Cover IllustrationBert Hellinger
Hunter Beaumont

Touching Love, Volume 2

A Teaching Seminar with Bert Hellinger and Hunter Beaumont

256 p., 179 Illus., Paperback, 1999
€ 29.00 / USD 35.95
ISBN 978-3-89670-122-0

The originator and undisputed master craftsman of this approach, Bert Hellinger, demonstrates his use of the method of family constellations to bring destructive, hidden family dynamics to light and to search for loving resolutions. His interventions are unconventional, surprising and thought provoking. He is unwavering in his dedication to do what is possible to free entangled love, and to offer loving support when the only alternative is to accept what cannot be changed.
Hunter Beaumont, a master psychotherapist and teacher in his own right, brings a quality to the work which complements Bert Hellinger. With non-judgemental compassion, irreverant humor and a delicate sense for systemic balance, he follows the constellations wherever they may lead.
Together, Bert Hellinger and Hunter Beaumont achieve a flowing collaboration. Their mutual trust helps clients face and resolve hidden relationship dynamics.
The written documentation of this seminar offers mental health professionals and interested non-professional readers a look in slow-motion at Bert Hellinger and Hunter Beaumont at work.

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Bert Hellinger

Bert Hellinger is probably Europe's most innovative and provocative psychotherapist and a best-selling psychotherapy author. A former priest and a missionary in South Africa for 16 years, as well as an educator, a psychoanalyst, body therapist, group dynamic therapist, and family therapist, he brings a lifetime of experience and wisdom to his work. The family constellations, which have become the hallmark of Hellinger's approach, as well as his observations about systemic entanglement and resolution, have touched the lives of thousands of people and have changed how many helping professionals carry out their own work.

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Hunter Beaumont

Hunter Beaumont, Ph.D., graduate of the University of California at Los Angeles and the School of Theology at Claremont, began his psychotherapeutic career at the Gestalt Therapy Institute of Los Angeles, where he served as president and as a member of the training faculty. A licensed clinical psychologist, in 1980, he accepted a guest professorship in clinical psychology at Ludwig-Maximilian's University in Munich, Germany, teaching graduate courses in Gestalt Therapy and Object Relations Theory. From his base in Munich, in addition to training and supervising psychotherapists, he has developed an integrated, interdisciplinary approach to treating osychosomatic illnesses and relationship issues. He became interested in the work of Bert Hellinger in 1990 and has been collaborating with him since 1993. His contributions have been instrumental in introducing Hellinger to a worldwide audience.

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