children for Cooperation & Contribution"
drstein_aaisf
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"Educating Children for Cooperation & Contribution," Volume II,
contains exceptional, new child guidance resources for educators,
therapists, and parents: "The Work of an Adlerian Psychologist in the
Schools," Enlightening Children," and "Influencing the Child," by
Anthony Bruck.  Bruck, who was trained by Alfred Adler, embodied
several central qualities of his mentor: warmth, gentleness, and
creativity. His work with children was reminiscent of Adler's
remarkable ability to make immediate contact and win a child with
respect, simple insight, and infectious optimism. Like a kindly uncle,
he guided children Socratically to make their own conclusions about
new ways to cross the bridge from misbehavior to cooperation.

Volume II also contains three articles by Alfred Adler: "Training for
Courage," "Children's Life Tests," and "The Lazy Child;" and "The
Challenge of Kindergarten," by Theodore Grubbe.

To order Volume II , or for additional information, go to
http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/hstein/ecc-v2.htm.

If you do not yet have Alfred Adler's seminal, child guidance texts,
"Individual Psychology in the Schools," and "The Education of
Children," you can also order "Educating Children for Cooperation &
Contribution," Volume I at
http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/hstein/ecc-v1.htm

#816 From: drstein_aaisf
Date: Sun Apr 12, 2009 11:21 pm
Subject: Social Inclusion and the Democratic Character
drstein_aaisf
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A new paper by Dr. Stein, "Social Inclusion and the Democratic Character"
explores Alfred Adler's ideal of the democratic character and the implications
of this for social inclusion: for child rearing, education, and the work place.
A "Levels of Functioning" chart investigates how a community of optimally
functioning individuals would represent the antithesis of social exclusion.   To
read the paper, go to
http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/hstein/inclusion.htm.

#815 From: "marie00353" <marie00353@...>
Date: Thu Apr 9, 2009 12:19 am
Subject: Re: Adlerian applied art therapy Sadie Tee Dreikurs
marie00353
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--- In classicaladlerianpsychology@yahoogroups.com, "marie00353"
<marie00353@...> wrote:
>
> I am findind it very difficult to get information on Adlerian Applied Art
Therapy. I live in Ireland and I'm doing an advanced course in Adlerian
Psychology and counselling skills. Information is so hard to find and I'm
frustrated ! Can anyone enlighten me ?
>

#814 From: Mihai ALBU <mihaialbu@...>
Date: Tue Apr 7, 2009 11:24 am
Subject: Re: [Classical Adlerian Psychology] Adlerian applied art therapy Sadie Tee Dreikurs
mihaialbu
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Hi
 
I followed a 2 weeks workshop in art therapy at ICASSI 2007, in Hungary, with
Hala Buck. She's from USA. I'm still looking for something like you are looking
in Europe, but...still nothing :(
 
Mihai


--- On Tue, 7/4/09, marie00353 <marie00353@...> wrote:


From: marie00353 <marie00353@...>
Subject: [Classical Adlerian Psychology] Adlerian applied art therapy Sadie Tee
Dreikurs
To: classicaladlerianpsychology@yahoogroups.com
Date: Tuesday, 7 April, 2009, 2:09 PM






I am findind it very difficult to get information on Adlerian Applied Art
Therapy. I live in Ireland and I'm doing an advanced course in Adlerian
Psychology and counselling skills. Information is so hard to find and I'm
frustrated ! Can anyone enlighten me ?



















[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

#813 From: "marie00353" <marie00353@...>
Date: Tue Apr 7, 2009 11:09 am
Subject: Adlerian applied art therapy Sadie Tee Dreikurs
marie00353
Offline Offline
Send Email Send Email
 
I am findind it very difficult to get information on Adlerian Applied Art
Therapy. I live in Ireland and I'm doing an advanced course in Adlerian
Psychology and counselling skills. Information is so hard to find and I'm
frustrated ! Can anyone enlighten me ?

