Cover Page

Schema Therapy with Couples is a very helpful addition to the clinical couples’ therapy literature, integrating the individual challenges people face in their own growth with managing a relationship with someone else who also faces their own individual challenges. Drs. DiFrancesco, Roediger, and Stevens provide a guide through this very difficult but everyday terrain that every couples therapist must navigate.”

John Gottman, PhD, Author of The Seven Principles for Making Marriage Work

“In 25 years of treating couples and closely following the literature, this is the most significant development I have seen. Schema Therapy with Couples provides a highly developed systems-oriented theoretical model. With its foundation in schema therapy, this approach can deftly deal with the most severely dysfunctional couples by focusing on personality dysfunction, change at a deep cognitive-emotional level, and potent emotive techniques. Schema Therapy with Couples is an extraordinary volume chock-full of figures, instructive clinical examples, and powerful clinical interventions. This innovative work will undoubtedly influence how you treat couples.”

Lawrence P. Riso, PhD, Professor of Clinical Psychology, American School of Professional Psychology at Argosy University, Washington, DC

“Schema therapists working with couples bring to their work the insights of the schema therapy approach usually integrated with concepts and insights from couples therapy approaches such as those of Johnson (emotion-focused therapy), Gottman (Gottman couples therapy), Hendrix (Imago therapy), and cognitive-behavioural approaches. Their interest is in the more difficult cases where one or both parties have longstanding psychological problems, often due to significant trauma, abuse and instability in childhood: a personality disorder, a mood disorder (bipolar or chronic depression), addiction, and so on. For several years, the authors of this book have been active in a schema therapy for couples workgroup and share their own discoveries and insights and those of other workgroup colleagues. They show how the central concepts and approach to case formulation and intervention in schema therapy provide a coherent integrative framework. The authors offer a set of guiding and enabling principles as well as practical examples of how to implement specific schema therapy interventions such as mode clash analysis, the mode clash-card, differentiating needs from wants, and imagery and chair-work. The book is rich in clinical examples that will enable readers to encounter the distinctive contribution of the schema therapy approach to couples therapy.”

David Edwards, Schema Therapy Institute of South Africa and Rhodes University

“This book teaches the basics of couples in conflicts and provides a deeper, need-based understanding of what goes wrong in relationships. Therapists are offered a toolkit to meet, understand, evaluate, handle, and help couples to stay together despite all interpersonal turmoil. Schema therapeutic couple therapy opens a new window of understanding and provides innovative ways to help.”

Gerhard Zarbock, PhD, Clinical psychologist, Director of IVAH, a government approved CBT-training center, Hamburg, Germany, co-author of Mindfulness for Therapists

Schema Therapy with Couples

A Practitioner’s Guide to Healing Relationships

Chiara Simeone-DiFrancesco, PhD

Counseling Psychologist

Eckhard Roediger, MD

Psychiatrist and Psychotherapist

Bruce A. Stevens, PhD

Clinical Psychologist

 

 

 

 

 

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List of Figures and Tables

Figures

  1. 1 Basic mode model
  2. 2 Genogram of Tom and Nancy
  3. 3 Diagram of generally accepted modes
  4. 4 Balancing the therapy relationship
  5. 5 Movements of a conflict-solving communication
  6. 6 Descriptive mode map
  7. 7 Dimensional mode map
  8. 8 The extended dimensional mode model
  9. 9 Mode cycle clash-card
  10. 10 Mode cycle clash-card of Tom and Betty
  11. 11 Tim’s mode map
  12. 12 Tim and Carol’s mode cycle clash-card
  13. 13 The movement of the Healthy Adult
  14. 14 Two ways to consistency
  15. 15 A typical internal drinking mode cycle
  16. 16 Needs vs. wants tool for Sylvia and Kurt
  17. 17 Blank needs vs. wants tool
  18. 18 Love target-practice
  19. 19 Sylvia and Kurt’s mode cycle clash-card

Tables

  1. 1 Examples of schema coping behaviors
  2. 2 The most important modes
  3. 3 Comparing the two mode models
  4. 4 The six types of affairs
  5. 5 Social drinking guidelines
  6. 6 Needs versus wants
  7. 7 Essential elements of ST-C
  8. 8 Building friendship or turning into enemies

About the Authors

Dr. Chiara Simeone-DiFrancesco (M.A./M.Ed. 1980/81 Columbia University, NY; Ph.D. 1990 U. of Mississippi), Counseling Psychologist. She founded Wisconsin Family Growth & Reconciliation Center LLC, working with couples for 25 years in private practice. Chiara now directs the Marriage & Family Schema Therapy Institute, a division of Healing International, Inc., a non-profit she co-founded in 1986. Training fellow schema therapists, she founded the ISST Special Interest Group on Couples Schema Therapy, and now chairs its international Subcommittee. Besides training and consulting, Chiara offers 3-day “Couples Intensives” in Wisconsin and Virginia, USA. She speaks and writes in the secular and Christian arena, with a special interest in marriage preparation, healing and support. Her website is www.SchemaTherapyforCouples.com and contact is SchemaHealing@gmail.com

Dr. Eckhard Roediger (MD, Frankfurt, Germany, 1986) is a neurologist, psychiatrist, and psychotherapist. He trained in psychodynamic and cognitive behavior therapy. Eckhard has been the director of the Psychosomatic Department of a clinic in Berlin, since 2007 working in private practice and as director of the Schema Therapy Training Center in Frankfurt. He is the author of a number of German books on schema therapy (www.schematherapie-roediger.de), currently ISST President.

