Thursday, August 2, 2012

Feminist, Postmodern, & Family Systems

Feminist Theory


Carolyn Zerbe Enns, PhD
Laura S. Brown, PhD

Jean Baker Miller, MD

Olivia M Espin, PhD

The feminist theory has been developed in a grassroots manner, responding to challenges and to the emerging needs of women.  There is no single individual that can be identified as the founder; it is more of a feminist collaboration of these and more women.

What is it?


The constructs of the feminist therapy include being gender fair, flexible, engaging in interactions, and life-span oriented.  Gender and power are the heart of feminist therapy.  It is an approach that recognizes the cultural, social, and political factors that contribute to an individual's problems.  These techniques can be applied to both men and women with the goal of bringing about empowerment.

Key Concepts 

  • Personal is Political
  • Therapists have a commitment to social change
  • Women's voices and ways of knowledge are valued
  • Women's experiences are honored
  • The counseling relationship is egalitarian
  • Therapy focuses on strengths and refined definitions of distress
  • All types of oppression are recognized
 

Goals of Therapy


A transformation in the individual client and in society.  To help clients to recognize, claim, and use their personal power to free themselves from the gender-role socialization limitations.  Also confrontation of all institutional policies that discriminate or oppress on any basis or idea.

Therapists Role


The therapist must create a relationship with their client based on empowerment and egalitarianism.  Self-disclosure in the feminist theory is necessaary to break down the barriers and boundaries that may seem to be present.  The goal is to create a collaborative relationship in which clients can become their own expert.

Techniques of Therapy 

  • Gender-role Analysis and Intervention
  • Power Analysis and Intervention
  • Demystifying Therapy
  • Bibliotherapy
  • Journal Writing
  • Therapist Self-Disclosure
  • Assertiveness Training
  • Reframing and Relabeling
  • Cognitive Restructuring
  • Identifying and Challenging untested beliefs
  • Role Playing
  • Psychodramatic Methods
  • Group Work
  • Social Action

Postmodern Therapy

 Steve de Shazer (1940-2005) and Insoo Kim Berg (1935-2007)

Steve de Shazer was the pioneer of solution-based brief therapy.  His collaboration with Insoo Kim Berg's development of the solution-focused approach was the ground work for postmodern therapy and the idea that there are multiple realities and multiple truths.

What is it?

 

The postmodern approach to therapy rejects the idea that reality is external and can be grasped.  This therapy is based on the premise that there are multiple realities and truths.  People create meaning in their lives through conversations with others.  This approach avoids pathologizing the client, look dimly towards diagnoses, avoids searching for an underlying problem, and place a high value of focusing on the strengths and resources of the client.  Creating solutions for the present and the future is the main focus of this therapy.  This therapy is well suited for people with adjustment disorders and for problems of anxiety and depression.  Postmodern approach can be applied to working with children, adolescents, adults, couples, families, and the community in a wide variety of settings. 

Key Concepts

 

  • Therapy is brief and addresses the present
  • The person is not the problem; the problem is the problem
  • Therapy is a collaborative dialogue of co-creating solutions
  • Clients create new meaning for themselves by identifying when a problem didn't even actually exist

Goals of Therapy

 

  • Change the way a client views a problem and what they can do about the concerns
  • Collaboratively establish specific, clear, concrete, realistic, and observable goals leading to positive change
  • Help clients create a self-identity grounded on competence and resourcefulness so they can resolve present and future concerns
  • Assist clients in viewing their lives in positive ways, rather than being saturated by problems
 

Therapists Role

 

Postmodern therapy is based immensely on the collaboration of the therapist and the client.  The client is viewed at the expert of their own life.  Questioning dialogue helps clients free themselves from their problem-saturated stories and create new life-affirming stories.  Solution focused therapists assume and active role in guiding the client away from problem-talk and towards solution-talk.  The clients are encouraged to explore their strengths and create solutions that will lead to a richer future.

Techniques of Therapy

 

  • Mostly involves in change-talk with focus on times in the client's life when the problem was not viewed as a problem
  • Creative use of questioning
  • The miracle question "If you had a magic wand, what would be different?"
  • Scaling Questions to encourage alternate solutions


Family Systems

Alfred Adler was the first psychologist or the modern era to do family therapy using a systematic approach.  

Marray Bowen was one of the original developers of mainstream family therapy.

Virginia Satir developed conjoint family therapy, a human validation process model that emphasizes communication and emotional experiencing.

What is it?

