The Imperfect Therapist: Learning from Failure in Therapeutic Practice |
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Page 76
... therapist should be in making this happen . Caught up in expectations for instant success and immediate competence , beginning therapists tend to have a narrow per- spective of therapy . Armed with a specific set of techniques and a ...
... therapist should be in making this happen . Caught up in expectations for instant success and immediate competence , beginning therapists tend to have a narrow per- spective of therapy . Armed with a specific set of techniques and a ...
Page 77
... beginning therapist's sense of over- importance and the inherent danger of establishing a dependent relationship . Hand in hand with this concept of overzealous re- sponsibility is the trepidation new therapists feel in making an ...
... beginning therapist's sense of over- importance and the inherent danger of establishing a dependent relationship . Hand in hand with this concept of overzealous re- sponsibility is the trepidation new therapists feel in making an ...
Page 82
... therapists , beginner or veteran , but when to say it . Fear of Confrontation Wanting to be liked by the client is a frequent desire of beginning therapists . For if one is liked , the client will certainly return week after week , thus ...
... therapists , beginner or veteran , but when to say it . Fear of Confrontation Wanting to be liked by the client is a frequent desire of beginning therapists . For if one is liked , the client will certainly return week after week , thus ...
Contents
Fear and Avoidance of Failure in Therapy | 20 |
Unproductive Defenses Against Failure | 40 |
Benefits of Confronting Imperfection | 56 |
Copyright | |
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accept acknowledge Albert Einstein Albert Ellis anger apist attempt become beginning therapists behavior believe Bergantino better blame Boonesborough Bugental Chapter child Clark Moustakas clinical clinician colleagues confront continued Corey counter-transference critical defenses depression doctor effective efforts Ellis endogenous depression ents errors event example expectations experience of failure fail failure in therapy family therapy father fear of failure feel felt Fisch frustration Gilbert Hill growth human Humanistic Psychology Imperfect Therapist interaction interventions issues Lazarus listening lives Lori lose ment misjudgments mistakes Moustakas negative outcomes never occur one's ourselves painful patient perfect practice practitioners problem professional progress psychiatrist psychodynamic Psychotherapy Ram Dass realize reflection resistance responsibility rience risk self-disclosure self-doubt sense sessions sions skills strategy struggle success suicide supervisor symptoms techniques ther therapeutic relationship things Tigger tion tive treatment vulnerability