Ann Weiser Cornell

Ann Weiser Cornell
Born Ann Weiser
(1949-10-06) October 6, 1949
Chicago, Illinois
Residence Berkeley, California
Education PhD, Linguistics
Alma mater University of Chicago
Occupation Author, psychology educator
Years active 1980–present
Known for Focusing
Inner Relationship Focusing
Notable work
  • The Power of Focusing
  • The Focusing Student's and Companion's Manual
  • The Radical Acceptance of Everything
  • Focusing in Clinical Practice
Title President of the Association for Humanistic Psychology
Predecessor Sandra Friedman
Successor Arthur Warmoth
Partner(s) Joseph McBride
Relatives Mark Weiser (brother)
Website FocusingResources.com

Ann Weiser Cornell (born Ann Weiser on October 6, 1949 in Chicago, Illinois) is an American author, educator, and worldwide authority on Focusing, the self-inquiry psychotherapeutic technique developed by Eugene Gendlin.[1][2][3] She has written several definitive books on Focusing, including The Power of Focusing: A Practical Guide to Emotional Self-Healing, The Focusing Student's and Companion's Manual, and Focusing in Clinical Practice. Cornell has taught Focusing around the world since 1980, and has developed a system and technique called Inner Relationship Focusing. Cornell is also a past president of the Association for Humanistic Psychology.[4]

Education and career

Ann Weiser Cornell received a PhD in Linguistics in 1975 at the University of Chicago, on a Woodrow Wilson Fellowship from the National Science Foundation.[5] She then taught Linguistics at Purdue University from 1975 to 1977.[5]

While still a graduate student at the University of Chicago, in 1972 Cornell met psychologist Eugene Gendlin, and learned the psychotherapeutic technique he had discovered and developed, called Focusing. After leaving her post teaching linguistics at Purdue, Cornell moved back to Chicago and reconnected with Gendlin, and in 1980 began collaborating with him in teaching his Focusing workshops.[6] Using her capacity for linguistics, Cornell helped develop the concept of Focusing guiding, and in the early 1980s she offered the first seminars on Focusing guiding.[1] In the early 1980s, Cornell also trained and worked as a psychotherapist at the Chicago Counseling Center, a non-profit counseling service that grew out of the University Counseling Center operated by Carl Rogers in the 1950s.[6][1]

In 1983 Cornell moved to California – where she concentrated on training people to Focus, and on facilitating Focusing, rather than on practicing traditional psychotherapy.[6][1] She began teaching her own Focusing workshops, and also experimented with how the Focusing process and theory could be expanded and refined.[6] In 1984 she established the bi-monthly newsletter The Focusing Connection,[7] and in 1985 she founded Focusing Resources, an umbrella organization to offer materials, support, sessions, and trainings on Focusing.[8] In the early 1990s Cornell wrote and published the first of her Focusing books, The Focusing Student's Manual and The Focusing Guide's Manual,[9][10][11] which were revised with Barbara McGavin in the 2000s and published as The Focusing Student's and Companion's Manual (2002).

In the early 1990s Cornell also began developing and teaching processes that emphasized the radical acceptance and allowance of all aspects, however negative, of the personality – and the ability to be present with whatever negativity comes up during Focusing – in order to return to a place of wholeness. Together with Barbara McGavin, whom she met in 1991, she developed this into a system called Inner Relationship Focusing.[1][12][13] In the early 2000s Cornell and McGavin also developed a theory and process called Treasure Maps to the Soul, an application of Focusing to difficult areas of life,[1] which they detailed in the book The Radical Acceptance of Everything (2005) along with Inner Relationship Focusing.[14][15]

Books and trainings

Cornell's books, including the best-selling The Power of Focusing (1996) which expanded and developed Gendlin's original Focusing processes further,[16] The Focusing Student's and Companion's Manual (2002), The Radical Acceptance of Everything (2005), and Focusing in Clinical Practice (2013), have been translated into several languages. Cornell has taught Focusing all over the world,[2] and she is also one of the premier trainers of Focusing teachers. Through her organization, Focusing Resources, she offers teleseminars, workshops, Focusing sessions, audio and print materials including The Focusing Teacher's Manual (2008),[17] and free resources on Focusing.[18]

