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Distancing: Avoidant Personality Disorder, Revised and Expanded
 
 
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Distancing: Avoidant Personality Disorder, Revised and Expanded [Hardcover]

Martin Kantor M.D. (Author)
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (12 customer reviews)

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Book Description

027597829X 978-0275978297 November 15, 2003 Rev Exp

Kantor focuses on a misunderstood but common condition that brings severe and pervasive anxiety about social contacts and relationships. He offers psychotherapists a specific method for helping avoidants overcome their fear of closeness and commitments, and offers a guide for avoidants themselves to use for developing lasting, intimate, anxiety-free relationships.

Fear of intimacy and commitment keeps avoidants from forming close, meaningful relationships. Types of avoidants can include confirmed bachelors, femme fatales, and people who form what appear to be solid relationships only to tire of them and leave with little warning, often devastating their partners/victims. Kantor takes us through the history of this disorder, and into clinical treatment rooms, to see and hear how avoidants think, feel, and recover. He offers psychotherapists a specific method for helping avoidants overcome their fear of closeness and commitments, and offers a guide for avoidants themselves to use for developing lasting, intimate, anxiety-free relationships.

The avoidance reduction techniques presented in this book recognize that avoidants not only fear criticism and humiliation, but also fear being flooded by their feelings and being depleted if they express them. Acceptance is feared as much as rejection, because avoidants fear compromising their identity and losing personal freedom. Kantor describes the different therapeutic emphasis required for the four types of avoidants, including those who are withdrawn due to shyness and social phobia, such as people who intensely fear public speaking; those who relate easily, widely, and well, but cannot sustain relationships due to fear of closeness; those whose restlessness causes them to leave steady relationships, often without warning; and those who grow dependent on—and merge with—a single lover or family member and avoid relating to anyone else.


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Editorial Reviews

Review

Recommended. Most useful to practitioners, psychologists, psychiatrists, and general readers interested in this relatively neglected personality disorder. -- Choice, June, 2004

Book Description

Kantor offers a specific method for helping avoidants overcome their fear of closeness and commitments and offers a guide for developing lasting, intimate, anxiety-free relationships.


Product Details

  • Hardcover: 296 pages
  • Publisher: Praeger; Rev Exp edition (November 15, 2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 027597829X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0275978297
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 6.1 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (12 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #104,080 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

For many people the hardest life challenge to overcome involves the anxiety associated with finding and keeping intense, lasting, committed, long-term, loving relationships. This anxiety is typically the product of a disorder called AvPD, or Avoidant Personality Disorder. This disorder doesn't take life, but it does ruin it. I have treated so many people I know and love succumbing to its ravages that I felt the urgency to write books that offer the layman a step by step method for coping with and overcoming this emotional difficulty.
Mine are the only books that deal with AvPD as an entity, not as a subvariety of Social Phobia. This is significant because the treatment is different in each case: treatment of social phobia should emphasize cognitive-behavioral interventions, while treatment of AvPD additionally requires uncovering via a psychoanalytically-oriented and interpersonal approach that goes beyond attempting to reverse symptoms directly to halting the process of anxious interpersonal withdrawal through uncovering its roots.
The Essential Guide to Overcoming Avoidant Personality Disorder is the third book I have written on the topic, but it is the first with material primarily directed toward individuals who finding themselves lonely and isolated because of relationship anxiety long for a self-help approach based on understanding to overcome the relational terrors that keep them from experiencing the fulfillment that can only come from closeness and commitment to significant others.



 

