Midlands State University Library
Image from Google Jackets

Leisure counselling, coping skills and therapeutic applications/ created by Dean Juniper

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: British journal of guidance and counselling ; Volume 33, number 1London : Routledge, 2005Content type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISSN:
  • 03069885
Subject(s): LOC classification:
  • LB1027.5 BRI
Online resources: Abstract: Leisure counselling is defined as the systematic exploitation of a client's past, existing or prospective hobbies, activities and interests for broad psychotherapeutic purposes. It functions as a powerful agent in the invigoration of a range of existing but inadequate coping skills, and can also act in an innovatory style when such key skills are absent. The effective functioning of leisure counselling, as this paper argues, requires a methodology of application, and the author's main contribution has been to identify a triad of approach techniques open to the leisure counsellor, namely, distraction, anticipation and confrontation, and to outline appropriate settings in which they may be fruitfully implemented. Effective leisure counselling requires a new mode of thinking, wherein leisure becomes instrumental and hobbies, activities and interests, its tools. So as to sharpen awareness of the full possible range of leisure counselling's application, this paper outlines how it may be applied across a wide span of coping needs and covers three broad domains: the need to ease phobias, panics, stress and tension states, and the aftermath of traumatic episodes; the need to create and sustain positive moods; and the need to contain and limit the destructive demands of habits and impulses as well as address the very sharp therapeutic challenge of obsessions and compulsions.
Reviews from LibraryThing.com:
Tags from this library: No tags from this library for this title. Log in to add tags.
Star ratings
    Average rating: 0.0 (0 votes)
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Vol info Status Notes Date due Barcode
Journal Article Journal Article Main Library - Special Collections LB1027.5 BRI (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Vol. 33, no.1 (pages 27-36) Not for loan For in house use only

Leisure counselling is defined as the systematic exploitation of a client's past, existing or prospective hobbies, activities and interests for broad psychotherapeutic purposes. It functions as a powerful agent in the invigoration of a range of existing but inadequate coping skills, and can also act in an innovatory style when such key skills are absent. The effective functioning of leisure counselling, as this paper argues, requires a methodology of application, and the author's main contribution has been to identify a triad of approach techniques open to the leisure counsellor, namely, distraction, anticipation and confrontation, and to outline appropriate settings in which they may be fruitfully implemented. Effective leisure counselling requires a new mode of thinking, wherein leisure becomes instrumental and hobbies, activities and interests, its tools. So as to sharpen awareness of the full possible range of leisure counselling's application, this paper outlines how it may be applied across a wide span of coping needs and covers three broad domains: the need to ease phobias, panics, stress and tension states, and the aftermath of traumatic episodes; the need to create and sustain positive moods; and the need to contain and limit the destructive demands of habits and impulses as well as address the very sharp therapeutic challenge of obsessions and compulsions.

There are no comments on this title.

to post a comment.