Attachment-based family therapy for sexual and gender minority young adults and their nonaccepting parents / Gary M. Diamond and Rotem Boruchovitz-Zamir.
Material type:
TextPublisher: Washington, DC : American Psychological Association, 2023Description: xii, 193 pages ; 23 cmContent type: - text
- unmediated
- volume
- 9781433836619
- 616.89156 D541a 23/eng/20221115
- RC488.5 .D536 2023
- WM 460.5.O2
- PSY056000 | FAM056000
| Item type | Current library | Shelving location | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Books
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Main Library | Circulation Section | CIR 616.89156 D541a 2023 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1-1 | Available | 030981 |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Introduction to attachment-based family therapy for sexual and gender minority young adults and their nonaccepting parents -- Empirical base of attachment-based family therapy for sexual and gender minority young adults and their nonaccepting parents -- Establishing relationship building as the shared goal of therapy -- Alliance building with the young adult -- Alliance building with parents -- The attachment task -- Consolidation of gains and collaborative planning for the future -- Special clinical issues.
"This book presents the first empirically supported family-based approach for working with LGBTQ young adults and their nonaccepting parents to help therapists promote parental acceptance and create closer, more meaningful relationships"-- Provided by publisher.
"Many parents experience fear, shame, and loss upon learning that their child is same-sex oriented or gender non-conforming. Therapies to help parents become more accepting and foster meaningful relationships with their LGBTQ children are critical. Ongoing parental criticism, invalidation, and rejection of one's sexual or gender identity can take a profound psychological toll and lead to internalized homophobia, expectations for future gay-related rejection by others, depression, and other negative impacts. In contrast, parental acceptance is associated with lower rates of suicidal thoughts and suicide attempts, higher self-esteem, higher levels of perceived social support, lower levels of psychological symptoms, and better general health. While most parents become more accepting, or at least more tolerant, over time, others remain partially or fully rejecting even years after learning of their child's identity. Attachment-based family therapy for sexual and gender minority young adults (ABFT-SGM) helps reduce parental rejection, facilitate parental acceptance, and ultimately promote safer, closer, and more mutually respectful relationships between LGBTQ young adults and their parents. This informative book combines step-by-step guidance, real-life examples, and an empirically based approach to help therapists conduct transformative attachment experiences to keep these families connected"-- Provided by publisher.
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