#811 From: drstein_aaisf
Date: Sun Mar 22, 2009 9:37 pm
Subject: A New Era of Service
drstein_aaisf
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President Barack Obama has called for a "A New Era of Service" in a Time
Magazine article, dated March 10, 2009.  He describes how through service, he
found the direction he'd been seeking, discovering that his own story fit into a
larger American story.  This perception of contribution as a key to personal
significance and security has deep roots in the psychology of Alfred Adler, who
emphasized that a personal commitment to social contribution was a prerequisite
for optimal mental health.  It is not just the economic, educational, and
medical fate of a nation that is at stake, but the psychological well-being of
each of its' citizen.  Too many greedy, socially indifferent, political and
business leaders have set a national tone of justifying sociopathic policies and
behavior.  Perhaps President Obama will provide a new era of socially
responsible, inspirational leadership by example.

#807 From: drstein_aaisf
Date: Mon Feb 2, 2009 4:14 pm
Subject: Ponzi Schemes for the Masses
drstein_aaisf
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According to Yale University economist Robert Shiller, author
of "Irrational Exuberance," the housing and stock market bubbles
were "naturally occurring" Ponzi schemes.  Successive waves of
investors generate gains for the last wave until the bubble
bursts.  "The essence of a Ponzi scheme is a story that justifies
these enthusiasms," Shiller says, whether the phenomenon is Internet
stocks or housing prices or Madoff.  "The social feedback loop of
other people making money causes people to suspend disbelief."

The seductive idea that one can make money without providing a useful
product or service, by simply riding the wave of artificially
inflated value, is a reflection of a socially exploitive, pampered
style of life.  The realization of profit without creating a real
increase of value, relies on an endless river of gullible investors
who assume that other gullible investors will follow them.  In the
housing market, each investor was willing to indulge the previous
owner, believing that another naive buyer would indulge them.  Home
buyers, real estate agents, and lenders all grabbed what they could
for themselves, indifferent to the impending fate of the "suckers"
who came late to the party.

Bernard Madoff ran a Ponzi scheme on a monumental scale.  Many stock
and real estate investors ran their own small-scale versions of the
same scam.

#806 From: drstein_aaisf
Date: Sun Jan 25, 2009 1:21 am
Subject: Re: Practicuum Sites that incorporate Adlerian methods
drstein_aaisf
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I don't know of any practicum opportunities in Los Angeles that reflect
an Adlerian approach.  You might have to engage in a distance training
program for that professional training.  Dyanne Pienknowski in San
Francisco is the nearest training analyst.  You could call her at (415)
584-3833 (or call me in Bellingham, Washington at 360-647-5670) and
discuss distance training options.

Dr. Stein

--- In classicaladlerianpsychology@yahoogroups.com, "fperlanger"
<fperlanger@...> wrote:
>
> I am starting my practicum in September in Los Angeles and would like
> to  work where Adler's philosophies and methods are embraced and used
> with clients. I am an MFT student graduating in about 18 months or
> less from Pepperdine. I am very interested in his work and learning
more.
>

#805 From: "fperlanger" <fperlanger@...>
Date: Thu Jan 22, 2009 8:27 pm
Subject: Practicuum Sites that incorporate Adlerian methods
fperlanger
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I am starting my practicum in September in Los Angeles and would like
to  work where Adler's philosophies and methods are embraced and used
with clients. I am an MFT student graduating in about 18 months or
less from Pepperdine. I am very interested in his work and learning more.

#803 From: "Art" <art_wharton@...>
Date: Wed Dec 10, 2008 11:29 pm
Subject: Adlerian Therapist
ohyougotit
Online Now Online Now
Send Email Send Email
 
Hi,

I am an MFT Student in Los Angeles. I am interested in Adlerian
theory, and I am about ready to start the required personal therapy as
part of my training. I would like to do that therapy with a therapist
that either exclusively or primarily uses Adlerian theory as their
approach. I am male and would prefer to work with a male therapist
although I do not believe that is an absolute requirement. I just
think I may be a little more comfortable. If any of you know of an
Adlerian based therapist in the Los Angeles area please send me an
email at art_wharton@....

