The ability to "exchange oneself for others," feeling the client’s experience without being overwhelmed.
Trungpa critiques the traditional clinical view that treats patients as "broken" objects to be fixed.
Using meditation to observe the mind without judgment, allowing the natural clarity to surface. The Sanity We Are Born With: A Buddhist Approac...
The book suggests that mental health is not the absence of problems, but the ability to relate to those problems with curiosity and bravery. By stopping the "struggle" against ourselves, we allow our inherent wisdom to guide us.
If you tell me what specific part of his philosophy interests you, I can: The ability to "exchange oneself for others," feeling
The idea that even in the midst of extreme chaos or "madness," there is a flicker of precise, intelligent awareness. The Role of the Therapist Trungpa redefines the therapist-client relationship:
Developing an unconditional friendship with oneself to dissolve self-aggression. The book suggests that mental health is not
these views to modern Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT). Draft a formal analysis of his "Basic Goodness" theory.