Theories of Counseling - Gestalt

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Name 4 limitations of Gestalt Therapy as it is applied to working with culturally diverse populations.

1) Clients who have been culturally conditioned to be emotionally reserved may not see value in experiential techniques 2) Clients may be "put off" by the emphasis on expressing feelings 3) Clients may be looking for specific advice on solving practical problems 4) Clients may believe showing one's vulnerability is being weak.

Name 4 key concepts of Gestalt Therapy

1) acceptance of personal responsibility 2) awareness of the present moment 3) unfinished business 4) dealing with the impasse

Name 4 focuses of Gestalt Therapy.

1) focus is on the "what" and "how" of behavior 2) The focus is on the here and now 3) The focus is on integrating fragmented parts of the personality 4) The focus is on unfinished business from the past.

Field

A dynamic system of interrelationships.

Empty chair technique

A role playing intervention in which clients play conflicting parts. This typically consists of clients engaging in an imaginary dialogue between different sides of themselves.

Contributions of Gestalt Therapy

By encouraging direct contact and the expression of feelings, the approach de-emphasizes abstract intellectualization of one's problems. Intense experiencing can occur quickly, so therapy can be relatively brief. The approach recognizes the value of working with the past as it is important to the here and now.

The process of blurring awareness of the boundary between self and environment is?

Confluence

Limitations of Gestalt Therapy

Gestalt procedures can become a series of mechanical exercise behind which the therapist as a person can hide. Therapist has the potential to manipulate the client with these powerful methods.

The tendency to uncritically accept others' beliefs without assimilating or internalizing them is?

Introjection

A contribution of the Gestalt approach is that?

It deals with the past in a lively manner.

Experiments

Procedures aimed at encouraging spontaneity and inventiveness by bringing the possibilities for action directly into the therapy session. Experiments are designed to enhance here-and-now awareness. They are activities clients try out as a way of testing new ways of thinking, feeling and behaving.

Exercises

Ready-made techniques that are sometimes used to make something happen in a therapy session or to achieve a goal.

Continuum of awareness

Staying with the moment-to-moment flow of experiencing, which leads individuals to discover how they are functioning in the world.

Retroflection

The act of turning back onto ourselves something we would like to do (or have done) to someone else.

Major Focus of Gestalt Therapy

The approach is an experiential therapy that stresses here-and-now awareness and integration of the fragmented parts of the personality. It focuses on the "what" and "how" of behavior and on the role of unfinished business from the past in preventing effective functioning in the present.

Introjection

The uncritical acceptance of others' beliefs and standards without assimilating them into one's own personality.

Figure

Those aspects of the individual's experience that are most salient at any moment.

True or False, One of the functions of the therapist is to pay attention to the client's body language.

True.

Unfinished business

Unexpressed feelings (such as resentment, guilt, anger, grief) dating back to childhood that now interfere with effective psychological functioning; needless emotional debris that clutters present-centered awareness.

According to the Gestalt view, awareness is?

by itself therapeutic.

Basic principles of Gestalt Therapy

holism, field theory, the figure-formation process, and organismic self-regulation

5 Major Channels of Resistance challenged in Gestalt Therapy

introjection, projection, retroflection, confluence, and deflection.

The focus of Gestalt Therapy is on?

recognizing one's own projections and refusing to accept helplessness.

Confluence

A disturbance in which the sense of the boundary between self and environment is lost.

Dichotomy

A split by which a person experiences or sees opposing forces; a polarity (weak/strong, dependent/independent).

Relational Gestalt Therapy

A supportive, kind, and compassionate style that emphasizes dialogue in the therapeutic relationship, rather than the confrontational style of Fritz Perls.

Paradoxical theory of change

A theoretical position that authentic change occurs more from being who we are than from trying to be who we are not.

Deflection

A way of avoiding contact and awareness by being vague and indirect.

Philosophy of Gestalt Therapy

An existential-phenomenological approach based on the premise that individuals must be understood in the context of their ongoing relationship with the environment.

Confrontation

An invitation for the client to become aware of discrepancies between verbal and nonverbal expressions, between feelings and actions, or between thoughts and feelings.

