In
Collaborative Couple Therapy, loss of voice is substituted for resistance
as the key pathological element. Loss of voice precludes expression
of heartfelt feelings - the partners' underlying longings and fears.
We take the fight that is occurring at the moment and, by discovering
the partners' heartfelt feelings, transform it into a moment of intimacy
and induce a collaborative spirit. This turns the relationship into
a curative force for solving the couple's moment-to-moment relationship
problems and each partner's family-of-origin problems.
A
defining feature of this approach is a recognition of how therapists
grapple with the same problems the partners do: being pulled into adversarial
states, where they lose the ability to appreciate each partner's point
of view, or into withdrawn states, where they lose the ability to engage
at all. The task of therapists is to recognize their reactions as clues
to the relationship problem of the moment, which is the partners' inability
to express their heartfelt feelings.
Collaborative
Couple Therapy is based on a form of psychotherapeutic thinking developed
by Bernard Apfelbaum (www.bapfelbaumphd.com).
The term "collaborative therapy" is borrowed from Harold Goolishian
and Harlene Anderson (www.harlene.org
). For the most recent version of Collaborative Couple Therapy see:
Wile,
D. B. (1999). Collaborative couple therapy. In Donovan, J. (Ed.) Short-term
couple therapy. New York, Guilford, pp. 201-225.
Wile,
D. B. (in press). Collaborative couple therapy. In Gurman, A.
S. & Jacobson, N. S (Eds.). Clinical handbook of couple therapy,
Third edition. New York: Guilford.