Thanks

#802 From: drstein_aaisf
Date: Sat Dec 6, 2008 1:44 pm
Subject: Brief Therapy
drstein_aaisf
Offline Offline
 
An innovative example of cost-effective, super-brief therapy, thanks to
Bob Newhart.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fpHeSKu0_LU

#801 From: drstein_aaisf
Date: Thu Nov 27, 2008 6:45 pm
Subject: The Limits of Game Theory
drstein_aaisf
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The December 1, 2008 issue of Newsweek includes a review, by Jeneen
Interlandi, of a new book "Rock, Paper, Scissors: Game theory in
Everyday Life," by physicist Len Fisher.  He assumes that all
individuals are fundamentally selfish, but that we can invent
strategies for minimizing interpersonal havoc by negotiating
cooperative resolutions that maximize each person's self-interest.  The
author seems not to be aware of the potential for a genuine and
profound interest, as well as feeling, for the well-being of others.
Mathematical and economic theories of human behavior may mistakenly
attempt to support pessimistic and short-sighted views of human
nature.  "Research" often merely justifies the bias of the researcher.

#798 From: drstein_aaisf
Date: Sat Nov 1, 2008 4:18 pm
Subject: New Training Analysts Added to Classical Adlerian Distance Training Program
drstein_aaisf
Offline Offline
 
The Alfred Adler Institute of Northwestern Washington is proud to
announce the addition of two new training analysts to its distance
training program in Classical Adlerian Depth Psychotherapy.

Dyanne Pienkowski, M.A., a Marriage & Family Therapist in private
practice in Millbrae, California,  combines over twenty years of
training with Dr. Stein & Dr. de Vries, with exceptional knowledge
and skill in substance abuse treatment.  She has  specialized in
substance abuse treatment for over 35 years and is certified as a
Master's Addiction Counselor (MAC).  Co-director of the Alfred Adler
Insititute of San Francisco, she offers on-site mentoring to anyone
living in the Bay Area, or telephone mentoring to students located
anywhere in the world.  For more information about her background, go
to http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/hstein/paths-dp.htm.

Martha Edwards, Ph.D. is the Founder and Director of the Center for
the Developing Child and Family at the Ackerman Institute for the
Family in New York City.  Dr. Edwards brings over 20 years of
Classical Adlerian study, first with Dr. Adele Davidson and then with
Dr. Stein, to her therapy practice with individuals, couples and
families, and to her students.  She offers on-site mentoring in the
New York City area as well as telephone mentoring to students located
anywhere in the world.  For more information about her background, go
to http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/hstein/paths-me.htm.

Our unique mentor-oriented program provides the most comprehensive
training in Alfred Adler's original theory and style of treatment.
A personal mentor guides students through weekly study and telephone
discussions.   For additonal information about our Distance Training
Program in Classical Adlerian Depth Psychotherapy, go to
http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/hstein/dist-tra.htm.  You
may also contact Dr. Stein at (360) 647-5670 or via e-mail at
htstein@....

If you'd like to consider studying with us, please e-mail your
Curriculum Vitae to Dr. Stein at htstein@....  We will then
schedule a preliminary telephone interview to explore how our
training might fit your professinal development.  Your next step
would be to take our short introductory course, DT101 - Basic Theory,
to evaluate the mentoring experience before you engage in the
complete Certification Program.

#797 From: drstein_aaisf
Date: Sat Oct 25, 2008 4:25 pm
Subject: More Than Greed?
drstein_aaisf
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Fixing our growing world-wide economic crisis will probably require
tighter government oversight and regulation of financial practices.
This "blowing away the smoke" approach is necessary, but perhaps not
deep enough to "put out the fire."   Economic theories and financial
systems have certainly contributed to the widespread economic
disasters, but the character and motives of the people managing large
sums of money needs to be explored and understood if we wish to
address the deeper roots of the problems.   The popular buzz word
explaining the psychology of Wall Street running wild and reckless is
greed.  Although this term seems accurate, it does not come close to
describing the underlying psychopathology of many of the individuals
or the devastating impact on large segments of society.

