Title: POSITIVE PSYCHOLOGY AND GOAL-ACHIEVING PSYCHOTHERAPY (GAP)
1POSITIVE PSYCHOLOGY AND GOAL-ACHIEVING
PSYCHOTHERAPY (GAP)
- Ronald S. Kaiser, Ph.D., ABPP
- Licensed Psychologist
- Clinical Associate Professor, Department of
Neurology, - Thomas Jefferson University
- Jefferson Headache Center
2POSITIVE PSYCHOLOGY DEFINED
- Positive psychology is that branch of psychology
that involves the study and promotion of
well-being. - The gold standard for measuring well-being is
flourishing. - The goal of positive psychology is the increase
of flourishing. -
Seligman, 2011
3POSITIVE PSYCHOLOGY DEFINED (2)
- Psychology is not just the study of pathology,
weakness, and damage. It is also the study of
strength and virtue. - Treatment is not just fixing what is broken. It
is nurturing what is best. - Seligman
Csikszentmihalyi (2000) - Positive Psychology can be incorporated into
other approaches to treatment.
4WHAT DETERMINES HAPPINESS?Lyubomirsky, 2007
5PSYCHOTHERAPY COMES FROM A DISEASE REDUCTION MODEL
- Historical definition of health Absence of
disease. - Psychoanalytic goal of tension-reduction.
- CBT focuses on irrational beliefs, automatic
negative thoughts, etc. - DSM gold standard is No Diagnosis.
- Reportable scales on the MMPI are the elevated
ones. - NIMH funding is granted for disease research.
6WHO DEFINITIONS OF HEALTH AND MENTAL HEALTH HAVE
CHANGED
- Health is a state of complete physical, mental
and social well-being, and not merely the absence
of disease or infirmity. - Mental Health is a state of well-being in which
an individual realizes his or her own abilities,
can cope with the normal stresses of life, can
work productively, and is able to make a
contribution to his or her community.
7PSYCHOLGYS CONTRIBUTIONS TO LEARNING HAVE
IMPACTED ON
- Schools
- Parenting
- Sports
- Industry
- But not necessarily on the conduct of
psychotherapy
8PSYCHOLOGY AND INDUSTRY
- Often co-opted by other disciplines
- Effectiveness trumps credentials
- Laid the groundwork for the coaching profession
- Are you familiar with?
- Seth Godin
- Brian Tracey
- Jim Rohm
- Stephen Hovey
- Napoleon Hill
- Tony Robbins
-
9MORE MOTIVATING THAN MONEY(AFTER A CERTAIN
POINT)
10LETS START WITH A BIT OF SELF-DISCLOSURE
- The influence of Jim Murray
- The influence of Don Meredith
- The influence of Dr. Benjamin Shimberg
- The influence of the gym
- The role of context
- The arrival of positive psychology
- The internet
11SOME NEW DEVELOPMENTS THAT AFFECT THEORY BUILDING
- Brain Plasticity
- Mindfulness
- The role of physical exercise
- The role of mental exercise
- Health Psychology
- Biofeedback/Neurofeedback
- The early work in positive psychology
- The internet
12THE SPECIAL ROLE OF BRAIN PLASTICITY
- The historical belief was that after childhood
the brain could only change in one direction
Decline. - Hardwiring the concept that the brain was more
like a computer than a muscle. - Research has dramatically changed this thinking
13RESEARCH ON THE CHANGING BRAIN
- Taubs Constraint Induced (CI) Movement Therapy.
- Competitive plasticity and Merzenichs brain
mapping. - The role of mental rehearsal (Pascal-Leones
piano students Sharanskys imprisonment). - Maguires research on the posterior hippocampuses
of London taxi drivers (Maguire, Current Biology,
2011). - Mirror neurons (Iacoboni, 2009)
14THE ROLE OF PHYSICAL EXERCISE
- What did Freud, Rogers, Skinner, Ellis, etc. have
to say about exercise? - What have Seligman, Achor, and other positive
psychologists said about exercise? - MacArthur Foundation studies demonstrate 3 ways
of reducing cognitive decline (normal weight,
lifelong learning, exercise) - Studies demonstrate that if you are middle-age
and sedentary and you start a regular exercise
program, you can delay the onset of cognitive
decline by 10-15 years (Ratey Kramer). - Naperville, IL, 8th graders finished 1 in the
world in science 6th in math after being
involved in a comprehensive daily PE program.
