Jewish Relational Care A-Z

Regular price €46.99
Quantity:
In stock with our UK publisher. 14-28 days
Delivery/Collection within 10-20 working days
14 days return policy Shipping & Delivery
A01=Jack H Bloom
advanced relational care strategies
aging and mental health support
Author_Jack H Bloom
Bat Mitzvah
Beth El
books
Category=QRJ
Category=QRVS2
CCAR
CCAR Journal
Chaplain
Chronic
compassion fatigue prevention
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
Etz Hayim
everett
Everett Fox
exemplar
Follow
fox
gilligan
High Holydays
Hold
interfaith caregiving
Jewish Publication Society
Jewish Relational
Jewish Relational Care
Kindred
Merriam Webster's Collegiate Dictionary
Merriam Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary
pastoral counseling
publication
Rabbi Yochanan
schocken
Shalom Aleichem
Shalom Bayit
society
spiritual care methods
Spontaneous Prayer
stephen
symbolic
Symbolic Exemplar
trauma-informed practice
Tzelem Elohim
Violates
Wo
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780789027061
  • Weight: 725g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 212mm
  • Publication Date: 18 Jul 2006
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
Secure checkout Fast Shipping Easy returns

A collection of caregiving tools combining the values of Jewish tradition and self-relationsuseful for practitioners of ANY faith!

Self-relations, a powerful framework for doing respectful and humane caregiving for oneself and for others is here brought into relationship with Jewish thought.

Jewish Relational Care A-Z: We Are Our Other’s Keeper is an extensive resource for caregiving tools and approaches. Using Jewish tradition and Self-Relations as take-off points, experts from many fields provide insightful perspectives and effective strategies for caregiving.

In the language of self-relations each of us is not referred to as a Self. Instead, each of us is more accurately described as a relationship between selvesrelationship is the basic psychological and religious unit! Jewish Relational Care A-Z: We Are Our Other’s Keeper sensitively centers on relationships and the healing process, using the understanding that to spark healing in others, a loving, respectful relationship must first be present between every aspect of our selves. Thirty-six categories of caregiving are comprehensively presented, allowing its use as a helpful resource for any clergy considering any of the included topics. Each author’s personal reflections, and personal experiences using care tools clearly illustrate how love-respect relationships within oneself can transcend into effective care for others.

Jewish Relational Care A-Z: We Are Our Other’s Keeper provides helpful tools and explores:

  • the use of language as a relational care tool
  • time management for optimum performance for oneself and for others
  • compassion fatigue, the need for self-care, and nurturing your own spiritual and psychological development
  • purposeful visiting as a sacred task
  • silence as an important part of spiritual care
  • the profound difference made in lives through relational listening
  • music as sacred powera communion between humans and the Divine
  • chanting as an intimate expression of the soul
  • creative ritual in relational healing
  • spontaneous prayer, and its place in relational care
  • relational care with other faiths inside and outside of the community
  • care for those going through divorce
  • care when a pregnancy is unwelcome
  • relational care for sexual orientation and gender identity issues
  • successful caring for those who don’t care about you
  • dealing with traumatic loss
  • care for those who have sinned sexually
  • fragile relationships
  • care with the healthy aging
  • relational care and retired clergy
  • care for those traumatized by sexual abuse
  • care for the cognitively impaired, mentally ill, and developmentally disabled
  • care for the final moments of life
  • care for the sick and dying
  • care within the grieving process

Jewish Relational Care A-Z: We Are Our Other’s Keeper is practical, insightful reading for clergy and caregivers of all denominations, educators, students, and lay people who care about clergy and their work.

More from this author