On December 12, 2004, the New York Times published an article by
Michael Steinberger titled "Psychopathic CEO's,"  wherein he
speculates on the motives of "lavishly compensated CEO's who cheat
and lie,"  Relying on the research of Paul Babiak and Robert Hare, he
suggests that many captains of industry are "sub-criminal
psychopaths," not serial rapists or murderers, but smooth-talking,
energetic, charming, manipulative, narcissistic, and ruthless.   He
emphasizes that the frenzied nature of modern business, constant down
sizing, relentless merging and acquiring, provides a very fertile
environment for havoc-wreaking psychopaths who thrive on chaos and
risk-taking.  As Hare put it in one interview, "If I couldn't study
psychopaths in prison, I would go down to the Stock Exchange."

Three years layer, on December 19, 2007, FastCompany,com
published "Is You Boss a Psychopath?" by Alan Deutschman.  He
describes a lecture that Hare gave in 2002 to 150 police and law
enforcement officials, including a proposal that "recent corporate
scandals (Enron and WorldCom) could have been prevented if CEO's were
screened for psychopathic behavior."  Hare claims that "We are
worshipful of top executives who seem charismatic, visionary, and
tough.  So long as they are lifting profits and stock prices, we are
willing to overlook that they can also be callous, conning,
manipulative, deceitful,verbally and psychologically abusive,
remorseless, exploitative, self-delusional, irresponsible, and
megalomaniacal.  So we collude in the elevation of leaders who are
sadly insensitive to hurting others and society at large."  Babiak
elaborates by comparing the narcissist, who simply thinks only of
himself, to a psychopath who enjoys hurting others.

Transposing Hare's and Babiak's assumptions from business and finance
to government, it is appalling to contemplate the implications of
people in positions of economic and political power who are possibly
borderline psychopaths.  When you add up the massive physical,
mental, and economic suffering caused by war, torture, layoffs,
depleted retirement investments, foreclosures, poverty, and
insufficient medical care, a disturbing questions arises.  Are these
conditions intended by psychopaths in positions of economic and
political power?

#796 From: "judy.love49" <judy.love49@...>
Date: Tue Oct 21, 2008 10:42 pm
Subject: The better careseekers and careproviders here you want
judy.love49
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Send Email Send Email
 
I'm  a  careseeker and I have found the ideal match on
http://carecity.bravehost.com/, It is a really trustworthy site.they
identify your family's needs and match the skills needed that will best
suit your situation and offer you precisely the right combination of
services,above all, it is totally free.

#789 From: drstein_aaisf
Date: Sun Jun 22, 2008 5:27 pm
Subject: Birth Order Audio Program Now Available in MP3 for iPod
drstein_aaisf
Offline Offline
 
The extremely popular program, "Birth Order: Sense and Nonsense,"
originally released in DVD video format, is now available in a CD audio
(MP3) format, and can be played on any computer or transferred to an
iPod for convenient listening. For details and online ordering, go to
http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/hstein/birth-vcd.htm .

In this 60-minute interview, conducted by Mick Conefrey of the British
Broadcasting Company, Dr. Stein offers a candid perspective on the
value, application, and limits of birth order theory, including the
contributions of Alfred Adler, Frank Sulloway, Judith Harris, Margarite
Goertzel, Hugh Missildine, and Thomas Verney.

