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Title: PSY 245 CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY-II


1
PSY 245CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY-II
  • Assoc. Prof. Dr. BAHAR BASTUG
  • Clinical Psychologist

2
CARL ROGERS PERSON-CENTERED THEORY AND THERAPY
3
Welcome
  • This week were focusing on person-centered
    theory and therapy (PCT).
  • This approach was developed by Carl Rogers.
  • The approach is deeply optimistic and guided by
    principles of trusting clients and an actualizing
    tendency.

4
Carl Rogers (1902 1987)
5
  • Freud gtgtgtgtpessimist
  • Adler Jung gtgtgtgtoptimist
  • Rogersgtgtgtgtsuperoptimist.
  • Rogers developed a distinctive approach
    Listening.

6
  • In his life, he strove to be a genuine and open
    person, he strove to be himself.
  • Other theorists criticized Rogers being
    superoptimist.

7
LIFE OF ROGERS.
Born in 1902, in Oak Park, Illinois
8
Biographical Information
  • 4th of 6 children to a farm family in Illinois.
  • His family was rigid fundamentalist Christians.
  • Traveled to China, had a significant change of
    view. Rogers appears to have become Rogers

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Biographical Information Carl Rogers
  • Carl Rogerss development as a person was
    characterized by the following (and more) events
  • He rejected his parents conservative religious
    ideology.
  • He decided to marry his childhood sweetheart.
  • He decided to pursue graduate studies at the
    liberal Union Theological Seminary in New York
    City.
  • He studied clinical psychology at Columbia
    University.

11
Married in 1924
  • Rogerss relationship with his wife had a
    powerful affect on him. Because of his poor
    social skills, she was the first person with whom
    he ever had a caring and sharing relationship.

12
in 1928

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  • At the time, Columbia University was interested
    in John Watsons behaviorism. Rogers was oriented
    more toward the contemporary scientist-practitione
    r model. He was the first person to tape-record
    actual therapy sessions.

14
  • Rogerss first clinical position was at the
    Adlerian-oriented Rochester Child Guidance
    Center. During this time, academic psychologists
    were behavioral, while clinicians were trained in
    either psychoanalytic or neo-analytic theory.
    Since Rogers wanted to help people (rather than
    work in a laboratory), he was trained in an
    analytic approach.

15
  • Rogers attended a seminar with Otto Rank and
    learned from a social worker, Elizabeth Davis.
    Ms. Davis way of articulating clients feelings
    fascinated Rogers.

16
  • Rogers adopted the following principles from Otto
    Rank
  • Clients have creative powers.
  • Therapy should help clients accept their personal
    uniqueness and self-reliance.
  • The client is the central figure in the therapy
    process the therapist only helps clients access
    their powers of self-creation.

17
  • Therapists shouldnt educate clients.
  • Therapist shouldnt foster dependency with
    clients by becoming love objects.
  • Therapy works when clients experience the present
    within the therapy setting.

18
  • Rogers was influenced by the person of Roosevelt.
  • Roosevelt was optimistic.
  • Rogers was influenced by the
  • philosophy of John Dewey.

19
Historical Context
  • Rogers was influenced by
  • Elizabeth Davis
  • President Franklin D. Roosevelt
  • John Dewey
  • His relationship with his wife
  • His clients

20
Historical Context
  • Honoring the Client
  • Rogers credited his clients as the greatest
    source of his development.
  • Natalie Rogers stated And so like Carl, I
    stayed open to learning from my clients. They are
    always our best teachers.

21
  • His daughter, Natalie Rogers, has become a
    significant force in integrating dance, movement,
    and the arts with person-centered theory and
    therapy.

22
Struggles with Psychiatry and Psychology
  • Rogers developed his client-centered approach to
    psychotherapy in a climate openly hostile to his
    ideas. He had to fight the behaviorism of
    academic psychology as well as the psychoanalysis
    of the clinical world.
  • Rogers had a battle with psychiatry to obtain for
    psychologists the right to practice
    psychotherapy.

23
  • Rogers socialized with social workers,
    counselors, and teachers. He rebelled against the
    traditional class lecture, he participated in
    encounter groups.

24
  • However, he was elected president of the American
    Psychological Association in 1946.

