“…This, however, is a trap to be avoided at all costs by those aspiring to the highest forms of failure. Such a view is likely to result in the successful application of collaborative narrative therapy (Clare and Grant, 1994;Foster and Banes, 2009;Lynggaard and Scior, 2002;McFarlane and Lynggaard, 2009;Matthews and Matthews, 2005;Perry and Gentle, 1997;Scior and Lynggaard, 2006;Wilcox and Whittington, 2003) and solutionfocused brief-therapy interventions (Roeden et al, 2009;Smith, 2005). Once average family therapists start down this line of reasoning it is almost inevitable that they may be tempted, as others have been, to adapt techniques to include individuals with a disability in order to avoid perpetuating the oppression they experience in the dominant culture (Baum, 2006a;Fidell, 2000;Fredman, 2006;Lynggaard and Baum, 2006;Pote, 2006).…”