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Change 101: A Practical Guide to Creating Change in Life or Therapy
 
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Change 101: A Practical Guide to Creating Change in Life or Therapy [Hardcover]

Bill O'Hanlon (Author), William Hudson O'Hanlon (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Book Description

0393704963 978-0393704969 September 17, 2006 1

Getting back to the basics of self-improvement.

Drawing on thirty years of clinical experience, Bill O’Hanlon—one of psychotherapy’s most innovative practitioners and teachers—examines this simple yet often elusive aspect of successful therapy: change. With his characteristic wit and style, O’Hanlon presents the key concepts and most powerful methods for achieving personal transformation. Readers are provided with the perspective and inspiration necessary to embrace the risk and reward of change.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

A very strongly recommended addition to the reading list of anyone who has or is contemplating any form of therapy. -- Library Bookwatch

I highly recommend this book! -- Jeff Herring, eZine articles

About the Author

Bill O’Hanlon, is a founder of Possibility and Inclusive Therapies and is the author or coauthor of more than twenty books, including Do One Thing Different and Quick Steps to Resolving Trauma. He lives in Santa Fe, New Mexico.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 184 pages
  • Publisher: W. W. Norton & Company; 1 edition (September 17, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0393704963
  • ISBN-13: 978-0393704969
  • Product Dimensions: 8.4 x 5.9 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 12 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #274,809 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Bill O'Hanlon, MS, LMFT, has authored or co-authored 30 books, the latest being Quick Steps to Resolving Trauma (W.W. Norton, October, 2010), A Guide to Trance Land (W.W. Norton, 2009); Pathways to Spirituality (W.W. Norton), Change 101: A Practical Guide to Creating Change (W.W. Norton, Fall 2006), and Thriving Through Crisis (Penguin/Perigee; winner of the Books for a Better Life Award). He has published 57 articles or book chapters. His books have been translated into 15 languages: French, Spanish, Portuguese, Swedish, Finnish, German, Chinese, Bulgarian, Turkish, Korean, Indonesian, Italian, Croatian, Arabic and Japanese. He has appeared on Oprah (with his book Do One Thing Different), The Today Show, and a variety of other television and radio programs. Since 1977, Bill has given over 1500 talks around the world. He has been a top-rated presenter at many national conferences and was awarded the 'Outstanding Mental Health Educator of the Year' in 2001 by the New England Educational Institute. Bill is a Licensed Mental Health Professional, Certified Professional Counselor, and a Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist. Bill is clinical member of AAMFT (and winner of the 2003 New Mexico AMFT Distinguished Service Award), certified by the National Board of Certified Clinical Hypnotherapists and a Fellow and a Board Member of the American Psychotherapy Association. He is known for his storytelling, irreverent humor, clear and accessible style and his boundless enthusiasm for whatever he is doing.

Find him at billohanlon.com

 

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39 of 48 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Delightful, December 15, 2006
This review is from: Change 101: A Practical Guide to Creating Change in Life or Therapy (Hardcover)
INTRODUCTION
-----------------------

This is a book about overcoming resistance. It is equally applicable to being a self-help book or a book for therapists. O'Hanlon is heavily influenced by the psychiatrist Milton Erickson It is beautifully written and glides under the eye. The quotes that begin each chapter are the best that I have seen.

O'Hanlon has written several books about how to change, such as Do One Thing Differently and Solution Focused Therapy. He himself says that this is the best book of his to buy about change because it incorporates things he learnt earlier and put in earlier books. He appears to have backed away from being so solution-focused because doing so is too invalidating.

SUMMARY
----------------

INTRODUCTION
Erikson wrote that there were "seething forces of change" within people.