The family is viewed from an interactive and systemic perspective.  Clients are all interconnected in a living system, one singular change will result in a change in the complete system.  The family provides context for understanding how individuals function in relationship to others and how they behave.  The treatment deals with the family as a whole, while an individual's dysfunction behavior grows out of the family as a whole and out of larger systems beyond the family as well.  This therapy is useful for dealing with marital distress, problems of communicating amongst family members, power struggles, crisis situations, helping individuals attain their potential, and enhancing the overall functioning of the family. 

Key Concepts

  • Communication patterns within a family, both verbal and non-verbal
  • Differentiation
  • Triangles
  • Power Coalitions
  • Family-of-origin dynamics
  • Functional vs Dysfunctional Interaction Patterns
  • Dealing with here-and-now interactions
  • The present is more important than exploring past experiences

Goals of Therapy

To help family members gain awareness of patterns of relationships that are not working well and to create new ways of interacting.

Therapists Role

The family therapist has many different roles.  This therapist functions as a teacher, coach, model, and consultant.  The family learns ways to detect and solve problems that are keeping members stuck, and it learns about patterns that have been transmitted from generation to generation.  Some approaches focus on the role of therapist as expert; others concentrate on intensifying what is going on in the here and now of the family session.  All family therapists are concerned with the process of family interaction and teaching patterns of communication.

Techniques of Therapy

A variety of techniques are used, depending on the particular theoretical orientation of the therapist.  Techniques include:
  • Genograms
  • Teaching
  • Asking Questions
  • Joining the Family
  • Tracking sequences
  • Issuing Directives
  • Use of Countertransference
  • Family Mapping
  • Reframing
  • Restructuring
  • Enactments
  • Setting Boundaries
These techniques may be experiential, cognitive, or behavioral in nature, and most are designed to bring about change in a short period of time.



Tuesday, July 24, 2012

Cognitive Behavior & Reality Therapy

Albert Ellis's Rational Emotive Behavior Therapy (REBT)
 This was the first of the cognitive behavior therapies.  The basic assumption is that people contribute to their own psychological problems, as well as to specific symptoms, by the rigid and extreme beliefs they hold about events and situations. Cognitions, emotions, and behaviors interact significantly and have a reciprocal cause-and-effect relationship.  It is based on the premise that we learn irrational beliefs from significant others during childhood and then re-create these irrational beliefs throughout our lifetime. 

REBT Encourages people to accept themselves even though they will make mistakes


A-B-C Framework
This framework is central in theory and practice.  Essentially it is a tool used for understanding the client's feelings, thought, events, and behavior.  
  • A = the activating event
  • B = belief
  • C = Emotional and behavioral consequence
  • D = Disputing intervention
  • E = Effect
  • F = New Feeling
The therapist/client relationship in this therapy is more of a teacher/student role.  The therapist is there not to form a warm relationship with the client, but to teach them how to understand and rationalize their emotions effectively.  The idea is to create an understanding that the activating event (A) does not cause the emotional and behavioral consequence (C), it is however the belief of the person (B) that causes the negative feelings.  At that point disputing intervention (D) comes into play.  Then a client must detect irrational beliefs, debate the dysfunctional or irrational beliefs by learning to logically question them then argue within themself and act against them.  This occurs over several therapy sessions.  Finally, clients learn to identify irrational beliefs from rational beliefs.  Clients learning to monitor, adapt, and substitute rational beliefs.  This then brings us to an effective philosophy (E), which is a new and effective beliefs system.  This system is acheived over time, with many therapy sessions of disputing intervention and self-growth and ultimately leads to the goal of new feelings (F).  Feelings of healthy disappointment and apology may override nervousness and anxiousness.


