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Theory and Practice of Counseling and Psychotherapy

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Title: Theory and Practice of Counseling and Psychotherapy


1
Theory and Practice of Counseling and
Psychotherapy
  • MacDonald
  • Existential Therapy

2
Questions?
  • What key concepts do you know in terms of
    existential therapy?
  • What is the meaning or purpose of your life?
  • What do you want from life?
  • Where is the source of meaning for you in life?
  • How do you work through a sense of no self and
    feeling alone?
  • What are the possible reasons that people tend to
    blame others for their problems?
  • What is the positive motivation of being anxious?
  • If you only have 30 days left, whats your
    feelings? What will you do?

3
Question
  • What key concepts do you know in terms of
    existential therapy?

4
Existential Therapy A Philosophical/Intellectual
Approach to Therapy
  • View of Human Nature
  • The capacity for self-awareness
  • The tension between freedom responsibility
  • The creation of an identity establishing
    meaningful relationships
  • The search for meaning, purpose, and values of
    life
  • Accepting anxiety as a condition of living
  • The awareness of death and nonbeing

5
The Capacity for Self-Awareness
  • We can reflect and make choices because we are
    capable of self-awareness.
  • Expanding our awareness in realizing that
  • We are finite - time is limited
  • We have the potential, the choice, to act or not
    to act
  • Meaning is not automatic - we must seek it
  • We are subject to loneliness, meaninglessness,
    emptiness, guilt, and isolation

6
Question
  • What are the possible reasons that people tend to
    blame others for their problems?

7
Freedom and Responsibility
  • We are free to choose among alternatives
  • We are responsible for our lives, for our action,
    and for our failure to take action.
  • Blaming others for their problems---
  • Recognize how they allowed others to decide for
    them and the price they pay
  • Encourage them to consider the alternative options

8
Striving for Identity
  • Identity is the courage to be
  • We must trust ourselves to search within and find
    our own answers
  • Our great fear is that we will discover that
    there is no core, no self
  • Struggling with our identity
  • Challenging clients---in what ways that they have
    lost touch with they identity and letting others
    to design their life.

9
Question?
  • How do you work through a sense of no self and
    feeling alone?

10
Relationship to others
  • Aloneness
  • We are alone---So, we must give a sense of
    meaning to life, decide how we will live, have a
    relationship with ourselves, and learn to listen
    to ourselves.
  • Relatedness
  • We need to create a close relationship with
    others
  • Challenging clients----What they get from they
    relationship? How they avoid close relationship?

11
Question
  • What is the meaning or purpose of your life?
  • What do you want from life?
  • Where is the source of meaning for you in life?

12
The Search for Meaning
  • Therapists trust is important in teaching clients
    to trust their own capacity to find their way of
    being.
  • Meaninglessness in life leads to emptiness and
    hollowness (existential vacuum)
  • Finding meaning in life is a by-product of
    engagement, which is a commitment to creating,
    loving, working, and building.

13
Question
  • What is the positive motivation of being anxious?

14
Anxiety A Condition of Living
  • Anxiety arises from ones strivings to survive.
  • Existential anxiety is normal
  • an outcome of being confronted with the four
    given of existence death, freedom, existential
    isolation, and meaninglessness.
  • Recognize existential anxiety and find ways to
    deal with it constructively.
  • Anxiety can be a stimulus for growth as we become
    aware of and accept our freedom
  • If we have the courage to face ourselves and life
    we may be frightened, but we will be able to
    change

15
Question
  • If you only have 30 days left, whats your
    feelings? What will you do?

16
Awareness of Death
  • Death provides the motivation for us to live our
    lives fully and take advantage of each
    opportunity to do something meaningful.

17
Therapeutic Goals
  • To expand self-awareness
  • To increase potential choices
  • To help client accept the responsibility for
    their choice
  • To help the client experience authentic existence

18
Therapists Function and Role
  • Understand the clients subjective world
  • Encourage clients to accept personal
    responsibility
  • When clients blame others, therapist is likely to
    ask them how they contributed to their situation.

19
Clients Experience in Therapy
  • They are challenged to take responsibility for
    how they now choose to be, decide how they want
    to be different, and take actions.
  • Major themes in therapy sessions are anxiety,
    freedom and responsibility, isolation, death, and
    the search for meaning.
  • Assist client in facing life with courage, hope,
    and a willingness to find meaning in life.

20
Relationship Between Therapist and Client
  • Therapy is a journey taken by therapist and
    client
  • The person-to-person relationship is key
  • The relationship demands that therapists be in
    contact with their own world
  • The core of the therapeutic relationship
  • Respect and faith in the clients potential to
    cope and discover alternative ways of being
  • Therapists share their reactions to clients with
    genuine concern and empathy as one way of
    deepening the therapeutic relationship.

21
Therapeutic techniques and procedures
  • It is not technique-oriented
  • The interventions are based on philosophical
    views about the nature of human existence.
  • Free for draw techniques from other orientations
  • The use of therapist self is the core of therapy

22
Questions
  • Which populations is existential therapy
    particularly useful?
  • Which issues is existential therapy particularly
    useful?

23
Areas of Application
  • Grief work, facing a significant decision,
    developmental crisis, coping with failures in
    marriage and work, dealing with physical
    limitations due to age

24
From a multicultural perspective
  • Contributions
  • Applicable to diverse clients to search for
    meaning for life
  • Be able to examine the behavior is influenced by
    social and cultural factors.
  • Help clients to weigh the alternatives and
    consequences.
  • Change external environment and recognize how
    they contribute

25
From a multicultural perspective
  • Limitations
  • Excessively individualistic
  • Ignore social factors that cause human problems
  • Even if clients change internally, they see
    little hope the external realities of racism or
    discrimination will change
  • For many cultures, it is not possible to talk
    about self and self-determination apart from the
    context of the social network
  • Many clients expect a structured and
    problem-oriented approach instead of discussion
    of philosophical questions.

26
Summary and Evaluation
  • Contributions
  • Stress self-determination accepting the personal
    responsibility along with freedom
  • View oneself as the author of ones life
  • Understand the value of anxiety and guilty, the
    positive meaning of death, the positive aspects
    of being alone and choosing for oneself
  • Enable clients to examine how their behavior is
    being influenced by social and cultural
    conditioning.

27
Summary and Evaluation
  • Limitations
  • Lacks of a systemic principles and practice for
    therapy
  • No empirical research validation yet
  • Limited to apply to lower-functioning clients,
    clients who need directions, are concerned about
    meeting basic needs, and lack of verbal skills

28
Case 1
  • I find myself terrified when I am alone. I need
    people around me constantly, and if Im forced to
    be alone, then I run from myself by watching TV.
    Id like to learn how to be alone and feel
    comfortable about it.
  • What are the issues?
  • What can you do to help this client?

29
Case 2
  • I feel like my existence does not matter to
    anyone. If I were to die today, I fully believe
    that it wouldnt make a difference to anyone.
  • What are the issues?
  • What can you do to help this client?

30
Case 3
  • I rarely feel close to another person. While I
    want this closeness, I am frightened of being
    rejected. Instead of letting anyone get close to
    me, I build walls that keep them removed. What
    can I do to lessen my fear of being rejected?
  • What are the issues?
  • What can you do to help this client?

31
Questions
  • Please discuss at least three questions to ask
    speakers regarding the career issues in social
    work, private practice, counseling, and family
    and marriage?
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