25
Evolution of Person-Centered Therapy
  • Rogerss practice of person-centered theory and
    principles is divided into 4 periods
  • 1. Nondirective counseling. This period began in
    the 1940s and was characterized by Rogerss
    growing aversion to directive, traditional
    therapy methods.

26
Evolution of Person-Centered Therapy
  • 2.Client-centered therapy. In the 1950s Rogers
    changed the name of his approach from
    nondirective counseling to client-centered
    therapy.

27
Evolution of Person-Centered Therapy
  • 3. Becoming a person. During the 1960s, Rogers
    focused on self-development. His work was
    strongly associated with the human potential
    movement. He published On Becoming a Person and
    moved from academia at the University of
    Wisconsin to California in 1964.
  • Person-centered therapy

28
Evolution of Person-Centered Therapy
  • 4.Worldwide issues. In the 1970s and 1980s,
    Rogers became more interested in worldwide
    issues. He began dedicating his work to improving
    interracial relations and producing world peace.
    He met with Irish Catholics and Protestants,
    visited South Africa and the Soviet Union, and
    conducted cross-cultural workshops in Brazil,
    Dublin, and Hungary.

29
  • Theory of Personality

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  • The person-centered approach includes a theory of
    personality and theory of psychotherapy. The
    theory of personality is complex and difficult to
    formulate. For this reason, it gets little
    attention.

31
Theory of Personality
  • Self theory
  • Phenomenology and the valuing of experience
  • Learning and growth potential
  • Conditions of worth

32
Self-Theory
  • Every person exists within an ever-changing world
    in which he or she is the center. The self is not
    a fixed structure, but a structure in process,
    capable of both stability and change.

33
Self-Theory
  • The term organism refers to the locus of all
    psychological experience. The organism is the
    entire realm of an individuals experience, while
    the self is the me portion of the organism.
  • Rogerss self has both conscious and unconscious
    components.

34
Self-Theory
  • The distinction between organism and self makes
    it possible that an individuals self can be
    inconsistent with its overall psychological
    experience. This discrepancy is referred to as
    incongruence.

35
Self-Theory
  • In contrast, when the selfs experiences and
    perceptions are consistent with the organisms
    total experience, there is congruence. Congruence
    between self and organism is highly desirable it
    leads to adjustment, maturity, and a fully
    functioning individual.

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Phenomenology and the Valuing of Experience
  • This theory is basically phenomenological.
    Personal experience.
  • Although both intellectual thinking and feelings
    are valued informational sources, experiencing is
    a direct way of accurately knowing oneself and
    the world.

40
Phenomenology and the Valuing of Experience
  • Person-centered therapy is designed to help
    clients be more open to personal experiences.
    True learning is best achieved through lived
    experience.

41
Learning and Growth Potential
  • Rogers believed in the inherent actualizing or
    formative tendency in humans. Rogers believed
    people have the capacity to learn on a
    moment-to-moment basis.
  • Rogers actualizing tendency is similar to
    Adlers striving for superiority.

42
Conditions of Worth
  • The main two learned needs are the need for
    positive regard and the need for self-regard.
  • The baby begins developing a greater and greater
    consciousness of self. Most parents see this
    behavior in their children at about age two, when
    the childs favorite words become mine! and
    no.

43
Conditions of Worth
  • 2. The growing child develops a strong need for
    positive regard or approval. This need for
    positive regardto be prized and lovedbecomes so
    powerful that the child is almost always looking
    to caregivers and significant others for
    acceptance and approval.

44
Conditions of Worth
  • Children begin distinguishing between approved
    and disapproved feelings and actions. They sense
    and understand the conditions of worth present in
    their lives.
  • Children internalize caregivers appraisals.

45
  • A young girl loves to play aggresively with other
    boys and experiences disapproval from parents,
    she concludes
  • When I play aggresively Im bad. (negative self
    regard)
  • My parents dont like me (negative regard from
    others)
  • I dont like to play aggresively (denial of a
    desirable organismic experience)

46
Conditions of Worth
  • Over time, if children continually experience
    conditions of worth incongruous with their
    organismic values, a conflict may develop between
    their conscious, introjected values and their
    unconscious genuine values.

