About the Author:
HILLARY KEENEY, PH.D., is a distinguished scholar, author, and practitioner of creative transformation and improvisational performance. Co-Founder and Director of The Keeney Center for Seiki Jutsu, she is presently Distinguished Visiting Professor in Psychology, Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla (BUAP), Mexico and Adjunct Faculty in the Creative Systemic Studies doctoral concentration at the University of Louisiana. Hillary also serves as an Associate Editor of the journal, Dance, Movement, and Spiritualities. Having begun her career in the non-profit sector doing community and social justice work, she now advances the art of change in a wide variety of venues, from the therapeutic clinic to the social service agency, classroom, and theatre. Her scholarship has made contributions to the study of interdisciplinary pedagogy, social cybernetics, creative therapeutic practice and training, ethnographic study of healing traditions, qualitative research of communication, and dance. Hillary received her B.A. in Women's Studies and Masters of Social Work from the University of Michigan with extensive study in dance. Her doctorate in Transformative Studies is from the California Institute for Integral Studies, San Francisco. Hillary spent five years studying Zen Buddhism as a resident of the Zen Center of Los Angeles, and was awarded the Frederick P. Lenz Residential Fellowship for the Study of American Buddhism at Naropa University in Fall 2009. Hillary has a true commitment to interdisciplinary scholarship and bringing contemporary people-helping professions into greater relationship to the healing ways held inside great wisdom traditions. In addition to The Keeney Center, Hillary provides postgraduate training to therapists, coaches, and other healing professionals at conferences and workshops throughout the world. Hillary s most recent books (co-authored with Bradford Keeney) include A Arte de Beber Uma Taça de Amor (Campinas, Brazil: IDPH Press, 2012), and Circular Therapeutics: Giving Therapy a Healing Heart, (Phoenix, AZ: Zeig, Tucker, and Thiesen, 2012). Her work has been critically acclaimed as destined to be a classic, a masterful account of a profound way of healing, an amazing work that exceeds the promises in Gregory Bateson s writing, and a clear meeting of heart and mind.
Review:
A book you can t put down! I don t know how to adequately convey that the Keeneys are true to the work of Milton H. Erickson. This is improvisation and utilization at its best, delivering solidly based effective therapeutic work. With exercises and all sorts of informative teaching, they show us how to do it. Best of all, the book fulfills a remarkable paradox: you will hate to finish this well-written, entertaining, and practice-changing book, but will hardly wait to finish so that you can use what s been learned. --Betty Alice Erickson, M.S., LMFT
If you are looking for new inspiration to enliven your clinical practice, this is the book to read. The Keeneys are masters of invention. Turning conventional thinking and practices on their head, they encourage therapists to leap over the bonds of the rational and enter the realm of the theatrical and metaphorical. They create a new therapeutic context with first, second and third acts. Guidelines are included that lay out specific ways for therapists to give free rein to their own imagination and develop their unique creativity. The book is filled with many clinical surprises. There are startling examples of transformative experiences in which silver linings are found within the darkest situations, seeds of hope are implanted in barren landscapes and nightmares are turned into dreams. It was a pleasure to read and I highly recommend it. --Peggy Papp, LCSW
If you try to get nothing from this book, happily, you will fail: It is a page-packed monument to unscripted change! You won't put it down once you begin as it teaches how to amplify experiential resources rather than focus on either problems or solutions. The book's creative voice alone will inspire therapists to pull the weeds out of any garden-variety approach and let flowers of change blossom and grow for both them and their clients. Enjoy. --Stephen Lankton, MSW, LCSW, DAHB
If you are looking for new inspiration to enliven your clinical practice, this is the book to read. The Keeneys are masters of invention. Turning conventional thinking and practices on their head, they encourage therapists to leap over the bonds of the rational and enter the realm of the theatrical and metaphorical. They create a new therapeutic context with first, second and third acts. Guidelines are included that lay out specific ways for therapists to give free rein to their own imagination and develop their unique creativity. The book is filled with many clinical surprises. There are startling examples of transformative experiences in which silver linings are found within the darkest situations, seeds of hope are implanted in barren landscapes and nightmares are turned into dreams. It was a pleasure to read and I highly recommend it. --Peggy Papp, LCSW
If you try to get nothing from this book, happily, you will fail: It is a page-packed monument to unscripted change! You won't put it down once you begin as it teaches how to amplify experiential resources rather than focus on either problems or solutions. The book's creative voice alone will inspire therapists to pull the weeds out of any garden-variety approach and let flowers of change blossom and grow for both them and their clients. Enjoy. --Stephen Lankton, MSW, LCSW, DAHB
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