Customer Reviews

12 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

104 of 116 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars APD: Character or Personality Disorder?, March 17, 2004
By 
Stephanie Silva (Urban Los Angeles) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Distancing: Avoidant Personality Disorder, Revised and Expanded (Hardcover)
Martin Kantor is a psychiatrist on the staff of the Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center in East Orange, New Jersey, and has elsewhere written the following summary of Distancing reproduced (and lightly edited) here:

~~~

APD has to date been a misunderstood and neglected entity -- either entirely ignored or confused with another disorder, such as Social Phobia. The purpose of my revised Distancing is to broaden our dynamic understanding of APD, to describe, understand and treat all avoidants, not just those who are shy and social phobic, and to develop a new therapeutic approach to avoidance, one I call Avoidance Reduction.

This is an eclectic method for treating avoidants composed of relevant techniques borrowed from psychoanalytic, cognitive behavioral, interpersonal, existential and supportive therapies. Many clinicians fail to recognize APD, instead diagnosing Social Phobia. Those who do recognize APD emphasize shyness and Social Phobia as its main features. However, these are not basic to all patients with APD. What is basic to APD is not shyness or Social Phobia but a severe and pervasive social and relationship anxiety displayed in a variety of ways. Therefore, there are not one but four subtypes of APD, each of which requires a different psychotherapeutic approach.

Type I avoidants, the classic avoidants, are withdrawn. There are two subtypes of withdrawn avoidants. The first is the shy individual who cannot seem to tolerate, flinches in the face of, and pulls back from any form of social contact. The second suffers from a Social Phobia, which is a delimited pull back from a situation or event that symbolizes relationships, for example, from public speaking or eating in public. Though shy and social phobic avoidants are the main and virtually exclusive focus of today's scientific literature, these avoidants may not even be in a majority, but may represent only the tip of the avoidant iceberg.

Types II and III avoidants, almost entirely ignored by the literature, also suffer from relationship anxiety -- but their relationship anxiety takes the form not of shyness or Social Phobia but of unstable relationships due to a fear of commitment. Type II avoidants shift from relationship to relationship afraid of closeness due to a fear of commitment ("mingle" avoidants such as the perpetual bachelor or femme fatale). They are therefore the opposite of withdrawn. These are hyperrelated individuals who can relate easily, widely and well but have difficulty sustaining the relationships they form. Theirs are unstable relationships, marked by a tendency to abandon relationships before they fully develop, especially when closeness threatens and commitment looms. Type III avoidants form lasting relationships only to disrupt them after months or years of apparent functionality. These are what I call the "seven year itch" avoidants who form what appear to be solid relationships -- only to tire of them after a shorter or longer period of time, then leave them with little warning. That is, they abandon their relationships after some time has passed, and they often do so suddenly and without warning.

Type IV avoidants hide out in a codependent relationship with one person to avoid having healthy relationships with many people. They sink into one relationship to avoid all others. Some are dependent on their family. Others are dependent on a lover with whom they form a merger relationship that protects them from the anxiety associated with relationships outside of the primary relationship.

These are all patients with APD. Their dynamics are remarkably similar. They all require Avoidance Reduction. However, the significant differences in the ways they manifest their avoidance require a different therapeutic emphasis in each case. For example, while exposure techniques may prove useful for Type I shy and social phobic avoidants, they will likely be ineffective for Type II avoidants with a commitment phobia, who are more likely to benefit from insight oriented and cognitive therapy. Effective treatment of APD requires a devoted approach dedicated to reversing the underlying relationship anxiety via Avoidance Reduction. It will be applicable to reduction of avoidance in all its forms.

Avoidance Reduction should focus not only on fear of criticism (the official dynamic explanation of avoidance) but also on the equally important fears of flooding, depletion, and acceptance. Avoidants are not simply afraid of criticism and humiliation -- the only reason for avoidance currently identified in the official literature. They are also afraid of being flooded by feelings they cannot tolerate, and of being depleted should they express these feelings. Most importantly, they fear acceptance as much as they fear rejection because they fear losing their identity and personal freedom.

In practice, Avoidance Reduction involves a pastiche of familiar psychotherapeutic approaches in use today, including psychodynamic, cognitive behavioral, interpersonal, and supportive approaches, selected elements of which are combined for a synergistic effect.

My book is for psychotherapists who will be better able to identify, understand and manage APD from the detailed clinical descriptions, illustrative clinical vignettes (including those from real life) and thorough exploration of the psychodynamic, cognitive and interpersonal dynamics of the disorder.

It is also for victims of avoidants who can learn to better manage the people in their lives who snub and otherwise neglect or exploit them.

It is a self help manual for avoidants themselves, for individuals attempting to surmount their relationship anxiety and form close, satisfying, meaningful relationships with others without inordinate fear and regret.

~~~
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54 of 59 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Interesting, but Flawed, September 7, 2005
By 
Mark A. Moorstein (Manassas, Virginia) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Distancing: Avoidant Personality Disorder, Revised and Expanded (Hardcover)
This book attracted me because I know an avoidant and wanted to understand her. I found the book both interesting and tedious. Kantor does a good job of classifying the various types of AvPD and their symptoms, but lost my attention by his examples and his constant reference to gays. I accept that any relationship may evidence avoidant behavior, but it seems that Kantor particularly enjoyed using a gay psychotherapist as his favorite example. This caused me to read the book primarily as a manual for gay avoidants --- that might be applicable to more general heterosexual relationships.
I also noticed that the examples seemed to focus on urban social life --- parties, decorating, looks, fashion --- conditions that might apply in New York City, but not necessarily Boise, Idaho.
Nevertheless, I found the basic explanation of avoidants and treatments good and thorough. It is fairly clear that avoidants can develop closer relationships --- and this provides hope for those who want to relate to them. Kantor could improve the book, however, by providing better examples.
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29 of 31 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Disappointing, January 21, 2009
This review is from: Distancing: Avoidant Personality Disorder, Revised and Expanded (Hardcover)
First of all this book is 265 pages and it should have been less 100. It is the most redundant book I have ever read.

Secondly, it seems to me a very superficial look at avoidant personality disorder. There are some sections of this book that are so superficial he should have left them out altogether. He classifies them into different groups and provides examples (way too many) of what type of behavior exemplifies a particular group. He does not delve into their psychology though. I don't find it useful just to be able to classify someone. I wanted to understand why they think like they do or behave like they do, even if it is theoretical.

Overall, it seems like his objective was to describe avoidants or identify them rather than figure out why they are like they are. It might be somewhat useful to an avoidant person to read the book just because they might recognize themselves in here somewhere.

About 17 pages are devoted to cause (at least 5 of which were examples). This chapter should be the center of the book if you want to understand the disorder, but it was treated superficially as well. Again, he seems to be describing the possible causes without explaining them. You expect some analysis from a psychologist, but he doesn't offer any.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Avoidant Personality Disorder, along with Passive-Aggressive Personality Disorder, might be called a stepchild, or orphan, personality disorder. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
hypomanic avoidants, avoidants distance, avoidants need, avoidant patients, depressed avoidants, healthy avoidance, many avoidants, one avoidant, other avoidants, most avoidants, shy avoidants, love revulsion, avoidant ways, such avoidants, paranoid avoidants, avoidant personality disorder, less avoidant, avoidant symptoms, interpersonal anxiety, avoidance reduction, social phobics, compulsive sexual behavior, relationship anxiety, cognitive errors, comorbid disorders
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
New York, Posttraumatic Stress Disorder, New Jersey, Borderline Personality Disorder, The Quality Assurance Project, Ginia Bellafante, Joseph Cornell, San Francisco, Unlike Type
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