47
Conditions of Worth
  • When individuals are unaware of true selves and
    desires, psychopathology develops. A discrepancy
    occurs between real self and ideal self. Its
    known as incongruence.

48
Conditions of Worth
  • Individuals are capable of perception without
    awareness. This process is subception. In the
    case of subception, a person unconsciously
    perceives a threatening object or situation.

49
  • In sum, it emphasizes several concepts. It is the
    theory of self, experience, striving for
    maintenance and enhancement of the self, and
    learned needs of positive regard.

50
Theory of Psychopathology
  • Psychopathology can be a discrepancy between the
    real self and the ideal self.
  • As humans confront challenges in life they will
    misperceive, operate on mistaken beliefs, and
    behave inadequately. Dysfunctionality occurs if
    we fail to learn from feedback. Dysfunctionality
    is a failure to learn and change.

51
Theory of Psychopathology
  • The failure to learn from experience.
  • Person-centered therapists work so hard to help
    clients become open to learning from new
    experiences. Rigidity is considered the
    antithesis of psychological health. Rigidity
    impairs learning.

52
Theory of Psychopathology
  • Since every moment is an opportunity for new
    learning, avoiding or ignoring these moments is
    pathological.

53
Theory of Psychotherapy
  • Psychopathology stems from the individuals
    experience of judgment of the self by significant
    others.
  • A nonjudgmental atmosphere will facilitate
    psychological health.

54
Theory of Psychotherapy
  • The success of person-centered therapy depends on
    two fundamental factors
  • The therapist must trust the client.
  • The therapist must establish a certain type of
    relationship with the client. ? So, clients will
    be able to begin trusting themselves,
    experiencing greater personal development and
    psychological health.

55
Theory of Psychotherapy
  • It is related to Rogerss theory of personality.
    For constructive personality change, it is
    necessary for the following core conditions to
    exist
  • 1. Two persons are in psychological contact.
  • 2. The client is in a state of incongruence.
  • 3. The therapist is congruent in the
    relationship.

56
Theory of Psychotherapy
  • 4. The therapist experiences unconditional
    positive regard.
  • 5. The therapist experiences an empathic
    understanding.
  • 6. Communication of unconditional positive regard
    and empathic understanding is at least minimally
    achieved.

57
  • The therapist communicate
  • congruence,
  • unconditional positive regard,
  • and empathic understanding to the client.

58
Congruence
  • is defined as authenticity or transparency. The
    congruent therapist is real, open, and honest.
  • The more that the therapist can be genuine in
    the relationship, the more helpful it will be.
  • Therapists should acknowledge and express both
    positive and negative feelings within the context
    of the therapy relationship.
  • How would you describe congruence?

59
Unconditional Positive Regard
  • Acceptance, respect, or prizing
  • Valuing the client as a separate person or
    organism whose thoughts, feelings, beliefs, and
    entire being are openly accepted, without any
    conditions. If the therapist can accept clients
    completely, the clients can begin exploring who
    they really are and what they really want. By
    accepting clients, therapists lead clients to
    begin accepting themselves.

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Unconditional Positive Regard
  • This acceptance should extend to the
    moment-to-moment changes and inconsistencies
    manifested by clients during sessions.

61
Unconditional Positive Regard
  • At one moment the clients may identify only
    feelings of love and kindness toward someone, and
    at the next they may rage about the same person.
    To the person-centered therapist, both love and
    rage are important, valid, and equally worthy of
    attention. By simply listening and reflecting
    back both feelings, the therapist allows clients
    to accept whats been expressed.

62
Unconditional Positive Regard
  • How would you describe unconditional positive
    regard?

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Accurate Empathy or Empathic Understanding
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Accurate Empathy or Empathic Understanding
  • Noticing your clients feelings.
  • Entering into the clients world, seeing and
    experiencing what client sees and experiences.

65
  • Rogers shifts from using a second-person pronoun
    (When he left, you felt betrayed and alone) to
    using a first-person pronoun (he just up and
    left, and I felt betrayed and alone). This
    pronoun shift is referred to as walking within.

66
  • Kizilderili Atasözü
  • komsun hakkinda hüküm vermeden 
  • önce iki ay onun makosenleriyle yürü.

