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Attachment
Control-Mastery theory does not explicitly incorporate Bowlby/Ainsworth
attachment theory. Nevertheless, attachment-related concepts permeate
the theory. This is most evident in the theory's use of the concept
of "safety" and its stress of the therapeutic importance
of the patient-therapist relationship. Control-Mastery theory emphasizes
the cooperative working relationship between the therapist and the
patient in disconfirming the patient's pathogenic beliefs.
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Reconceptualizing the Therapeutic Process,
by Vic Comello (67 KB) |
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Attachment, Guilt, and Symptomatology
among Incarcerated Women, by Renee Simone and Robert
Shilkret, Mount Holyoke College, South Hadley, MA (122 KB) |
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Attachment Style, Emotional Expressiveness,
and Guilt among College Women, by Katherine C. Haydon
and Robert Shilkret, Mount Holyoke College, South Hadley, MA
(406 KB) |
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Authenticity and the Psychology of Choice
in the Analyst, by Michael J. Bader, D.M.H. (147
KB) |
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Bowel Obstruction: A Case Presentation,
by Joseph Weiss, M.D. (157 KB) |
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Certain Facets of the Therapeutic Process,
by Joseph Weiss, M.D. (776 KB) |
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Clinical and Theoretical Aspects of "As
If" Characters, by Joseph Weiss (1.2 MB) |
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Control Mastery Therapy as a Secure Attachment
Relationship, by Vic Comello (310 KB) |

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Ideal Control Mastery Technique Correlates
with Change in a Single Case, by Nnamdi Pole and J.
Stuart Ablon, University of California, Berkeley, Lynn O’Connor,
The Wright Institute, and Joseph Weiss, University of California,
San Francisco (79 KB) |

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Psychodynamic Studies of College Adjustment,
by Robert Shilkret, Mount Holyoke College, South Hadley,
MA (275 KB) |
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The Analyst's Use of Humor,
by Michael J. Bader, D.M.H. ( 167 KB) |
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The Patient's Search for Safety: The
Organizing Principle in Psychotherapy, by Alan Rappoport,
Ph.D. (55 KB) |
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The Therapist as the Patient's Attachment
Figure and Secure Base, by Vic Comello (155 KB) |
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Treatment by Attitudes, by Hal
Sampson, Ph.D. (336 KB) |
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