New age: Details about 'Virginia Satir'

Index / New Age / Esalen / Virginia Satir /

Navigation

Home
One level up
Back
Index of contents
Links
New-Age-Shop

Search

Google

Useful Links


Virginia Satir (26 June 1916 - 10 September 1988) was a noted psychotherapist, known especially for her approach to family therapy. Her most well-known books are Conjoint Family Therapy, 1964, Peoplemaking, 1972, and The New Peoplemaking, 1988.

Her work was extensively studied by Richard Bandler and John Grinder who used it as one of the three primary models of NLP. However Virginia herself was known to be rather uneasy about the distillation of her work - best summed up by Jerry (Gerald) Weinberg who studied directly with Virginia Satir for over a decade after investigating NLP and deciding that he "wanted the chicken, not the chicken soup."

Prior to her untimely



death, Virginia Satir worked extensively with Jerry Weinberg and Jean McLendon. Virginia is quoted as saying of Jean "It is a pleasure to experience Jean work. She has that rare capacity to be able to 'sit in the airport control tower position' and at the same time to be aware of all the 'planes' in her vision and to be able to help them find out about themselves and their relationship to each other."

AVANTA is an international organization that carries on her work and promotes her approach to family therapy.

Bibliography

  • Virginia Satir

Virginia Satir


Visitors who viewed this also viewed:

New Age: Alexander Scriabin
New Age: Camlann
New Age: Holistic Health
Buddhism: Honkyoku
Christianity: 2 Peter


 

Click here for our New-Age-Shop




This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Virginia_Satir". A list of the wikipedia authors can be found here.