Summary of Chapter 6 of the The Individual Book (de Bruin, E., 1st Edition)

This is the Chapter 6 of the book The Individual (de Bruin, E., 1st Edition). Which is content for the exam of the Theory component of Module 4 (The Individual) of the University of Twente, in the Netherlands.

 

Chapter 6:

Person-centred/ humanistic and experimental approaches:

Philosophical/ cultural underpinning humanistic therapies:

  • Client-centred therapy:
  • Humans cannot be reduced to components
  • Humans exist in a uniquely human context
  • Humans are conscious (includes awareness oneself in context of others)
  • Humans intentions/ goals/ aware they can cause future events
  • Experimental therapy: working here-and-now experiencing of client/ therapist
  • Person-centred approach: emphasis actual momentary lived experiencing of person
  • Phenomenological: valid knowledge/ understanding gained exploring/ describing way things are experienced
  • Phenomenological inquiry: investigate assumptions held about specific phenomenon --> describe it as comprehensive/ sensitive as possible

Evolution person-centred approach:

  • Non-directive approach: client finding their own solutions to their problems as result of change in self-concept
  • Core conditions model: empathy/ congruence/ acceptance

Theoretical framework person-centred approach:

  • Person-centred approached:  = therapeutic nation, which comprised of numerous tribes
  • Relationship with clients: high degree respect/ equality/ authenticity
  • Here-and-now experiencing: enable clients become aware moment-by-moment patterns of thought/ feeling associated with difficulties everyday life
  • Phenomenal field: flow of experiencing
  • Process oriented work (actualization): engaged process of personal growth --> fulfil 2 primary needs: self-actualization/ be loved-valued others
  • Organismic valuing: inner embodied sense right/ wrong
  • State of incongruence: disjunction feelings & capacity accurate awareness/ symbolisation of these feelings
  • Conditions of worth: way self-concept of child shaped by parental influence
  • Locus evaluation: explains how self-concept created/ how it changes
  • Rogers: when making judgments/ evaluations about issues, people can be guided externally defined sets of beliefs/ attitudes (over-reliance on this means continued exposure of conditions of wort) OR own internal feelings on the issue (organismic valuing process)’
  • Full functioning person:
  • openness to experience
  • engage process of being and becoming
  • ability live in the moment
  • use feelings to guide actions
  • being autonomous
  • Therapist empathy: leads client greater capacity explore/ accept previously denied aspects of self
  • Empathy cycle model:
  1. Empathic set by therapist: therapist actively attending/ receptive
  2. Empathic resonation: resonates to clients experiencing
  3. Expressed empathy: expresses/ communicates felt awareness of client’s experiencing
  4. Received empathy: client perceives therapist’s immediate understanding
  5. Empathy cycle continues --> quality therapeutic relationship
  • Congruence: feelings therapist available in their awareness, and able communicate them if appropriate (willingness to know)
  • Presence: moments of congruence  in a process of mutual flow that involves being fully present to each other at the same time
  • Therapeutic process: gradual process of greater openness to experience
  • Direction of therapeutic growth: awareness denied experience/ see things differentiated manner/ greater reliance on personal experience as source o values and standards
  • Depth of experiencing: able process info about self nd expressing at greater levels of depth/ intensity
  • Focusing process: meanings events/ relationships contained in “felt sense” (internal/ physical sense of situation) experienced by person.
  • Inner referent: = felt sense
  • Experiential process: therapeutic movements/ shifts brought about by interpretation/ behavioural methods

Further development person-centred theory/ practice:

  • Agency: human capacity for intentionality and purpose
  • Self-multiplicity:
  • Self-split: growthful/ not-for growth part --> dialogue between them constitutes growth
  • Configurations: individual/ active/ changing nature process in relation to these elements of self
  • Inner critic: criticise onw thoughts/ actions/ feelings --> client become aware this patter as specific part of self
  • Bill Stiles: self as a community of voices
  • Relational depth: profound engagement/ contact  in which each person fully real with other and enduring sense of contact/ connectedness
  • Working alliance model: 3 dimensions of relationship: bond/ goals/ task
  • Mutuality: effective therapy relied on sense of togetherness/ shared experience  --> shared reality, transcends individual perception
  • Thou-I relationship: “I realise myself though my effort and struggle to understand and be with you”)
  • Strategies of disconnection: practical ways of thinking about how conditions mutuality/ relational depth may be maximised
  • Difficult process: types of experiential processing characteristic of people with different types of problem
  • Process: activity involving paying attention to/ regulation intensity of different facets of, experiencing
  • Fragile process: difficulty maintaining flow processing of experiential material
  • Dissociated process: abruptly shift form one area of experiencing to another --> protecting themselves against potentially painful emotions/ memories

Other humanistic therapies built on person-centred approach:

  • Expressive therapy: therapeutic space where client can express “core conditions” though creativity --> significance in relation to having satisfying/ fulfilling life
  • Creative connection: engage creative activity --> access authentic aspect of self
  • Pre-therapy or contact work model: clients which basic contact with others hugely problematic --> restore client’s capacity psychological contact --> enable them to enter to conventional therapy/ or other types or therapeutic activity and social care
  • Emotion-focused therapy (EFT): emphasis significant event within therapy by facilitate emotional processing --> create highly meaningful moments of change
  • Problematic incidents: incidents client’s life when they felt as though their reaction as puzzling or inappropriate
  • Evocative unfolding: cognitive-affective reprocessing of single troubling episode that leads widening serios of self-discoveries:
  1. Exploration: labelling incident as problematic
  2. Parallel tasks:
    1. Examine different faces of feelings experienced during incident
    2. Find aspects incident hold most intense meaning/ significance
  3. Exploration new options
  • Two-chair work: dialogue critical part of self or significant individual
  • Secondary emotions: socially accepted statements --> primary emotions: gradually expressed, previously suppressed
  • Emotional pain: comprising shame-based, loneliness-based, and fear-based experiences

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