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This article considers four basic themes that emerge in stories told in therapy. The intent is: to describe these themes sufficiently so that major therapeutic mistakes are avoided, to provide a new therapeutic perspective for looking at personal history, and to describe easily learned therapeutic exercises.

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Dixie G. Morris

Dixie G. Morris and Frank R. Morris, M. Div., are Certified Transactional Analysts who have 25 years of practical experience in psychotherapy. They are founders of Liberation Psychotherapy Training Center and train fellow mental health professionals in therapeutic skills based on feelings, modularity, and the new art of presuppositional relationships. The Morrises have co-authored books on feelings, grandparenting, parenting, identity, and identity-inrelationship.

Frank R. Morris

Dixie G. Morris and Frank R. Morris, M. Div., are Certified Transactional Analysts who have 25 years of practical experience in psychotherapy. They are founders of Liberation Psychotherapy Training Center and train fellow mental health professionals in therapeutic skills based on feelings, modularity, and the new art of presuppositional relationships. The Morrises have co-authored books on feelings, grandparenting, parenting, identity, and identity-inrelationship.