#786 From: "Kurda" <dkurdulija@...>
Date: Sun May 25, 2008 6:09 pm
Subject: Re: Help
dkurdulija
Offline Offline
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--- In classicaladlerianpsychology@yahoogroups.com, drstein_aaisf
<no_reply@...> wrote:
>
> Read http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/hstein/theoprac.htm
and
> http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/hstein/demo1.htm.
>
>
> --- In classicaladlerianpsychology@yahoogroups.com, "Kurda"
> <dkurdulija@> wrote:
> >
> > Hello,I have one question for you.I am from Serbia,and there is
no
> > chanse for me to find all Adlers books here.I am looking for his
> > clinical practice,other words i would like to see how individual
> > psychology works in practice.How does look relationship between
> > client and therapist.I would be very grateful to you if you can
> > provide me some examples and review of some particular cases.
> > Best regards.
> >
>
Thanks for your effort.I must say that I had read that before I
decided to ask for help.But if there is no chanse to find more issues
on this subject then i'll try something else.Thanks anyway.

#785 From: drstein_aaisf
Date: Sun May 25, 2008 3:51 pm
Subject: Re: Help
drstein_aaisf
Offline Offline
 
Read http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/hstein/theoprac.htm and
http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/hstein/demo1.htm.


--- In classicaladlerianpsychology@yahoogroups.com, "Kurda"
<dkurdulija@...> wrote:
>
> Hello,I have one question for you.I am from Serbia,and there is no
> chanse for me to find all Adlers books here.I am looking for his
> clinical practice,other words i would like to see how individual
> psychology works in practice.How does look relationship between
> client and therapist.I would be very grateful to you if you can
> provide me some examples and review of some particular cases.
> Best regards.
>

#784 From: "Kurda" <dkurdulija@...>
Date: Thu May 22, 2008 10:45 am
Subject: Help
dkurdulija
Offline Offline
Send Email Send Email
 
Hello,I have one question for you.I am from Serbia,and there is no
chanse for me to find all Adlers books here.I am looking for his
clinical practice,other words i would like to see how individual
psychology works in practice.How does look relationship between
client and therapist.I would be very grateful to you if you can
provide me some examples and review of some particular cases.
Best regards.

#782 From: drstein_aaisf
Date: Sat May 17, 2008 4:15 pm
Subject: Kindle E-Book Reader Versions of Selected Publications Now Available!
drstein_aaisf
Offline Offline
 
If you have the new Amazon Kindle E-Book reader, several volumes of The
Collected Clinlcal Works of Alfred Adler, as well as other books and
articles are now available at the Amazon Kindle Store <www.amazon.com>.
At the Amazon site search box, select "Kindle Store," then
enter "Classical Adlerian" and press "go." You can then select from the
displayed list and then have the publication delivered to your Kindle
within minutes.

For additional information about the publications currently being
offered in the Kindle format, go to the AAISF Kindle Page
<http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/hstein/kindle.htm>. This is a
wonderfully convenient way to carry and study Adler's writings. The
Kindle E-Book reader permits highlighting, bookmarking, and recording
notes.

#776 From: drstein_aaisf
Date: Tue Feb 5, 2008 1:10 am
Subject: Adler's Reference to Henri Bergson
drstein_aaisf
Offline Offline
 
On page 203 of "The Collected Clinical Works of Alfred Adler,Volume
1 - The Neurotic Character," Adler refers to Henri Bergson's concept
of "identicality of every movement in life."  I suspect the idea
appears in Bergson's 1907 work "Creative Evolution."  Does anyone
have access to Bergson's comments on this topic?  Adler's remarks are
below.

"In our type of the psychology of neuroses one always gets the
impression that the neurotic gesture that one observes is pointing
straight to the final purpose, to the fictional final goal, as if one
were examining one of the middle pictures in some cinematographic
film. The problem consists in recognizing these gestures, that is,
the symptoms, predispositions and characteristics, and to come to
understand what is their objective. In every neurotic attitude the
beginning and the final goal are suggestively concealed

Bergson correctly emphasizes the identicality of every movement in
life. With sufficient knowledge and enough experience one may discern
the past, the present and the future, but the final goal as well, of
any psychic phenomenon. And thus every psychic phenomenon, and indeed
every characteristic, in a similar way as an inferior physical organ,
can be viewed as a symbol of an individual life, as an individual
attempt to climb up."