Aaron T. Beck's Cognitive Therapy (CT)
To produce lasting change in dysfunctional emotions and behaviors is to modify inaccurate and dysfunctional thinking.
Cognitive Therapy is an insight-focused therapy that was developed independently from, but during the same time as REBT.   Cognitive therapy perceives psychological problems as stemming from commonplace processes such as faulty thinking, making incorrect inferences on the basis of inadequate or incorrect information, and failing to distinguish between fantasy and reality.  Cognitive therapy is highly collaborative and involves designing specific learning experiences to help clients monitor their automatic thoughts, examine the validity, understand the relationship among cognition feelings, and behavior, and develop more accurate and realistic cognitions as well as change underlying beliefs and assumptions.  Beck believes people with emotional difficulties tend to commit characteristic "logical errors" that distort objective reality.  These are called cognitive distortions.
  • Arbitrary Indifferences - making conclusions without supporting and relevant evidence
  • Selective Abstraction - forming conclusions based on an isolated detail of an event
  • Overgeneralization - holding extreme beliefs on the basis of a single incident and applying them inappropriately to dissimilar events or settings
  • Magnification and minimzation - perceiving a case or situation in a greater or lesser light than it truly deserves
  • Personalization - tendency for individuals to relate external events to themselves, even when there is no basis for making this connection
  • Labeling and mislabeling - portraying one's identity on the basis of imperfections and mistakes made in the past and allowing them to define one's true identity.
  • Dichotomous thinking - categorizing experiences in either-or extremes, it's either black or white, there's no gray area
Cognitive Therapy initially gained recognition as an approach to treating depression, but research has been devoted to the study and treatment of many other psychiatric disorders.   The relationship between client and therapist in cognitive therapy emphasizes the quality of the relationship.  Empathy and sympathy plays a great role in Beck's cognitive therapy.  The therapists are actively and continually interactive with clients to help them frame their conclusions in the form of testable hypotheses.  These specific and measurable goals and to move directly into the areas that are causing the most difficulty for the client.  Educational readings of the cognitive behavior therapy process may be assigned to clients to enhance their educational focus, self-help books may also be utilized, as well as homeowork may often be given to the clients for the next session.

Reality Therapy

William Glasser contends that clients should not be labeled with a diagnosis except when it is necessary for insurance purposes.  From his perspective diagnoses are descriptions of the behaviors people choose in their attempt to deal with the pain and frustration that is endemic to their unsatisfying present relationship. Glasser defined the premise of reality therapy in his books.

What is it?

This therapy is based on choice theory and assumes that we need quality relationships to be happy.  Psychological problems are the result of our resisting the control by others or of our attempt to control others.  Choice theory is an explanation of human nature and how to best achieve satisfying interpersonal relationships.  This therapy is geared towards teaching people ways of using choice theory in everyday living to increase effective behaviors.  It has been applied to individual counseling with a wide range of clients, group counseling, working with youthful law offenders, and couples and family therapy.  In some instances it is well suited to brief therapy and crisis intervention.

Key Concepts

  • The basic focus is on what clients are doing and how to get them to evaluate whether their present actions are working for them
  • People are mainly motivated to satisfy their needs, especially the need for significant relationships
  • The approach rejects the medical model, the notion of transference, the unconscious, and dwelling on one's past

Goals of Therapy

To help people become more effective in meeting all of their psychological needs.  To enable clients to get connected with the people they have chosen to put into their quality worlds and teach clients choice theory.

Therapists Role

The key of a successful client/therapist relationship is to build a good relationship with the client.  They must also
  • Engage clients in an evaluation of all their relationships with respect to what they want and how effective they are in getting this
  • Find out what clients want
  • Ask what they are choosing to do
  • Invite them to evaluate present behavior
  • Help them make plans for change
  • Get the client to make a commitment
The therapist is a client's advocate, as long as the client is willing to attempt to behave responsibly

Therapy Techniques

Realistic therapy is an active, directive,  and didactic therapy.  Skillful questioning is a central technique used for the duration of the therapy process.  Various techniques may be used to get clients to evaluate what they are presently doing to see if they are willing to change.  If clients decide that their present behavior is not effective, they develop a specific plan for change and make a commitment to follow through.

Thursday, July 5, 2012

Gestalt & Behavior Therapy

Frederick S. "Fritz" Perls, MD, PhD

Gestalt Therapy
 "Awareness, Choice, and Responsibility"
Frederick "Fritz" Perls was the main originator and developer of Gestalt therapy.  Gestalt therapy is an existential, phenomenological, and process-based approach created on the premise that individuals must be understood in the context of their ongoing relationship with the environment.

