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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigated drug use among attendees of electronic dance music (EDM) festivals in Belgium and Sweden, highlighting significant underreporting by participants.
  • Results showed that self-reported and tested drug use was much higher in Belgium (56.8% self-reported vs. 37.2% tested) compared to Sweden (4.3% self-reported vs. 12.5% tested).
  • The findings suggest that cultural differences influence both actual drug use and the willingness to disclose it, calling for careful consideration of these factors in drug use research methodologies.
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This paper, written from a relational perspective, examines the final minutes of an individual psychotherapy session, and is organized around the topics of boundary negotiation, unwitting self-disclosures, visual challenges, and countertransference. Attending to session-ending material is important because the separation involved lends heightened emotional intensity to the oftensignificant material that appears in the final minutes. This material often serves as a bridge to the psychotherapeutic work to be taken up in subsequent sessions.

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Unwitting self-disclosures (USDs), unconscious yet observable parts of personality, are often behavioral relics of past suffering and, as such, constitute valuable though frequently underutilized clinical information. While ego-syntonic aspects of personality can be commented on with impunity, dealing therapeutically with patients' USDs--manifestations of their blind spots--requires sensitivity, empathy, and timing. Providing many clinical examples of patient and therapist USDs from individual and group psychotherapy, this report discusses the origins, possible meanings, and the countertransference and empathic challenges encountered in the handling of these blind spots.

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Secrecy, disclosure, and closet dynamics.

J Homosex

June 1998

National Centre in HIV Social Research, Macquarie University, Sydney, NSW.

This paper examines the assumption that male homosexuality has a natural affinity with femininity and that male heterosexuality has a natural affinity with masculinity. An analysis of the relationship between people's disclosure or concealment of their homosexual practice or identity, particularly as it relates to notions of hegemonic masculinity and femininity provides the focus of this paper. It is argued that everyday understandings of homosexuality tend to be resolved in such as way as to press homosexuality into the service of privileging a male, masculine, and heterosexual subjectivity.

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Inherent in the illness experience are multiple assaults on one's self and one's body. These assaults may be interpersonal (such as an unwitting remark made from another), or intrapersonal (such as unrelenting symptoms that are a part of illness, injury or treatments). These assaults may accumulate until the situation becomes unbearable, the person can no longer 'take it', and the person loses control.

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