#774 From: drstein_aaisf
Date: Fri Feb 1, 2008 2:14 am
Subject: Workshop August 22-24 - Experiencing Classical Adlerian Psychotherapy
drstein_aaisf
Offline Offline
 
Workshop August 22-24, 2008 in Bellingham, WA
Experiencing Classical Adlerian Psychotherapy
==============================================

This three-day workshop provides an opportunity to observe,
experience, practice, and receive feedback from peers and seasoned
professionals on Classical Adlerian therapeutic techniques.
Participants are encouraged to bring a personal issue to work on.
(The workshop is for individuals who are currently enrolled in, or
have completed our full distance-training program.) For complete
information visit
http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/hstein/sum08.htm.

#773 From: drstein_aaisf
Date: Fri Feb 1, 2008 12:18 am
Subject: Re: Napoleon Complex
drstein_aaisf
Offline Offline
 
It is always tempting, but usually misleading, for researchers as
well as the media, to simplify the influences on human development.
Short, tall, average, fat, or thin people can chose to become
aggressive.  Also, an underdeveloped social interest may be expressed
in dependency, passivity, as well as aggression.  Genetic, social,
cultural, religious, gender, and family influences may be used as
provocations for aggression.  Adler was very clear about the absence
of cause and effect, as well as the primacy of creative power in the
development of the unique individual.  If we know enough about a
specific person's early life, we may be able to guess at the
probability of one or more influences, as well as the private logic
of his/her chosen direction.  Attempting to make broad, simplistic
generalizations may make for breezy reading, but does not contribute
to a meaningful understanding of human behavior.

--- In classicaladlerianpsychology@yahoogroups.com, "Steven"
<steversmatrix@...> wrote:
>
>   Despite recent evidence to the contrary:
> http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/6501633.stm
> many laypeople still say that short men compensate for their
> inferiority of being short with being aggressive.
>
>   People appear to borrow the thought of inferiority complex and
apply
> it to short men from the works of Adler.  I've read some, though not
> all, of Adler's books yet I have not found anything specifically
> saying the reason Napoleon, or any short man for that matter, was
> aggressive is that they feel too inferior for being short.
>
>   I have read that some individuals will interpret their inferior
> organs, illness, or ugliness as significant enough to create an
> abnormal inferiority complex should they not develop social
interest.
>  I have also read a reason Adler brings up Napoleon is to
demonstrate
> how an individual may stray from social interest and go on to commit
> crimes against humanity.
>
>   I wanted to hear from the experts here, once and for all, if Adler
> did indeed say Napoleon's lack of social interest was due to his
being
> short.  If not, is it plausible to say that certain individual short
> men see their height as a physical deficit and will, indeed,
> compensate for the resultant feeling of inferiority with
aggression?
> Does there have to be other environmental factors or even biological
> ones present for this to take place?
>

#772 From: "Steven" <steversmatrix@...>
Date: Tue Jan 29, 2008 10:04 pm
Subject: Napoleon Complex
steversmatrix
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Despite recent evidence to the contrary:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/6501633.stm
many laypeople still say that short men compensate for their
inferiority of being short with being aggressive.

   People appear to borrow the thought of inferiority complex and apply
it to short men from the works of Adler.  I've read some, though not
all, of Adler's books yet I have not found anything specifically
saying the reason Napoleon, or any short man for that matter, was
aggressive is that they feel too inferior for being short.

   I have read that some individuals will interpret their inferior
organs, illness, or ugliness as significant enough to create an
abnormal inferiority complex should they not develop social interest.
  I have also read a reason Adler brings up Napoleon is to demonstrate
how an individual may stray from social interest and go on to commit
crimes against humanity.

   I wanted to hear from the experts here, once and for all, if Adler
did indeed say Napoleon's lack of social interest was due to his being
short.  If not, is it plausible to say that certain individual short
men see their height as a physical deficit and will, indeed,
compensate for the resultant feeling of inferiority with aggression?
Does there have to be other environmental factors or even biological
ones present for this to take place?