1. NEVER TRY TO TEACH A PIG TO SING: FINDING THE MOTIVATION AND ENERGY TO CHANGE

The anatomy of change
* Negative past motivation
o Diagnosis: mostly talk about past pain or dislikes (similar pattern for others)
o Person might be more motivated by their wounds than by their bliss, such as being told not good enough by school guidance counsellor
o Rx: "How does that hurt motivate you re the problem you brought in?"
o Rx: Find out how they changed and how they stayed stuck
o Rx: Link Rx with avoiding the problems again. Can always link all the special senses, thoughts, emotions, behaviours and environments of problems
* Negative present motivation
o When people are first admitted, they might be most motivated to change
o Alcoholic hitting bottom
o Rx: Find out what they don't like about the current situation and link this to the behaviour change
* Negative future motivation
o Rx: "Imagine, it is five years from now and you have/are still... How does that feel." / "You're 90 years old..."
o Rx: What potential futures do you want to avoid?
* Positive past motivation
o Rx: Find what worked in the past
o Rx: Find positive memories from the past
o Rx: Find what changes they made because of what they brought from the past
* Positive present motivation
o Rx: Get more of the same
o Rx: "We don't want to throw out the baby with the bathwater, so can you tell me about some parts of your life that are going well?"
o Rx: Use the current positive coping mechanisms
o Erickson prompted his son to think of dust on the basement floor as opposing armies
* Positive future motivation
o The optimists did not survive prisoner of war camps because they thought they would be freed by a particular date.
o What futures would one really like to have happen, then work backwards, then find out what the person would do now
o Can be linked with negative current motivation

Sometimes, the person pushing for change is not the one in the office, so you need to engage the patient with the person with the motivation. For example, writing to tell the court that the offender recons they do not have any problems.

You can create motivation by letting people experience the consequences of their action.

In order to motivate people, you might need to change people's environment.

Clarify the patient's concerns, complaints and suffering into problems.

Goals: "How will you know when you have gotten what you came for? How will they know when you have made the changes they want you to make."

Focus of therapy
* Complaint, by who
* Goals
o First signs of progress (in video talk)
o Final actions or results
o How to know when finished

2. THE JOURNEY OF 1000 MILES: THE SMALL-STEPS METHOD OF CHANGE
Bigger changes are harder and disrupt the person's environment. You could try something three times before giving up. Roger Bannister did not try to run under a certain time, but reduce his time by 1/16 second each race.

Strategies for small steps: 1 identify the problem, 2 do experiments, 3 change actions and/or point of view.

Find the smallest thing they could and would do. Or, make small commitments of time. Change point of view a little, for example, by giving oneself credit for one thing each day.

Pair the behaviour with something pleasurable.

3. THE SAME DAMN THING: THE BREAKING-PATTERNS METHOD OF CHANGE
Think of problems as patterns rather than things. Observe the pattern. Change the pattern rather than try to stop it. The pattern can be emotional, behavioural, cognitive, environmental or biochemical. Erickson would have his patient do something different, for example go to the library instead of stay at home, to break a pattern rather than because he knew what might happen. Example was walking backward up bus steps so too embarrassed to be scared. Another: only criticising spouse when had inhaled helium. Change the behaviour, location, timing or clothing. Another: eat with the non dominant hand to stop overeating. Another: set a timer and do the behaviour for 5 minutes then stop for 5 minutes. Increase the intensity of the behaviour before trying to decrease the intensity of the behaviour; moving ones hands or urinating through a tube(!) Link the problem to something else, such as putting on your new shoes when you go to binge, or, do 50 sit-ups every time you postpone doing the tax.

Notify aspects of the problem situation that are not problems and amplify them. Find competence patterns from another context and transfer them. Mindfulness. Karma is his word for behaviours due to core beliefs. Core beliefs...

What would a person who felt good about them self do in this situation. What would Jesus.

Notice results that recur that you do not like, like being in debt. Investigate your actions, feelings and underlying ideas at that time. Do something different. Repeat until you break the automatic pattern.

Ask yourself: what do you think you can not do, what do you think is the nature of people and the world. What could you do that would be incompatible with the above premise.