Dr. Bruce A. Stevens (PhD, Boston University, 1987) was Associate Professor in Clinical Psychology at the University of Canberra, Australia. He is now Wicking Professor of Aging and Practical Theology at Charles Sturt University, Canberra. He also has a part-time private practice at Canberra Clinical and Forensic Psychology, a practice he founded in the early 1990s. Bruce was chair of the Canberra section of the Clinical College of the Australian Psychological Society for four years (2009–2013). He gives many professional workshops on couple therapy throughout Australia. He has written five books, most recently a practitioner book with Dr. Malise Arnstein (Happy Ever After? A Practical Guide to Relationship Counselling for Clinical Psychologists, Australian Academic Press, Brisbane, Queensland, 2011), which is mostly from an emotion-focused therapy for couples perspective.

Preface

From all of us

In this book, we have cited many experts and authors, including colleagues, and have tried to convey their ideas accurately. Sometimes we have illustrated a range of opinion, and we do not necessarily agree with everything we have cited (it would not be good to cite only those we agree with, or only those whose work lacks any hint of controversy). In areas of disagreement, we must not overlook anything that could be useful or valuable. We can only take responsibility for expressing our own opinions in these pages.

The authors participate in the Couples/Marital Interest Group of the International Society of Schema Therapy (ISST) (chaired by Simeone-DiFrancesco). This is a group of experienced schema therapists who meet at least monthly to share ideas about treating difficult couples. Some of those ideas, not yet published in peer-reviewed papers, have informed this book. Where possible, we have tried to acknowledge and give credit for all contributions.

We would like to thank the many clients who have helped us to learn to be better therapists and to use ST more effectively.

Please note: All case examples have been made from a composite of clinical experiences, so any resemblance with any actual client is purely coincidental.

From Chiara Simeone-DiFrancesco, PhD

www.SchemaTherapywithCouples.com

This work is in itself an example of the united effort of three colleagues who have become good friends in the process of writing. While we support and agree with the principles we have put forward, we each apply them differently. We offer our written “jewel” to share, yet we each practice the dialogic attitude of acceptance, even where we may have serious issues of disagreement in working with actual cases. Such is the beauty of this work. We believe its principles are applicable to all cultures, faiths, and situations, but its application can take on individual variations in time, place, and culture. This is the beauty of schema therapy and Healthy Adult mode!

I have found our journey in writing together to be a learning experience on all levels, intellectually, emotionally, and spiritually. Through it, some of my own needs in all those areas have been met, and I am very grateful to my colleagues for this. As you read, I hope that you will be able to sense the spirit of humility and openness to learning that my two colleagues, Bruce and Eckhard, have modeled. It has been one of those blessed growth and transformational experiences in life to be part of this journey together. I hope and pray that you will be as inspired as each of us has been in discovering schema therapy for couples (ST-C).

Many possible research applications can stem from what we have presented here. It is a seedbed for further development. We stand with excitement to see how the minds and especially the hearts of our readers are opened to new possibilities of healing and connecting others. My vision is for ST-C, with its heart-changing possibilities, to have an effect on the worldwide divorce rate. If our collective lives can make an impact on that, then they will have been well spent, especially for the future of children who need their parents to be secure and well-connected in love.

We look forward to you, the therapist-reader, developing your own comfort with, and application of, ST-C. And we look forward to you, the seeking and perhaps hurting couple or individual, to perhaps gaining some hope and some strengthening and turning towards healthy ways. Together, we may dare to hope that we will all grow on the continuum towards the fulfillment of the Healthy Adult—with humility and openness, and much thankfulness for those who model for us the greatest virtues. “And the greatest of these is love which holds and binds everything together.” (1 Corinthians 13:13)

We welcome your feedback through email, mail, or even phone calls, as we believe that ultimately we are better together!

From Eckhard Roediger, MD

Writing in English was a special challenge for me, but writing together with Chiara and Bruce made it surprisingly easy. We all enjoyed the mutual exchange and inspiration. I especially want to thank all members of the ISST Couples/Marital Special Interest Group initiated and conducted by Chiara, for their creative and courageous input. They all contributed very much to this book, and we tried to cite them wherever we remembered their personal contributions. Besides that, looking at my own marriage through ST glasses and applying the model described in this book to ourselves helped my wife and I to deal with life challenges much better. So there were gains in many fields! I hope you, as the reader, feel the same.

