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Index
Cover
Title
Copyright
Table of Contents
About the Author
Who This Workbook Is For and How to Use It
Part One: Critical Components
Personality Disorders—They're Not Going Anywhere
Cluster B Client Assessment
Structure of Personality Disorders
Critical Factors in the Treatment of Histrionic, Antisocial, Narcissistic, and Borderline Clients
Personality Disorder Risk and Protective Factors
Part Two: Antisocial Personality Disorder Spectrum
Antisocial Personality and Its Subtypes
Antisocial Personality Disorder—Homicidal Triad
Oppositional Defiant Disorder—Behavioral Replacement
Conduct Disorder
Antisocial Personality Disorder Core and Surface Structure.
Attachment and the Antisocial Spectrum
Antisocial Spectrum and Suicide Risk
Perception Questionnaire.
How to Manage and Avoid In-Session Violence and Threats.
Secondary Gain/Assertiveness
Can They Collaborate?
The “Wrong-Patient Syndrome”
Can You Bond With a Client on the Antisocial Personality Disorder Spectrum?
Transference and Countertransference
Part Three: Narcissistic Personality Disorder Spectrum
Narcissistic Personality Disorder and It's Subtypes.
Harm to Self and Other
Building Mastery
Attachment and the Narcissistic Spectrum
Perfection Versus Excellence
Surmount the Power Struggle
Physical and Emotional Empathy
Narcissism Key Target Areas for Treatment
Maladaptive Beliefs About Self and Emotions
Defuse Narcissistic Resistance
Avoiding Session Sabotage
Part Four: Histrionic Personality Disorder Spectrum
Histrionic Personality and Its Subtypes
Histrionic Personality Spectrum
Histrionic/Borderline Distinction
Attachment and the Histrionic Spectrum
Histrionic Spectrum and Suicide Risk
Flirtation, Avoidance, and Inauthenticity
Histrionic Client Dangers
Boundary Securement
Emotional and Behavioral Record
False Self/True Self
Self-Worth Enhancement
Managing the Session With a Histrionic Spectrum Client
DBT: The Six Levels of Validation
Dependent Versus Independent Action
Part Five: Borderline Personality Disorder Spectrum
Borderline Personality and Its Subtypes
Borderline Personality Spectrum
Distinction Between Borderline Spectrum and Bipolar Disorder
Lessening Self-Mutilation
Attachment and The Borderline Spectrum
Identifying the Transitional Object
Concept of “IT”.
Motivations and Triggers
Identifying Maladaptive Patterns
Unconscious Wishes and Fears
Part Six: Dialectical Behavioral Therapy Worksheets
Mindfulness
Observe, Describe, Participate
Feel The Moment
Ready, Breathe, Draw
Let It Melt (Chocolate!!!)
Participating to Do It Differently
Interpersonal Effectiveness
Healthy/Hopeless Relationships
Steps to Conflict Resolution
Wants-to-Shoulds Balance
Getting My Needs Met F-A-S-T
Moving Beyond the Conflict: G-I-V-E
Get What You Want: D-E-A-R M-A-N
Emotion Regulation
Primary and Secondary Emotions.
Acting Opposite Emotion
Negative Emotional Resistance
Emotional Description
Unhealthy to Healthy Coping
Distress Tolerance
Accept to Surpass (Radical Resistance)
Proof of Survival
Four Keys to Crisis Survival.
Accepting Reality
Willingness Over Willfulness
References
Appendix A Answer and Scoring Keys
Appendix B Emotions List
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