15THE BRAIN AND POSITIVE PSYCHOLOGY
16POSITIVE PSYCHOLOGY EMERGES IN AN AGE OF SCIENCE
- Commitment to research
- Criticisms of humanistic psychology for
insufficient research base. - Unlike Freud, Rogers, Ellis, Positive Psychology
was largely developed by academics rather than
clinicians
17THE SEMINAL ARTICLE
- Seligman, M., Csikszentmihalyi, M. (2000).
Positive psychology An introduction. American
Psychologist, 55 (1), 5-14.
18PIONEERS OF THE POSITIVE PSYCHOLOGY MOVEMENT
- Ed Diener (Dr Happiness Subjective well-being)
- George Vaillant (longitudinal study of successful
aging) - MIHALYI CSIKSZENTMIHALYI
- MARTIN SELIGMAN
- Barbara Fredrickson (Broaden and Build
Positivity Ratio) - Christopher Peterson (Values in Action project)
19THE NEXT GENERATION OF LEADERS IN POSITIVE
PSYCHOLOGY
- Sonja Lyubomirsky (Happiness)
- Todd Kashian (Curiosity)
- Karen Reivich (Resilience)
- Angela Duckworth (Grit)
- Robert Vallarand (Passion)
- Tal Ben-Shahar (General student body teaching)
- Shawn Achor (Consulting)
20THE CONTRIBUTIONS OF CAROL DWECK
- Mindset The view that you adopt for yourself.
- Fixed Mindset The belief that your qualities
are unchangeable and you have to keep proving
yourself over and over. - Related to being praised for your
attributes. - Growth Mindset The belief that your basic
qualities can be changed by your efforts. - Related to being praised for
your efforts. - Substantial research supports the benefits of the
growth mindset.
21CSIKSZENTMIHALY
- As World War II approached in Europe, he observed
how some adults became helpless as social
supports decayed while others maintained their
integrity. - His work in the U.S. led to his development of
the concept of Flow and its role in the
development of Positive Psychology.
22FLOW
- The optimal experience.
- It does not just happen passively, but you
cant force yourself into flow. - It involves being fully focused, motivated,
energized, and involved in an activity. - You cant be depressed or anxious and able to be
in a state of flow. - Contrary to popular belief, lifes best moments
are when we are stretched to physical and/or
mental limits rather than relaxed. - Our best moments may not necessarily be pleasant
at the time. - Experiences that result in flow for us are not
universal.
23THE CONDITIONS OF FLOW
- Goals are clear
- Feedback is immediate
- There is a balance between opportunity and
capacity - Concentration is deep
- The sense of time is altered
24TRAITS OF THE AUTOTELIC PERSONALITY
- Curiosity
- Persistence
- Low self-centeredness
- Oriented toward performing activities for
intrinsic reasons only.
25SELIGMAN
- His journey went from Learned Helplessness to
Learned Optimism to Authentic Happiness to
Flourish - and the psychology of well-being. - Developed the MAPP program at Penn.
- Instrumental in developing major positive
psychology concepts including Signature
Strengths and PERMA. - Collaborated with Chris Peterson in researching
and writing Character Strengths and Virtues.
26PERMA
- Positive Emotion
- Engagement
- Relationships
- Meaning
- Accomplishment
27CHARACTER STRENGTHS AND VIRTUES
- Positive Psychologys answer to the DSM and ICD
A Manual for the Sanities. - The focus is on what is right about people rather
than what is wrong. - Based on substantial research across cultures.
- 6 Virtues encompass 24 Character Strengths.
