I did like this. Would rather give it 3.5 stars than three, but many things took away its power. 1. Clearly imagery etc. heavily borrows from many other psychotherapies and these are not named. Hypnosis, regression, inner child work, psychodrama etc. But almost suggest this unique and innovative practice is completely new when it is reinventing the wheel. 2. Overtly technical and presumptuous on many levels of diagnosis and sometimes the language is dehumanized and lacks the descriptive quality you might hope from a piece of work that seeks to inspire practitioners. 3. It is evident that there are many advantages over traditional CBT, but as the compassionate therapy book in this series suggests, the drive towards 'healthy adult schema' could be quite unforgiving of the client and instigate more self-loathing. Is there one main model of a 'healthy adult'? And who defines these values? Is this always possible or indeed right for all people? It seems to me, some attention to the mindfulness and compassion based theories would make a useful integration. However, was useful to look at schemas and the overdriving impacts that these have on people and some of the ways that could be beneficial to access these.