67
Empathy
  • has been most widely discussed and researched.
    Empathy is a prerequisite for therapy and a
    necessary condition.
  • Empathy is a multidimensional concept. Three
    components are commonly discussed in the
    literature

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  • Subjective empathy involves to identify with a
    client and imagine and experience what it is like
    to be a patient.
  • Interpersonal empathy occurs when you attempt the
    phenomenological experiencing of a client from an
    extended perspective.
  • Objective empathy involves using the
    observational data to understand the client.

69
THE PRACTICE OF PERSON-CENTERED THERAPY
  • two different types of person-centered
    therapists
  • The Classical person-centered therapist is highly
    nondirective, does not use assessment procedures,
    and does not establish any specific goals for
    clients.
  • The contemporary person-centered therapist is a
    more active and directive therapist.

70
The Practice of PCT A Way of Being With Clients
  • Assessment Issues and Procedures
  • Classical person-centered therapists dont employ
    standardized assessment or diagnostic procedures.
  • Contemporary person-centered approaches sometimes
    employ assessment procedures.

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The Practice of PCT A Way of Being With Clients
  • The Therapists Opening Statement
  • Clients can take the lead in determining what to
    talk about.
  • Example Anything youd like to tell me about
    yourself that will help me to know you better,
    Id be very glad to hear. (Rogers, 1963)

72
Experiencing and Expressing Congruence
  • This can be tricky.
  • How do you think therapists should experience and
    express congruence?

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Experiencing and Expressing Congruence
  • The basic question is If I am to be congruent,
    do I need to tell the client about my every
    thought and feeling?
  • The answer is No. Thats not to say that
    therapists should be too cautious about
    self-disclosing to clients.
  • The main aim of this openness is communicating
    helpful information to clients.

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  • A certain amount of censoring is necessary.
  • To use techniques in therapy is appropriate, but
    only when the techniques come up spontaneously,
    not when theyre preplanned.

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Experiencing and Expressing Unconditional
Positive Regard
  • This is also tricky.
  • It involves accepting clients as they are and
    avoiding judgments.
  • Is this possible?
  • How do you think you could experience and express
    unconditional positive regard?

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Experiencing and Expressing Unconditional
Positive Regard
  • Everyone is human and judges others.
  • The problem is how to best express positive
    regard. Would it be appropriate to say, I accept
    you completely and totally as the person you are
    or I prize and value your total being?

77
Experiencing and Expressing Unconditional
Positive Regard
  • Most therapists get themselves in trouble if they
    directly express unconditional positive regard to
    clients, for two reasons
  • 1.Expressing too much positive regard can be
    overwhelming to clients. Clients may react by
    wanting to break down therapy boundaries. Upon
    hearing such positive, loving statements they
    naturally seek more closeness, a friendship or
    romantic relationship. Some clients may react to
    direct expressions of affection with fear. These
    clients may try to expand the boundary between
    themselves and the therapist.

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Experiencing and Expressing Unconditional
Positive Regard
  • 2. Saying I care about you or I wont judge
    you can be viewed as unrealistic, especially if
    the therapist hasnt spent much time with the
    client and doesnt really know the client well.

79
Experiencing and Expressing Unconditional
Positive Regard
  • If its inappropriate to directly express
    unconditional positive regard to clients, how can
    therapists communicate this important message?
  • 1.by keeping appointments, and by listening
    sensitively.
  • 2.by allowing clients freedom to discuss
    themselves in their natural manner.

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Experiencing and Expressing Unconditional
Positive Regard
  • 3.by demonstrating that you hear and remember
    specific parts of a clients story.
  • 4.by responding with empathy to clients
    emotional pain and intellectual conflicts.
  • 5.clinical experience and research both indicate
    that clients are sensitive to an interviewers
    intentions. By making an effort to accept and
    respect your clients.

81
Experiencing and Expressing Empathic Understanding
  • Person-centered therapists do not believe its
    possible for one individual to directly know and
    experience another individuals feelings. As with
    unconditional positive regard, what appears
    important regarding empathy is not that
    therapists perfectly experience and express
    empathy, but that they try their best to do so.

