PSYCHOANALYTIC THERAPY Basic Philosophy
Human beings are basically determined by psychic energy and by early experiences. Unconscious motives and conflicts are central in present behavior. Irrational forces are strong; the person is driven by sexual and aggressive impulses. Early development is of critical importance because later personality problems have their roots in repressed
Key Concepts
Normal personality development is based on successful resolution and integration of psychosexual stages of development. Faulty personality development is the result of inadequate resolution of some specific stage. Anxiety is a result of repression of basic conflicts. Unconscious processes are centrally related to current behavior.
Goals
To make the unconscious conscious. To reconstruct the basic personality. To assist clients in reliving earlier experiences and working through repressed conflicts. To
Therapeutic relationship
The classical analyst remains anonymous, and clients develop projections toward him or her. Focus is on reducing the resistances that develop in working with transference and on establishing more rational control. Clients undergo long-term analysis, engage in free association to uncover conflicts, and gain insight by talking. The analyst makes interpretations to teach clients the meaning of current behavior as it relates to the past. In contemporary relational psychoanalytic therapy, the relationship is central and emphasis is given to here-and-now dimensions of this relationship.
Techniques
Key techniques are interpretation, dream analysis, free association, analysis of resistance, analysis of transference, and understanding counter transference. Techniques are designed to help clients gain access to their unconscious conflicts,
Application of Candidates for analytic therapy include professionals who want to become therapists, the Approach people who have had intensive therapy and want to go further, and those who are in psychological pain. Analytic therapy is not recommended for self-centered and impulsive individuals or for people with psychotic disorders. Techniques ca n be Contribution to It's focus on family dynamics is appropriate for working with many cultural groups. The therapist's formality appeals to clients c lients who expect professional distance. Notion o Multicultural ego defense is helpful in understanding inner dynamics and dealing with Counseling Limitations in Multicultural Counseling
It's focus is on insight, intrapsychic dynamics, and long-term treatment is often not valued by clients who prefer to learn coping skills for dealing with pressing daily concerns. Internal focus is often in conflict with cultural values that stress and
Contributions of More than any other system, this approach has generated controversy as well as exploration and has stimulated further thinking and development of therapy. It has the Approach provided a detailed and comprehensive description of personality structure and functioning. it has brought into prominence factors such as the unconscious as a determinant of behavior and the role of trauma during the first 6yrs of life. It has developed several techniques for tapping the unconscious and shed light on the dynamics of transference and counter transference, resistance, anxiety and the Limitations of the Approach
Requires lengthy training for therapists and much time and expense for clients. The model stresses biological and instinctual factors to the neglect of social, cultural, and interpersonal ones. Its methods are less applicable for solving specific daily life problems of clients and may not be appropriate for some ethnic and cultural groups. Many clients lack the degree of ego strength needed for regressive and reconstructive
ADLERIAN THERAPY
ADLERIAN THERAPY Basic Philosophy
Humans are motivated by social interest, by striving toward goals, by inferiority and superiority, and by dealing with the tasks of life. Emphasis is on the individual's positive capacities to live in society cooperatively. People have the capacity to interpret, influence, and create events. Each person at an early age creates a unique style of life, which tends to
Key Concepts
Key concepts include the unity of personality, the need to view people from their subjective perspective, and the importance of life goals that give direction to behavior. People are motivated by social interest and by finding goals to give life meaning. Other key concepts a striving for significance and superiority, developing a unique lifestyle, and understanding th family constellation. Therapy is a matter of providing encouragement and assisting clients i changing their cognitive perspective and behavior.
Goals
To challenge clients' basic premises and life goals. To offer encouragement so individuals can develop socially useful goals and increase social interest. To develop the clients sense o belon in . The emphasis is on joint responsibility, on mutually determining goals, on mutual trust and respect, and on equality. Focus is on identifying, exploring, and disclosing mistaken goals and fault assum tions within the erson's lifest le. Adlerians pay more attention to the subjective experiences of clients than to using techniques. Some techniques include gathering life-history data (family constellation, early recollections, personal priorities), sharing interpretations with clients, offering enc ura ement and a i tin client in earchin f rm new i ilitie . Because the application is based on a growth model, it is applicable to such varied spheres life as child guidance, parent-child counseling, marital and family therapy, individual counseling with all age groups, correctional and rehabilitation counseling, group counseling substance abuse programs, and brief counseling. It is ideally suited to preventive care and alleviating a broad range of conditions that interfere with growth.