28STRENGTHS OF WISDOM AND KNOWLEDGE
- Creativity (Originality, Ingenuity)
- Curiosity (Interest, Novelty-seeking, Openness to
Experience) - Open-mindedness (Judgment, Critical Thinking)
- Love of Learning
- Perspective (Wisdom)
29STRENGTHS OF HUMANITY
- Love
- Kindness (Generosity, Nurturance, Care
Compassion, Altruistic Love, Niceness) - Social Intelligence (Emotional Intelligence,
Personal Intelligence)
30STRENGTHS OF JUSTICE
- Citizenship (Social Responsibility, Loyalty,
Teamwork) - Fairness
- Leadership
31STRENGTHS OF TEMPERANCE
- Forgiveness and Mercy
- Humility and Modesty
- Prudence
- Self-Regulation (Self-Control)
32STRENGTHS OF TRANSCENDENCE
- Appreciation of Beauty and Excellence (Awe,
Wonder, Elevation) - Gratitude
- Hope (Optimism, Future-Mindedness, Future
Orientation) - Humor (Playfulness)
- Spirituality (Religiousness, Faith, Purpose)
33STRENGTHS OF COURAGE
- Bravery
- Persistence (Perseverance, Industriousness)
- Integrity (Authenticity, Honesty)
- Vitality (Zest, Enthusiasm, Vigor, Energy)
34ASSESSING SIGNATURE STRENGTHS
- Go to www.authentichappiness.org
- VIA Survey of Character strengths (240 items)
- Brief Strengths Test (24 items)
- Several other tests
- Test results are used for research as well as
your own benefit/
35OTHER INDICATORS OF STRENGTHS
- Resilience
- Savoring
- Grit
- Posttraumatic Growth
36FREDRICKSONS 10 TOP POSITIVE EMOTIONS
- Joy
- Gratitude
- Serenity
- Interest
- Hope
- Pride
- Amusement
- Inspiration
- Awe
- Love
37MEASURES OF POSITIVE INTERACTIONS
- The Losada Line and Ratio
- The Fredrickson Positivity Ratio
38RESEARCH SUPPORTIVE OF POSITIVE PSYCHOLOGY
CONCEPTS
- Education
- Health
- Aging
- Work-related
- The Military
39POSITIVE PSYCHOLOGY AND HEALTH
- Positive psychological well-being is associated
with - Fewer colds
- Reduced mortality in both healthy
ill populations - Reduced cardio-vascular disease
- Reduced mortality from CVD , renal
failure, HIV - Findings with respect to cancer are more
equivocal - No study has demonstrated a relationship between
pessimism and better health or reduced mortality. -
-
40THE IMPORTANCE OF THE SOCIAL NETWORK
- Strength of social relationships is the major
distinguishing characteristic of the happiest 10
of the population. -
(Diener Seligman, 2002) - There are 70 years of evidence that our
relationships with others matter, and matter more
than anything else in the world.
(Vaillant, 2009) -
- The concepts of social capital and reciprocity
41THE IMPORTANCE OF A SOCIAL NETWORK
- You should always go to other peoples funerals
otherwise they wont come to yours. -
Yogi Berra
42POSITIVE PSYCHOLOGY EXERCISES
- The What-Went-Well (or 3 Good Things or 3
Blessings) Exercise - The Gratitude Visit
- The 21 day rule for positive behavior change
- The 20 second rule
- The Reverse 20 second rule
- The Modified Presidential Campaign Assessment
43SELIGMANS ABCD EXERCISE
- Adversity
- Belief
- Consequences
- Disputation
- Energization
44CRITICISMS OF POSITIVE PSYCHOLOGY
- The scientists and philosophers
- The generalizers and over-simplifiers
- The anti-military
- Barbara Ehrenreich
45INTERNATIONAL POSITIVE PSYCHOLOGY ASSOCIATION
- For information or to join
- www.ippanetwork.org
- 3rd Annual World Congress was held in Los Angeles
on June 23-27, 2013
46GOAL-ACHIEVING PSYCHOTHERAPY A MODEL FOR
POSITIVE PRACTICE
- GAP builds upon the research orientation and
philosophy of positive psychology. - GAP builds upon effective techniques of practice
from several approaches, primarily CBT. - GAP introduces unique concepts involving the role
of the therapist, the purpose of psychotherapy,
history, the goals of treatment, and the process.
47GOAL-ACHIEVING PSYCHOTHERAPY (GAP)
- Bridges the GAPs between
- Thinking and doing
- Gaining and maintaining
- The past and the future
- Science and practice
-
-
48PRINCIPLES AND PRACTICES OF GAP (1)
- The approach is forward looking and positive.
- The approach is geared toward building personal
strengths to manage change and growth. - The focus is primarily on the solution, not the
problem. - The past is meaningful especially as it relates
to character strengths and achievements. - The therapist is active, directive, supportive
and a cheerleader for growth and change.
49PRINCIPLES AND PRACTICES OF GAP (2)
- The patient/client is active in preparing a
Mission Statement and setting an achieving goals. - Goal setting is designed to ensure maximum
success by utilizing small and measureable
forward steps. - Wallowing is avoided.