#771 From: drstein_aaisf
Date: Wed Jan 9, 2008 3:12 am
Subject: Re: Question about Neuroses
drstein_aaisf
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A vivid clarification of the dynamic connection between the feeling of
inferiority and the compensatory fictional final goal may be found
in "The Collected Clinical Works of Alfred Adler, Volume 1, The
Neurotic Character."  See
http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/hstein/nc-3.htm.

The ficitonal final goal is an unconscious image of personal security,
superiority, and completion.  As long as it remains unconsicous, it
organizes and drives the individual's mental, emotional, and behavioral
life.  In Classical Adlerian depth psychotherapy, this unconsicous goal
is gradually made conscious, offering the client and opportunity to
change direction.


--- In classicaladlerianpsychology@yahoogroups.com, "zurabp"
<zurabp@...> wrote:
>
> Some years ago I have read in the book of Gorge Simenon "Doubts of
> Megre" (Georges Simenon "Les Scrupules De Maigret') about
> Neurosis: "Neuroses by Adler began with threatening sensations of
> inferiority and uncertainty. Defensive reaction against sensations of
> disease drives neurotic to identify himself with fictive ideal
> structure. It was in the former Soviet Union and though I tried hard
> and even read the book of J. A. C. Brown " Freud and Post Freudians"
I
> couldn't find anything on this matter. I'm not sure in Russian
> translation of the novel, but what does mean "identification with
> fictive structure is fully unclear for me. Can you tell anything
about
> this matter or may I read anywhere?
>

#770 From: "zurabp" <zurabp@...>
Date: Fri Jan 4, 2008 2:33 pm
Subject: Question about Neuroses
zurabp
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Some years ago I have read in the book of Gorge Simenon "Doubts of
Megre" (Georges Simenon "Les Scrupules De Maigret') about
Neurosis: "Neuroses by Adler began with threatening sensations of
inferiority and uncertainty. Defensive reaction against sensations of
disease drives neurotic to identify himself with fictive ideal
structure. It was in the former Soviet Union and though I tried hard
and even read the book of J. A. C. Brown " Freud and Post Freudians" I
couldn't find anything on this matter. I'm not sure in Russian
translation of the novel, but what does mean "identification with
fictive structure is fully unclear for me. Can you tell anything about
this matter or may I read anywhere?

#764 From: drstein_aaisf
Date: Wed Sep 12, 2007 11:40 pm
Subject: Capitalism With a Heart
drstein_aaisf
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"This is Not Charity," by Jonathan Rouch, in the October 2007 issue of
the Atlantic, describes the emerging movement of "social
entrepreneurship, a dynamic process of using entrepreneurial methods
and market mechanisms to solve social problems.  Fueled by the
enthusiasm and skill of Bill Clinton, Ira Magaziner, and a team of
management consultants, they are creating new markets and reinventing
philanthropy.  To date, successful innovations in micro lending and
affordable medicine have sparked projects targeting global warming.
Rather than relying on the often slowing moving traditional
philanthropy, entrepreneurial philanthropy attempts to create profit-
making, sustainable projects that can eventually grow on their own.

#763 From: "jeanellnorvell" <JeanellNorvell@...>
Date: Tue Sep 11, 2007 10:18 pm
Subject: Self Concept and Life Tasks
jeanellnorvell
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I work with a criminal justice diversionary program that uses a group
therapy process centered on increasing self concept. The counseling
portion of the program is 10 years old and the program has a recidivism
rate of around 2%.

Currently I am looking at the Tennessee Self Concept Scale and possible
links between its subscales (social, work, family personal, moral and
physical dimensions) and the Adlerian life tasks of friendship, work,
family, self-acceptance and spirituality.

I would greatly appreciate any guidance you might provide in reference
to past work you know of linking self concept and life tasks.
Additionally, if you have heard of any other diversionary programs that
are Adlerian based, I would appreciate learning about those.

Repectfully,

Jeanell J. Norvell, LPC

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