Therapeutic relationship Techniques
Application of the Approach
Contribution to Its focus on social interest, helping others, collectivism, pursuing meaning in life, importanc of family, goal orientation, and belonging is congruent with the values of many cultures. Multicultural Focus on person-in-the-environment allows for cultural factors to be explored. Counseling Limitations in Multicultural Counseling
This approach's detailed interview about one's family background can conflict with cultures that have injunctions against disclosing family matters. Some clients may view the counselo as an authority who will provide answers to problems, which conflicts with the egalitarian, person-to-person spirit as a way to reduce social distance.
Contributions A key contribution is the influence that Adlerian concepts have had on other systems and th of the Approach integration of these concepts into various contemporary therapies. This is one of the first Limitations of the Approach
approaches to therapy that was humanistic, unified, holistic, and goal-oriented and that put an em ha i n cial and ch l ical fact r . Weak in terms of precision, testability, and empirical validity, Few attempts have been mad to validate the basic concepts by scientific methods. Tends to oversimplify some complex human roblems and is based heavil on common sense.
PERSON-CENTERED THERAPY Basic Philosophy
The view of humans is positive; we have an inclination toward becoming fully functioning. In the context of the therapeutic relationship, the c lient experience feelings that were previously denied to awareness The client moves toward
PERSON-CENTERED THERAPY Basic Philosophy
The view of humans is positive; we have an inclination toward becoming fully functioning. In the context of the therapeutic relationship, the c lient experience feelings that were previously denied to awareness The client moves toward increased awareness, spontaneity, trust in self, and inner-directedness.
Key Concepts
The client has the potential to become aware of problems and the means to resolve them. Faith is placed in the client's capacity for self-direction. Mental health is a congruence of ideal self and real self. Maladjustment is the result of a discrepancy between what one wants to be and what one is. In therapy attention is given to the present moment and on experiencing and expressing
Goals
To provide a safe climate conducive to clients' self-exploration, so that they ca recognize blocks to growth and can experience aspects of self that were formerly denied or distorted. To enable them to move toward openness, greate trust in self, willingness to be a process, and increased spontaneity and aliveness. to find meaning in life to experience life fully. To become more self
Therapeutic relationship
The relationship is of primary importance. The qualities of the therapist, including genuineness, warmth, accurate empathy, respect, and nonjudgmentalness - and communication of these attitudes to clients - are stressed. Clients use this genuine relationship with the therapist to help them
Techniques
This approach uses few techniques but stresses the attitudes of the therapist an a "way of being." Therapists strive for active listening, reflection of feelings, clarification, and "being there" for the client. This model does not include diagnostic testing, interpretation, taking a case history, or questioning or
Application of the Has wide applicability to individual and group counseling. It is especially well Approach suited for the initial phases of crisis intervention work. Its principles have been applied to couples and family therapy, community programs, administration an management, and human relations training. It is a useful approach for teaching parent-child relations and for working with groups of people from diverse Contribution to Multicultural Counseling
Focus is on breaking cultural barriers and facilitating open dialogue a mong diverse cultural populations. Main strengths are respect for clients' values, active listening, welcoming of differences, nonjudgmental attitude, understanding, willingness to allow clients to determine what will be explored
Limitations in Multicultural Counseling
Some of the core values of this approach may not be congruent with the client' culture. Lack of counselor direction and structure are unacceptable for clie nts who are seeking help and immediate answers from a knowledgeable
Contributions of the Approach
Clients take an active stance and assume responsibility for the direction of therapy. This unique approach has been subjected to empirical testing, and as a result both theory and methods have been modified. It is an open system. People without advanced training can benefit by translating the therapeutic conditions to both their personal and professional lives. Basic concepts are straightforward and easy to grasp and apply. It is a foundation for building a
Limitations of the Possible danger from the therapist who remains passive and inactive, limiting responses to reflection. Many clients feel a need for greater direction, more Approach structure, and more techniques. Clients in crisis may need more directive measures. Applied to individual counseling, some cultural groups will expect