From Bruce A. Stevens, PhD

bstevens@csu.edu.au

I feel profoundly grateful. I am approaching the age at which many people retire (or at least think about it), but I have found a life of continuing creativity and intellectual stimulation. I am delighted to be with Shayleen. I am surrounded by wonderful colleagues, graduate students and, of course, the courageous couples who challenge any ideas articulated here, saying, “It’s all very well to say that in a book, but will it work with us?” I am very grateful for Chiara and Eckhard, two leading schema therapists whom I have found to be both generous and understanding. I have learned more from them than I can adequately acknowledge.

Acknowledgments

I dedicate this to the most glorious reality of marriage, a unity made in heaven. May all see the hope which is ours to share in Christ Jesus.

—Chiara Simeone-DiFrancesco

I dedicate this to my beloved wife, Andrea, who has shared my life for better or worse for more than 30 years now.

—Eckhard Roediger

To Rowena, Kym, Naomi, and Christopher—four wonderful children. And Shayleen, with thanks for the journey.

—Bruce A. Stevens

Abbreviations

BPD
borderline personality disorder
EFT
emotion-focused therapy
EFT-C
emotion-focused therapy for couples
ISST
International Society of Schema Therapy
SMI
Schema Mode Inventory
ST
schema therapy
ST-C
schema therapy for couples
SUDS
Subjective Units of Distress Scale
YPI
Young Parenting Inventory
YSQ-3
Young Schema Questionnaire, version 3

Introduction

First, a bold statement: There is an urgent need for yet another book on couple therapy.

It is time to bring a new perspective to persistent problems and seemingly irresolvable difficulties in relationships. We believe that schema therapy (ST) is a potentially more effective approach than what is currently available. This therapy can deal with problems largely ignored by mainstream cognitive therapy. This includes dysfunctional patterns in intimate relationships and changing troublesome memories from childhood (Arntz & Jacob, 2013). ST has established itself as an evidence-based therapy for treating the most difficult therapeutic problems, and this book explores ways to apply this “strong” therapy to work with couples in effective interventions.1

ST has easy-to-grasp concepts, such as schemas and modes, which make sense of the couple’s past experiences, educate them, and open the door to allow them to speak freely about ways in which both can feel more connected. These concepts allow the therapist and couple to communicate about what is inside an individual’s inner world—and give clearer explanations of what is experienced, such as bodily sensations, varied feelings, thoughts and beliefs, values, and much more. When an individual learns about the origins of dysfunctional patterns, life and relationships tend to make sense. Better yet, the process, mutually applied, progressively gives the couple effective tools to intercept habitual negative interactions and personality patterns. In the first publication we know in ST-C, Simeone-DiFrancesco (2010) stressed: “ST for Couples and Marriages is a consummate therapy of reality-based hope.” This leads to dramatic changes. Few therapies can offer such potential for change, and at the same time create a culture of mutual acceptance and understanding.

Couple therapy has advanced on many fronts. It has been greatly informed by the research of John Gottman (1999, 2011). The effectiveness of emotion-focused therapy for couples (EFT-C) is now well established through clinical trials (Johnson, 2004). However, couples with traits of personality disorder present the greatest therapeutic challenge because of their typically volatile relationships and disordered thinking. This includes the emotional instability of those with borderline personality disorder, the withdrawal of the schizoid, the self-focus of the narcissist and the “moral insanity” of the psychopath. ST was developed to treat more difficult people who present for therapy with powerful interventions, including active re-parenting in imagery rescripting, chair-work dialogs, and behavioral pattern breaking. ST combines the depth and developmental theory of longer term treatments with the active, change-oriented approach of shorter term therapies (Young et al., 2003). We hope to build on the important contributions of Gottman and EFT-C, but highlight the unique contribution that ST can make to working with difficult relationships.

As authors, we bring two mental health disciplines to this book: psychiatry and clinical/counseling psychology. We have made contributions to the theory and practice of ST with “needs” and “wants” (i.e., re-parenting) (Simeone-DiFrancesco & Simeone, 2016ab); mode explication and stages of treatment (Simeone-DiFrancesco, 2011); understanding the schema–mode model in detail, mode cycles, methods of treatment (i.e., details of the imagery rescripting and chair-work techniques), and using clash-cards (Roediger & Jacob, 2010; Roediger, 2011; Roediger & Laireiter, 2013); and distinguishing infant modes from child, parent and compensatory modes (Stevens, 2012b). We hope that this book will not be read as a simplistic “how to” manual, but as a practical guide for clinical work.

We hope to offer the experienced practitioner a map for the rocky terrain of therapy with the most challenging couples. We have also found, through experience, that using ST for couples can lead to lasting change in relationships.

Note

About the Companion Website

This book is accompanied by a companion website:

www.wiley.com/go/difrancesco/schematherapywithcouples

The website includes blank versions of forms in the book for your own use.