82
Experiencing and Expressing Empathic
Understanding
  • Entering and becoming at home in the clients
    personal perceptual world.
  • Being sensitive from moment to moment with the
    clients changing meanings and emotions.
  • Temporarily living, and moving in the clients
    life.
  • Sensing deep meanings, but not uncovering
    feelings that are too far out of awareness.

83
Entering and Becoming at Home in the Clients
Private Perceptual World
  • Entering the clients private world requires
    preparation. You need to be open to feeling what
    the client feels and willing to ask the empathy
    question
  • How would I feel if I were _____ and saying
    these things?
  • The procedures employed to enter the clients
    world include reflection of feelings, empathic
    exploration, and clarification.

84
Being Sensitive from Moment to Moment with the
Clients Changing Meanings and Emotions
  • Moment-to-moment sensitivity requires focused
    attention to your clients changing way of being.
    In his emotion-focused therapy, Greenberg
    recommends focusing on meaning associated with
    the clients verbalizations.

85
Temporarily Living, and Moving in the Clients
Life
  • To reside in another persons life is serious
    business. Rogers says to do this temporarily.
  • Your goal is to have one foot inside the world of
    the client and one foot planted in your own
    world.

86
Temporarily Living, and Moving in the Clients
Life
  • Martin Buber, existantialist, referred to this
    sort of relationship experience as an I-Thou
    relationship, and he emphasized that its
    impossible to constantly maintain such a
    relationship.

87
Sensing Deep Meanings, but not Uncovering
Feelings That Are Too Far out of Awareness
  • Rogers talked about working on the edge of his
    clients consciousness. As a person-centered
    therapist moving about within your clients
    world, if you have an impulse to tell a client
    about something outside of his or her awareness,
    its best to hold your tongue. Your main job is
    to follow the clients lead, not to walk your own
    path.

88
  • PCT has been integrated with other therapies.
    These include
  • Motivational interviewing
  • Emotion-focused therapy
  • Nondirective play therapy

89
Motivational Interviewing
  • was developed by William R. Miller. In his work
    with problem drinkers, Miller discovered that
    structured behavioral treatments were no more
    effective than an encouragement-based control
    group. He concluded that reflective listening and
    empathy were crucial in producing positive
    treatment effects with problem drinkers, and
    began his development of motivational
    interviewing.
  • MI builds on person-centered principles by adding
    more focused therapeutic targets and specific
    client goals.

90
  • Focusing on Client Ambivalence (primary target of
    MI)
  • Their four central principles of MI flow from
    their conceptualization of Rogerss approach.
    According to these principles, it is the
    therapists job to
  • Use reflective listening skills to express
    empathy for the clients message.

91
Motivational Interviewing
  • Notice and develop the theme of discrepancy
    between the clients deep values and current
    behavior.
  • Meet client resistance with reflection rather
    than confrontation.
  • Enhance client self-efficacy by focusing on
    optimism, confidence that change is possible, and
    small interventions that are likely to be
    successful.

92
Cultural and Gender Considerations
  • Empowering of all persons, including women.
  • Designed to address the needs and interests of
    unique clients.
  • Too indirect for some cultures, but actually
    could be too direct (focusing on self and
    emotions) in other cases.

93
Evidence-Based Status
  • Rogers was the first to record his sessions.
  • Rogers studied client-centered relationship
    variables in the treatment of 16 hospitalized
    schizophrenics. The patients made little progress
    in PCT. But, patients who rated their therapists
    as higher empathy, warmth and genuineness had
    shorter hospital stays than patients who rated
    their therapists as less degree of empathy,
    warmth and genuineness.

94
Evidence-Based Status II
  • Recent research on the effectiveness of PCT has
    yielded small, but positive results.
  • PCT is consistently more effective than no
    treatment.
  • It is more effective than placebo treatment.
  • It is less effective than structured cognitive
    and behavioral treatments.

95
Concluding Comments
  • It may be that at least in some cases, the person
    of the therapist and the attitudes of the
    therapist holds are more important than specific
    problems or techniques.

96
from Lao-tse
  • If I keep from meddling with people, they take
    care of themselves,
  • If I keep from commanding people, they behave
    themselves,
  • If I keep from preaching at people, they improve
    themselves,
  • If I keep from imposing on people, they become
    themselves.

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