Recent relationship science research finds that intense, satisfying romantic love is a real phenomenon occurring in couples. Creating Optimal Relationships: Use of the Voltage Concept with Couples provides the field of marriage and family therapy with the first model for assisting couples to sustain bliss for a lifetime. The voltage concept, based on over forty years of clinical research, uses a skills-based approach from Anthetic Relationship Therapy. By providing psychodynamic skills for facilitating each partner's psychological growth, the psychological infrastructure is then achieved for supporting optimal relating skills. The voltage concept presents a useful dichotomy of closeness levels to which partners aspire. Couples who want a more surface relationship fit a Low-Voltage Relationship model marked by less emotional intensity. With such couples, minimal skills can be taught to reduce any conflict that brought them to therapy. High-Voltage couples desire great emotional depth and receive skills to help them achieve it. Perhaps even more valuable, the voltage vocabulary equips clinicians and partners in understanding a common source of couple conflict; that is, the voltage mismatch. The book offers options for treatment when a voltage discrepancy exists in the couple.
Recent relationship science research finds that intense, satisfying romantic love is a real phenomenon occurring in couples. Creating Optimal Relationships: Use of the Voltage Concept with Couples provides the field of marriage and family therapy with the first model for assisting couples to sustain bliss for a lifetime. The voltage concept, based on over forty years of clinical research, uses a skills-based approach from Anthetic Relationship Therapy. By providing psychodynamic skills for facilitating each partner's psychological growth, the psychological infrastructure is then achieved for supporting optimal relating skills. The voltage concept presents a useful dichotomy of closeness levels to which partners aspire. Couples who want a more surface relationship fit a Low-Voltage Relationship model marked by less emotional intensity. With such couples, minimal skills can be taught to reduce any conflict that brought them to therapy. High-Voltage couples desire great emotional depth and receive skills to help them achieve it. Perhaps even more valuable, the voltage vocabulary equips clinicians and partners in understanding a common source of couple conflict; that is, the voltage mismatch. The book offers options for treatment when a voltage discrepancy exists in the couple.
Chapter 1 What Is the High-Voltage Relationship
Chapter 2 A New Psychology as the Foundation for the High-Voltage
Relationship
Chapter 3 The Inner Critic and Its Sabotaging Effects on
Relationships
Chapter 4 Using the Anthetic Inner Figure Language
Chapter 5 What It Takes to Create a High-Voltage Relationship: The
Anthetic Values
Chapter 6 Eight Intrapersonal High-Voltage Skills
Chapter 7 Nine Skills to Empower the Self for Optimal Relating
Chapter 8 Creating Connection: The Interpersonal High-Voltage
Communication Skills
Chapter 9 Interpersonal Skills for Handling Negativity in
Relationships
Chapter 10 Increasing the Voltage: Depth Connecting Skills
Chapter 11 Handling the Voltage Mismatch
Chapter 12 Maintenance Skills: High-Voltage for a Lifetime
James Elliott, PhD, created Anthetic Therapy and Anthetic
Relationship Therapy and founded the Anthetics Institute in
Berkeley, California and Lafayette, Louisiana
Kathryn Elliott, PhD, LPC-S, LMFT, is director of Anthetic Therapy
Center.
Not just an illustrative guide of psychodynamic principles to help
couples communicate more optimally, this book is an evocative foray
into the very essence of emotional closeness, warmth, and
empathy between two souls searching for connection. Whether you're
high voltage, low voltage, or not-so-sure-what-your voltage, these
skills will diffuse conflict and conflagration and improve upon
love's gentle embrace. Highly recommended!
*Eric Green, Purdue University*
In developing the ‘high voltage/low voltage relationship’ concept,
the Elliotts have provided a means for couples to quickly and
comprehensively understand and analyze themselves and their
relationships. This book is a welcome addition to the field and one
that clinicians will find themselves coming back to again and again
in their work with couples.
*David A. Spruill, University of Louisiana at Lafayette*
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