Holism

Attending to a client's thoughts, feelings, behaviors, body and dreams.

The process of distraction, which makes it difficult to maintain sustained contact is?

Deflection

Figure-formation process

Describes how the individual organizes the environment from moment to moment and how the emerging focus of attention is on what is figural.

Techniques

Exercises or interventions that are often used to bring about action or interaction, sometimes with a prescribed outcome in mind.

True or False, A major function of the therapist is to make interpretations of clients' behavior so that they can being to think of their patterns.

False.

True or False, Gestalt techniques are primarily aimed at teaching clients to think rationally.

False.

True or False, Recent trends in Gestalt practice include more emphasis on confrontation, more anonymity of the therapist and increased reliance on techniques.

False.

True or False, The basic goal of Gestalt Therapy is adjustment to society.

False.

The main founder of Gestalt Therapy is?

Fritz Perls

Key Figures in Gestalt Therapy

Fritz Perls, Laura Perls, Miriam Polster and Erving Polster

Key concepts of Gestalt Therapy

Here and Now, Direction experiencing, awareness, and bringing unfinished business from the past into the present.

Field Theory

Paying attention to and exploring what is occurring at the boundary between the person and the environment.

Blocks to energy

Paying attention to where energy is located, how it is used, and how it can be blocked.

The process of turning back to ourselves what we would like to do to someone else is?

Retroflection

Describe the approach of Gestalt Therapy

The approach is designed to help people experience the present moment more fully and gain awareness of what they are doing. The approach is experiential in that clients come to grips with what they are thinking, feeling, and doing as they interact with the therapist.

Techniques and Procedures of Gestalt Therapy

The client is expected to play an active role. Therapists do not force change on clients, they create experiments within a context of the I/Thou dialogue in a here-and-now framework. Experiments can take many forms: setting up dialogue between a client and a significant person in his or her life; reliving a painful event; or carrying on dialogue between two conflicting aspects within an individual. Role-play can occur, empty chair technique also used.

Projection

The process by which we disown certain aspects of ourselves by ascribing them to the environment; the opposite of introjection.

Awareness

The process of attending to and observing one's own sensing, thinking, feelings, and actions; paying attention to the flowing nature of one's present-centered experience.

Contact

The process of interacting with nature and with other people without losing one's sense of individuality. Contact is made by seeing, hearing, smelling, touching and moving.

Impasse

The stuck point in a situation in which individuals believe they are unable to support themselves and thus seek external support.

Role of therapist in Gestalt Therapy

Therapist is a guide and a catalyst, presents experiments and shares observations.

Ground

Those aspects of the individual's experience that tend to be out of awareness or in the background.

Phenomenological inquiry

Through a therapist asking "what" and "how" questions, clients are assisted in noticing what is occurring in the present moment.

True or False, Blocked energy can be considered a form of resistance.

True.

True or False, Dreams contain existential messages, and each piece of dream work leads to assimilation of disowned aspects of the self.

True.

True or False, Gestalt therapy is well suited for group counseling, especially when there is a here-and-now emphasis within the group.

True.

True or False, Perls contends that most frequent source of unfinished business is resentment.

True.

True or False, Resistance refers to defense we develop that prevent us from experiencing the present in a full and real way.

True.

Gestalt Therapy can be best described as?

an experiential therapy

Therapeutic Goal of Gestalt Therapy

attaining awareness and expanding choices.

The impasse is the point in therapy at which clients?

do not have external support available to them, experience a sense of being stuck, are challenged to get into contact with their frustrations and accept whatever is.

Gestalt Therapy encourages clients to?

experience feelings intensely, stay in here-and-now, work through the impasse, pay attention to their own non verbal message.

The basic goal of Gestalt therapy is to help clients?

move from environmental support to self support.

Describe the therapeutic relationship in Gestalt Therapy

stresses the I/Thou relationship. The focus is not on the techniques employed by the therapist but on who the therapist is as a person and what the therapist is doing. The counselor assists clients in experiencing all feelings more fully and lets them make their own interpretations. Clients identify their own unfinished business from the past that is interfering with their present functioning.


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