Personal life

Cornell lives in Berkeley, California. Her partner is author and film historian Joseph McBride.[19] She is the sister of computer scientist Mark Weiser (1952–1999).[20]

Selected bibliography

Selected audio

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Kirschner, Ellen. "FOCUS ON: Ann Weiser Cornell". Staying in Focus: The Focusing Institute Newsletter. Vol. IV, No. 2. May 2004.
  2. 1 2 Gendlin, Eugene. Advance praise for The Radical Acceptance of Everything. 2005. "Ann Weiser Cornell has been teaching for many years in many countries and is well known worldwide. In her previous book and her manuals she has created new specific and accessible instructions for focusing as well as for the teachers of focusing. In person and through her students and writings she has given Focusing to far more people than any other single individual. She is a powerful force in making the world better. She has gone on to create different new processes in new dimensions ...." – Eugene Gendlin, author of Focusing.
  3. Gendlin, Eugene. Review of Focusing in Clinical Practice: The Essence of Change. W. W. Norton & Company, 2013. "Ann Weiser Cornell and I have been working closely together for thirty years, and she knows as much about Focusing as I do. Ann has a knack for making the complex understandable and the theory of Focusing accessible to all readers. This book will be helpful to anyone who wants to know my philosophical work and better understand how to bring Focusing into clinical practice. I recommend it very strongly." – Eugene Gendlin, author of Focusing.
  4. The Association for Humanistic Psychology – Past Presidents. The Association for Humanistic Psychology. AHPweb.org.
  5. 1 2 Cornell, Ann Weiser and Barbara McGavin. The Radical Acceptance of Everything: Living a Focusing Life. Calluna Press, 2005. p. 270.
  6. 1 2 3 4 Weiser, Ann Cornell. Focusing in Clinical Practice: The Essence of Change. W. W. Norton & Company, 2013. p. xxxi.
  7. Oxbridge Directory of Newsletters. Oxbridge Communications, 1994. p. 954.
  8. Focusing Resources – About Us
  9. Cornell, Ann Weiser and Barbara McGavin. The Radical Acceptance of Everything: Living a Focusing Life. Calluna Press, 2005. p. 208.
  10. Cornell, Ann Weiser. The Focusing Guide's Manual. Focusing Resources, 1993.
  11. Cornell, Ann Weiser. The Focusing Student's Manual. Focusing Resources, 1994.
  12. Brenner, Helen G. I Know I'm in There Somewhere: A Woman's Guide to Finding Her Inner Voice and Living a Life of Authenticity. Penguin, 2004. p. 51.
  13. Leigh, CC. Becoming Divinely Human: A Direct Path to Embodied Awakening. Wolfsong Press, 2011. pp. 8–9.
  14. McGavin, Barbara, & Cornell, Ann Weiser. (2008). "Treasure Maps to the Soul". The Folio: A Journal for Focusing and Experiential Therapy, 21(1), 41–60.
  15. Treasure Maps to the Soul. FocusingResources.com.
  16. Wehrenberg, Margaret. The 10 Best-Ever Anxiety Management Techniques: Understanding How Your Brain Makes You Anxious and What You Can Do to Change It. W. W. Norton & Company, 2010. p. 149.
  17. Cornell, Ann Weiser and Barbara McGavin. The Focusing Teacher's Manual. 2008.
  18. Focusing Resources
  19. McBride, Joseph. Writing in Pictures: Screenwriting Made (Mostly) Painless. Random House, 2012. pp. 352–353.
  20. "Remembering Mark Weiser" Archived October 2, 2013, at the Wayback Machine.. The Mark Weiser Memorial Site. SiliconBase, Stanford University.

External links


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