Leaving Home: The Art of Separating From Your Difficult Family

David P. Celani

eISBN: 9780231509121

2005 (176 pages )

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Complete Book Download (pages 1-168)

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Table of Contents (pages 7-8)

Download Acknowledgments
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Acknowledgments (pages 9-12)

Download Introduction
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Introduction (pages 13-24)

Download 1. The Building Blocks of Our Personality
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1. The Building Blocks of Our Personality (pages 25-62)

Download 2. How Our Defenses Play “Hide and Seek” with Reality
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2. How Our Defenses Play “Hide and Seek” with Reality (pages 63-86)

Download 3. Staying Home
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3. Staying Home (pages 87-104)

Download 4. Preparing for Change
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4. Preparing for Change (pages 105-136)

Download 5. Leaving Home
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5. Leaving Home (pages 137-164)

Download References
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References (pages 165-166)

Download Index
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Index (pages 167-168)

Leaving Home: The Art of Separating From Your Difficult Family

Why, after a childhood of emotional neglect and abuse, would a man move next door to the very parents who caused him pain? And how can a woman emerge from her mother's control in order to form healthy adult relationships?

Giving up family attachments that failed to meet our needs as children, David Celani argues, is the hardest psychological task an adult can undertake. Yet the reality is that many adults re-create the most painful aspects of their early relationships with their parents in new relationships with peers and romantic partners, frustrating themselves and discouraging them from leaving their family of origin. Leaving Home emphasizes the life-saving benefits of separating from destructive parents and offers a viable program for personal emancipation.

Celani's program is based on Object-Relations Theory, a branch of psychoanalysis developed by Scottish analyst Ronald Fairbairn. The human personality, Fairbairn argued, is not the result of inherited (and thus immutable) instincts. Rather, the developing child builds internal relational templates that guide his future interactions with others based on the conscious and unconscious memories he internalized from his primary relationship-the one he experienced with his parents. While a child's attachment to parents who were neglectful or even abusive is not uncommon, there is a way out. Articulate, sensitive, and replete with examples from Celani's twenty-six years of clinical practice, this book outlines the practical steps to leaving home.

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Table of Contents

Leaving Home: The Art of Separating From Your Difficult Family

Author(s): Celani, David P.
Keyword(s): SW07; SW06; CSWO
Abstract:

Why, after a childhood of emotional neglect and abuse, would a man move next door to the very parents who caused him pain? And how can a woman emerge from her mother's control in order to form healthy adult relationships?

Giving up family attachments that failed to meet our needs as children, David Celani argues, is the hardest psychological task an adult can undertake. Yet the reality is that many adults re-create the most painful aspects of their early relationships with their parents in new relationships with peers and romantic partners, frustrating themselves and discouraging them from leaving their family of origin. Leaving Home emphasizes the life-saving benefits of separating from destructive parents and offers a viable program for personal emancipation.

Celani's program is based on Object-Relations Theory, a branch of psychoanalysis developed by Scottish analyst Ronald Fairbairn. The human personality, Fairbairn argued, is not the result of inherited (and thus immutable) instincts. Rather, the developing child builds internal relational templates that guide his future interactions with others based on the conscious and unconscious memories he internalized from his primary relationship-the one he experienced with his parents. While a child's attachment to parents who were neglectful or even abusive is not uncommon, there is a way out. Articulate, sensitive, and replete with examples from Celani's twenty-six years of clinical practice, this book outlines the practical steps to leaving home.