Key Concepts
View of Human Nature
  • Clients are manipulative and avoid responsibility
  • Clients and Therapists are viewed as interdependent
  • People have the ability to self regulate
  • People change when they become aware of who they are
 Four Basic Principles 
  • Holism - Nature is seen as a unified and coherent whole, and the whole is different from the sum of its parts.
  • Field Theory - One must become and understand it's part of the ever changing environment.
  • Figure-Formation Process - How one views the organization of their environment
  • Organismic Self-Regulation - Taking action or responsibility to achieve equilibrium when a want or need arises.
The Now
  • The present moment is the most significant in Gestalt Therapy.  Past and Future focus is an avoidance
  • Phenomenological inquiry is coming into contact with the present moment, asking what and how rather than why.
  • When the past arises, it must be brought into present tense
Unfinished Business
  • When figures emerge from the background but are not completed and resolved, individuals are left with this
  • Can create grief, guilt, unexpressed feelings, resentment, etc.
  • Is brought forward and may interfere with the present
  • Must be faced and dealt with to prevent persistence
Contact and Resistance to Contact
  • Contact is necessary for change and growth to occur 
  • Good contact requires clear awareness, full energy, and the ability to express oneself without losing ones individuality
  • There are 5 main kinds of contact boundary disturbances
    • Introjection - to uncritically accept others' beliefs and standards without assimilating them to make them congruent with who we are
    • Projection - to disown certain aspects of ourselves by assigning them to the environment, the opposite of introjection
    • Retroflection - turning back onto ourselves what we would like to do to someone else or doing to ourselves what we would like someone else to do to or for us
    • Deflection - the process of distraction or veering off, so that it is difficult to maintain a sustained sense of contact
    • Confluence - blurring the differentiation between the self and the environment.
Energy and Blocks to Energy
  • Special attention given to where energy is located, how it is used, and how it can be blocked
  • Blocked energy is another form of defensive behavior
  • This energy must be addressed and recognized 
  • Energy must be transformed into effective productive behavior
 
 Goals of Therapy

The basic goal of therapy is an existential encounter out of which clients tend to move in certain directions.  Moving towards increased awareness of themselves, assuming ownership of their experiences, develop self-satisfaction without violating others, awareness of all senses, accepting responsibility for what they do, and learn to be able to ask for help and get help from others as well as having the ability to give to others.
Therapist's Role 

Engaging with clients to assist them in developing their own awareness and experiencing how and who they are in the present moment.  They also create a safe space for clients to explore themselves and try out new behaviors as well as encouraging their clients to bring their thoughts experiences and feelings to the present, and to the surface.  Therapist's must also pay close attention to body language patterns as well as language patterns to ensure that the client is focusing on the present.  Therapist's treat the clients as equal and does little talking, mostly listening, and reminding and encouraging to focus on the present.
Techniques and Processes
  • Experiments are developed from interaction between therapist and client.  They are aimed at helping the client to learn by experience, and the client is typically surprised by what they have learned.  The experiments are typically spontaneous and one-of-a-kind.  The experiment are designed to bring out internal conflict by making the struggle an actual process to help the clients gain fuller awareness, experience internal conflict, resolve inconsistencies, and work through an impulse.
    •  The Internal Dialogue exercise may also be called the empty chair exercise.  The therapist asks the client in one chair to portray one personality, while moving to the other chair to become the opposite personality while verbalizing.  This helps the client to accept and integrate both sides of the issue.  This helps clients get in touch with feelings that they may be denying.  
    • Making the Rounds exercise involves going around the room and speak to or do something to or with each person in the group.  The purpose is to confront, risk, disclose themselves, experiment with new behavior, and to grow and change. 
    • The rehearsal exercise addresses the need to be approved, accepted, and liked.  Speaking out loud the silent rehearsal that we sometimes go through in our heads.
    •  The reversal exercise is basically grabbing the bull by the horns and taking a plunge into the very thing that is creating the anxiety or that is being denied.
    • The exaggeration exercise focuses on body movements, gestures, postures, and movements that may communicate significant meaning.  They are asked to exaggerate the action and repeat it over and over which usually intensifies the feeling attached to the bahavior thus making it easier for the client to grasp and understand.
    • Staying with the feeling is encouraging clients to dive deep into fearful stimuli and unpleasant feelings.  Facing and experiencing feelings takes courage and is a mark of willingness to endure the pain necessary for personal growth.
    • Gestalt theory does not interpret dreams but brings dreams to life, and walks through them, and helps the client to experience the feelings the dream caused and understand the feelings they have.  The dream is assumed to be a projection of oneself, it is talked through as though it is currently occurring in the present to help the client actively and presently deal with the feelings they have.

Thursday, June 28, 2012

Existential Therapy

  "That which does not kill me, makes me stronger" -Friedrich Nietzsche (1844-1900)


What is it?

Existential therapy is more of an attitude or way of thinking that influences a therapists therapeutic practice than a clearly defined therapeutic model with specific techniques.  The goal of the therapist is to understand the unique way an individual views their life, then to help them recognize their potential and learn and understand ways for them to achieve their fullest potential from within themselves.  