- Activity is the default.
- Once positive commitment and direction is
implemented, other forms of therapy can be
incorporated. - Positive personality change can take place
throughout the life span.
50PRINCIPLES AND PRACTICES OF GAP (3)
- The Type P Personality is the model of the
healthy personality. - Emotional health is always a work in progress.
- GAP principles can be pursued on a do-it-yourself
basis, in therapy, or through coaching
depending upon your needs at any specific time. - GAP-specific materials are available to aid in
the implementation and maintenance of progress. - www.thementalhealthgym.com is the ongoing source
of GAP resources and information.
51THE GYM AS A MODEL
- Wellness is a central concept
- Open to all shapes and sizes
- Individual measureable goals
- Diagnosis is descriptive, not prescriptive.
52GAP ASSESSMENT ALTERNATIVES TO TRADITIONAL
DIAGNOSIS
- Competent Persons Disease the addiction to
2nd place - The Too Excuse
- Over-thinking
- Under-rating (A/Fail thinking Ascribing
unimportance to achievements Luck) - Waiting for an A
53THE TYPE P PERSONALITY
- The ultimate goal
- Assessment is done throughout the process
- Roughly comparable to PERMA
54TYPE P PERSONALITY
- Personal goal-directed
- Proactive
- Positive
- Persistent
- Playful
55THE INTRODUCTORY SESSION
- Understanding the reason for treatment
- Expression of therapist gratitude as part of
informed consent - Explanation of process and philosophy
- History-taking within the context of
strength-building - Introduction to the role of activity level and
homework
56THE ROLE OF HISTORY
- Establish early the importance of moving forward
to develop strengths. - Identify unhappy aspects of history to
primarily use in the future. - Identify positive aspects of history.
- When was the best time in your life?
- What things do you like most about
yourself? - What makes you so resilient?
- Be prepared to revisit history from a position of
strength.
57GETTING UNSTUCK THE CRITICAL QUESTIONS
- Are you a fortune teller?
- What can go right?
- What does this have to do with you?
- How is this getting you where you want to go?
- What will you do now to maintain your success?
-
58THE TECHNIQUES OF GAP (1)
- Vision without execution is hallucination.
-
Thomas Edison
59THE TECHNIQUES OF GAP (2)
- The Mission Statement
- The current goals
- Benefits
- Impediments
- Strengths to overcome impediments
- Areas for change and growth
- Health and fitness
- Cognitive functioning
- Social
-
60THE TECHNIQUES OF GAP (3)
- Exercise Cards
- Create Your Proactive Positive Explosion Form
- Type P Personality Development Form
- DEFAULTS ARE ACTIVE
61THERAPEUTIC CONSIDERATIONS
- The therapist as a role model
- Phone calls
- No shows
- Suicidal ideation or threats
- Patient sabotage
- Session intensity
62HOW DO YOU KNOW WHEN YOU ARE DONE?
- Does the person conform to the mission statement?
- How well does s/he meet the criteria for Type P
Personality? - Has the personal tipping point (Proactive
Positive Explosion) been achieved? - Has a maintenance program been put in place?
- Are conditions right for continued flourishing?
63SUCCESSFUL APPLICATIONS OF GAPTO SPECIAL
POPULATIONS
- Some Axis II populations
- Habit control
- Depression
- PTSD
- Headache patients
64WHY DOESNT IT WORK FOR EVERYONE?
- Nothing does.
- Expectancy of therapy as a place to wallow may
not be met. - Using the gym as a model, it is notable that
people who drop out may successfully return in
the future. - Intensity and/or homework turn some people off.
- Its still a work in progress without a lot of
external input.
65THE CHALLENGE
- The incidence of depression has risen every year
since the early 20th century. - Depression is the leading cause of disability in
the U.S. for individuals between the ages of
15-44. - The average age of initial diagnosis is getting
younger. - Depression is the most costly disease in he world
although up to half of the cases that meet the
criteria for depression at any one time go
untreated. - IT IS HARD TO BE POSITIVE AND DEPRESSED AT THE
SAME TIME.
66THANK YOU!
-
- Your comments are important to me.
- Please feel free to contact me at
- ronald.kaiser_at_jefferson.edu
- 215-955-2743
- Or
- ron.kaiser_at_thementalhealthgym.com
- 215-704-0983