Contributors
Acknowledgments
Introduction: AEDP After Twenty Years
Diana Fosha
Part I. Healing From the Get-go
Chapter 1. How AEDP Works
Chapter 2. The First Session in AEDP: Harnessing Transformance and
Co-creating a Secure Attachment
Part II. Context and Scaffolding
Chapter 3. Historical Context: AEDP's Place in the World of
Psychotherapy
Chapter 4. What Just Happened? And What is Happening Now? The Art
and Science of Moment-to-Moment Tracking in AEDP
Chapter 5. A Shift in Focus: Making Use of Therapist Experience in
AEDP
Chapter 6. Using AEDP's Representational Schemas to Scaffold the
Therapist's Attunement and Engagement
Part III. How to Work with Core Affective Experience:
Attachment, Emotion, Self
Chapter 7. Neuroplasticity in Action: Rewiring Internal Working
Models of Attachment
Chapter 8. Portrayals in AEDP: Processing Core Affective Experience
and Bringing it to Completion
Chapter 9. Agency, Will, and Desire as Core Affective Experience:
Undoing Disempowerment to Foster the Emergence of the Agentic
Self
Part IV. How to Work with Maladaptive Affective Experience and
Complex Trauma
Chapter 10. Fierce Love: Championing the Core Self to Transform
Trauma and Pathogenic States
Chapter 11. Finding Healing in the Broken Places: Intra-Relational
AEDP Work With Traumatic Aloneness
Chapter 12. Relational Prisms: Navigating Experiential Attachment
Work with Dissociation and Multiplicity in AEDP
Part V. Integration, Flourishing, Core State, and the Core
Self
Chapter 13. What Went Right? What Happens in the Brain During
AEDP's Metatherapeutic Processing
Chapter 14. "We are organized to be better than fine": Building the
Transformational Theory of AEDP 2.0
Chapter 15. Future Directions for AEDP
Appendix. The Phenomenology of the Four-State Transformational
Process in AEDP
Index
About the Editor
Diana Fosha, PhD, is the developer of Accelerated
Experiential Dynamic Psychotherapy (AEDP), a healing-oriented
psychotherapy to treat attachment trauma and help people connect to
their vitality. She is director of the AEDP Institute. Her work
focuses on integrating neuroplasticity, recognition science and
developmental dyadic research into experiential clinical process
work with patients. With an interest in the phenomenology of
experience, she is on the cutting edge of transformational theory
and practice. AEDP’s transformational theory, putting
neuroplasticity and attachment into clinical action, is similarly
receiving recognition. She lives and practices in New York City and
leads workshops and trainings worldwide.
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