The idea is that although we sometimes cannot control external events forced upon us, existential therapists believe that we have the freedom to choose how we respond to such events.  We are ultimately in control of our own lives, and the way we choose to respond or the choice not to respond ultimately determines our destiny.  The focus of this therapy helps individuals to look within themselves to find the answers to questions such as "Is this all there is to life?  What's the point in me being here?"  Existential therapy helps us to understand that we alone have control over our own destiny.

Viktor Frankl (1905-1997) was a central figure in developing the existential therapy in Europe and bringing it to the United States.  Not only did he introduce existentialism to the United States but he served as an illustration of the theory.  He was a prisoner in Nazi camps for three years where he witnessed the death of his parents, brother, wife, and children.  He carried on to lecture around the world of how he used his tragedies in a constructive way and did not allow them to hold him back or use his experiences as excuses.

Rollo May (1909-1994) was the principal American spokesperson of European existential therapy and one of the main proponents of humanistic approaches to psychotherapy.  He believed that psychotherapy should be aimed at helping people discover the meaning of their lives and should be concerned with the problem of being rather than solving.  He believed therapists should help individuals find ways to better themselves and the society in which they live.

Key Concepts
  • View of Human Nature
  • The capacity for self-awareness
  • Freedom & responsibility
  • Striving for identity and relationships to others
  • The search for meaning
  • Anxiety as a condition of living
  • Awareness of death and nonbeing

Goals
Increase self-awareness
The greater the awareness, the greater the possibility for freedom.  Therapists attempt to increase awareness: 
    • of the lack of infinite time in life
    • of the potential to make the decision to take action or not take action
    • that actions are a choice that creates a person's destiny
    • of alternatives and choices
    • that people are subject to loneliness, meaninglessness, emptiness, guilt, and isolation 

Understand the freedom of choice , and being responsible for those choices
The goal is to help the person to understand that although they have no control over a situation or other people, that there must be responsibility for and awareness that our choice of response is our freedom, and we must take responsibility for response.

Learn to strive for identity within oneself
People are alone as one person and simply build relationships; relationships should not build the person.  The goal is for the person to look within themself for direction, values, answers, & beliefs.  It needs to be understood that it takes courage, and may not be easy to discover oneself; and discover if the person has truly discovered their own identity from within, or if the identity was based upon others expectations, beliefs, and values.

Defining a meaning to life
Finding satisfaction and meaning in life is accomplished through engaging in what is valued, which leads to a commitment that provides the purpose to make life worthwhile.  There must also be an understanding that this is a lifelong struggle that will change as one develops their identity and continues on throughout a lifetime.

Understanding anxiety is a condition of living
One must understand that existential anxiety is unavoidable.  It an inevitable fact of the human condition.  There is normal anxiety which is an appropriate resopnse to an event being faced, and can be used as motivation to change.  This type of anxiety is considered "good" anxiety that must be present to progress.  Neurotic anxiety, however, is anxiety about concrete things that is out of proportion to the situation.  One must learn to live with anxiety and learn to live with and benefit from normal anxiety while also keeping neurotic anxiety at a minimum.  The therapist can help one learn to cope with anxiety and distinguish between types of anxiety.
Becoming aware of death and nonbeing
Death is not viewed negatively, but the person who holds the awareness of death as a basic human condition gives more significance to living.  One must learn that it is necessary to think about death to think significantly about life.  A person should not consider death as a threat so much as a motivation to take advantage of and appreciate the moment.  This understanding may help the person evaluate how well they are living and what changes they want to make in their lives.

Techniques
The existential approach to therapy isn't like most therapy models.  It is based on the philosophical approach that we have control of our own destiny.  It is based on description, exploration, and understanding of ones own subjective reality rather than forming a diagnosis, treatment, and prognosis.  This type of therapy must be responsive to each individuals uniqueness. 

Phases
  1. Assisting the person in identifying and clarifying their assumptions about the world.  They are invited to define and question the ways in which they perceive and make sense of their existence.
  2. Assisting the person in examining the source and authority  of their present value system.  This self-exploration get a better idea of the life they consider wirthy to live and develop a clearer sense of their internal value process.
  3. Focuses on helping people take what they are learning about themselves and put it into action.  Helps people to implement and deal with the anxieties of putting what they have learnd about themselves into action.
Reference:
     Corey, G. (2013).  Theory and practice of counseling and psychotherapy. Belmont, CA: Brooks/Cole Cengage Learning.