4. 52-CARD PICKUP: THE CRISIS METHOD OF CHANGE
Connection, compassion, contribution, wake-up call; response to crisis.

Connection example: Rudi Guiliani,
Contribution example: Mothers Against Drink Driving

Find out what you did last time that worked. What past crises have helped you make positive changes.

5. BLESS MY SOUL: THE MENTOR/MODEL METHOD OF CHANGE
The model can be close or far, what to do or what not to do. People can feel they have been given a blessing when they are told they can do something. Mentors can see potential and give specific guidance. Sting used Jimi Hendrix and Janice Joplin as models of what not to do.

Ask
* What has inspired you?
* Who has believed or believes the best in you?
* Who has encouraged you?
* Who are your role models?
* Who are your negative role models?
* Have you had mentors?
* Have you had any negative mentors?
* Do you know anyone who would handle the situation better than you are handling it?

6. CUSTOM REFRAMING: THE NEW PERSPECTIVE METHOD OF CHANGE
Someone found that deciding a child was Bad, Sad or Mad helped stuck behaviour even if the new perspective was not correct.

Reframing.

Have the patient sense that their situation is changeable rather than set. Can try experiments.

Have the patient focus their attention a little differently, such as
* Change orientation in time
o Past to present, for example, five things that happened that she was grateful for.
o Past to (untraumatising) future.
o Present to past (things she had done well)
o Present to the future
o Future to the past. Example: writing a memoir when the wife recons he lived in the future/dreams
o Future to present. Example: saying one good thing about the current situation when confronted about future.
* Orientation to/from internal to/from external
* Causation to/from internal or external
* View of the permanence of problems
o Assume that there is a time when the problem will be solved and ask how one might have changed or do you remember when one has not been depressed
* Accept rather than try to change
o Paradoxically can help change
o Happy couples often accept that they can not change their spouses
* Express gratitude/recognise what you have that has gone well
* Get a bigger or smaller perspective
o How will it look when you are 90
o What would Jesus say?

Don't believe everything you think: how to challenge and escape the domination of unhelpful thoughts
* You are bigger than your mind: disidentification, externalising, mindfulness
* Challenge thoughts: counter arguments, make slight shifts in self talk.
* Just the facts with observations/sensory-based descriptions
* Accept and soften towards one's thoughts
* Exaggerate one's thoughts until they are absurd or lose their power.
* Get into a dialogue rather than a monologue, for example, with other people or oneself
* Take action and do something incompatible with the unhelpful thought

Ask
* When did you think that the problem could not change?
* What part of the problem are you concentrating on?
* Do you usually concentrate on the past, present or the future?
* Do you have an internal or external locus of control?
* Might it be useful to accept some aspect of what the... Read more ›
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6 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A survey recommended for both psychology collections and general-interest libraries., March 4, 2007
This review is from: Change 101: A Practical Guide to Creating Change in Life or Therapy (Hardcover)
A very strongly recommended addition to the reading list of anyone who has or is contemplating any form of therapy to improve their lives or help them deal with the their problems, CHANGE 101: A PRACTICAL GUIDE TO CREATING CHANGE IN LIFE OR THERAPY tells of the one thing all therapies have in common: they all work with clients to facilitate change. That said, it's surprising that few books on therapy identify this common denominator to treatment - or survey the basic idea of what constitutes helpful change. Bill O'Hanlon provides keys to achieving personal transformation, offering specific methods to encourage change. His background as a licensed marriage and family therapist lends to reality-based discussions in a survey recommended for both psychology collections and general-interest libraries.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A GREAT BOOK!!, July 29, 2010
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Change 101: A Practical Guide to Creating Change in Life or Therapy (Hardcover)
I BOUGHT THIS BOOK FOR AN ONLINE COURSE, BUT READ THE ENTIRE BOOK IN ONE SITTING, EVEN THOUGHT IT WAS ASSIGNED OVER 3 WEEKS!
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