In Beyond Therapy, Erving Polster examines the role of "life focus" in three of society's most familiar activities: ordinary conversation, the arts, and religion. He shows the life focus movement to be an indivisible complement to just simply living. In proposing a paradigm shift from psychotherapy's priority for changing people's troubled lives into the complementary purpose of illuminating their lives, the author invites the participation of many people who do not seek remedial treatment for emotional or psychological problems. Polster incorporates a broader scenario for enhancing attention through community groups, showing that the convergence of people's minds on commonly important life themes creates enlightenment. This interlocked focus amplifies the ensuing conversational content and creates a meditation-like absorption. This kind of pointed focus, argues Polster, has the power to colour the lives of the participants. This work offers rationale and design for life focus community groups, and also creates a heightened identity for the life focus movement, providing other foundational ideas that help to unify diverse approaches. Mental health professionals will benefit from its wealth of specific exercises and instructions for program design. Polster provides leaders and group members with a well-rounded perspective on the basics of personal enlightenment and communal belonging.
Erving Polster is the director of The Gestalt Training Center, San Diego, and the author of Gestalt Therapy Integrated, Every Person's Life is Worth a Novel, and From the Radical Center: The Heart of Gestalt Therapy.
AcknowledgementsSection A. The Importance of Life Focus1.What I Mean By Life Focus2.The Drama of the Split Mind3.Life as Microcosm4.A Focus RevolutionSection B. How Life Focus Groups Work5.Life Focus Community: Design Ideas6.Artful Engagement7.Themes that Mark a Lifetime8.Communal SettingSection C. Social Implications of Life Focus9.From the Supernatural to the Human: Part 110.From the Supernatural to the Human: Part 211.A Psychotherapeutic Morality12.Dependable Identity13.Belonging and Indivisibility14.A Social TrustBibliographyIndex