Psychoanalytic & Client-Centered Approaches

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    A Report on

    The Psychoanalytic Approach

    & The Client-Centered Approach

    In Partial Fulfillment

    Of the Requirements

    In Basic Guidance and Counseling Techniques

    Submitted to:

    Cynthia S. Alpas, DM-HRM

    Submitted by:

    James Franklin L. Chin, RN

    Submitted on:

    May 9, 2010

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    SIGMUND FREUDS PSYCHOANALYTIC THEORY

    Psychoanalysis a personality theory, a philosophical system, and a method of psychotherapy.

    Psychoanalytic Therapy the first system psychotherapy.

    - 1st of the 3 major schools of psychology- 2nd being behaviorism- 3rd being existential-humanistic psychology

    Major Historical Contributions:

    1. An individuals mental life can be understood, and the insights into human nature canbe applied to alleviate some human suffering.

    2. Human behavior is often governed by unconscious factors.3. Early childhood development has a profound effect on adult functioning.4. This theory has provided a meaningful framework for understanding the ways in which

    an individual attempts to cope with anxiety by postulating mechanisms to avoid

    becoming engulfing in anxiety.

    5. This theory offers ways of tapping the unconscious through the analysis of dreams,resistances, and transferences.

    Structure of Personality

    1. Id biological component, PLEASURE- Original system of personality.- Primary source of psychic energy and the seat of instincts.- Lacks organization; blind, demanding, and insistent.- Cant tolerate tension; it functions to discharge tension immediately and return

    to a homeostatic condition.- Aimed at reducing tension, avoiding pain, and gaining pleasure.- Illogical, amoral, and driven by one consideration: to satisfy instinctual needs.- Never matures but remains the spoiled brat of personality.- Does not think but only wishes or acts.- Unconscious

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    2. Ego psychological component REALITY- Contact with the external world of reality.- Executive of personality that governs, controls, and regulates.- Principal job is to mediate between the instincts and the surrounding

    environment.- Controls consciousness and exercises censorship.- Does realistic and logical thinking and formulates plans of action for satisfying

    needs.

    - Seat of intelligence and rationality that checks and controls the blind impulses ofthe id.

    - Id knows only subjective reality whereas the ego distinguishes between mentalimages and things in the external world.

    3. Superego social component- Moral, judicial, branch of personality.- A persons moral code, the main concern being whether action is good or bad,

    right or wrong.

    - Represents the ideal rather than the real, and strives not for pleasure but forperfection.

    - Represents the traditional values and ideals of society as they are handed downfrom parents to children.

    - Functions to inhibit the id impulses, to persuade the ego to substitute moralisticgoals for realistic ones, and to strive for perfection.

    - Internalization of the standards of parents and society, is related to psychologicalrewards and punishments.

    Rewards = feelings of pride and self-love Punishments = feelings of guilt and inferiority

    VIEW OF HUMAN NATURE

    Human Nature is essentially pessimistic, deterministic, mechanistic, and reductionistic.

    Human beings are determined by irrational forces, unconscious motivations, biological and

    instinctual needs and drives, and psychosexual events during the first five years of life.

    -energy systems

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    Orthodox Freudian view, the dyanamics of personality consists of the ways in which psychic

    energy is distributed to the id, ego, and superego. Since the amount of energy is limited, one

    system gains control over the available energy at the expense of the other two systems.

    Role of Instincts

    y All instinct are innate and biologicaly He stressed the sexual instincts and the aggressive impulses.y All human behavior desires to gain pleasure and avoid pain.y Human have both life instincts and death instincts.y The goal of all life is death; life is but a roundabout way to death.

    CONSCIOUSNESS AND UNCONSCIOUSNESS

    Clinical evidence for postulating the concept of the unconscious:

    1. Dreams symbolic representations of unconscious needs, wishes, and conflicts.2. Slips of the tongue & forgetting3. Post-hypnotic suggestions4. Material derived from free association techniques5. Material derived from protective techniques

    Consciousness a thin slice of the total mind.

    Unconsciousness out of awareness, stores up all experiences, memories, and repressed

    material. Also needs and motivations that are inaccessible; it influences behavior.

    Unconscious processes are the roots of all dorms of neurotic symptoms and behaviors.

    A cure is based on uncovering the meaning of symptoms, the causes of behavior, and the

    repressed materials that interfere with healthy functioning.

    AIM: to make the unconscious motives conscious, for only when one becomes conscious of

    motivations can one exercise choice.

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    ANXIETY

    y State of tension that motivates us to do something.y Function: to warn of impending danger.

    3 Kinds of Anxiety:

    1. Reality Anxiety the fear of danger from the external world.2. Neurotic Anxiety the fear that the instincts will get out of hand and cause one to do

    something for which one will be punished.

    3. Moral Anxiety the fear of ones own conscience.

    EGO-DEFENSE MECHANISMS

    THERAPEUTIC PROCESS

    Goal of Analytic Therapy: to reform the individuals character structure by making the

    unconscious conscious in the client.

    y Past experiences are reconstructed, discussed, analyzed, and interpreted with the aimof personality reconstruction.

    y Emphasizes the affective dimension of making the unconscious known.

    THE THERAPISTS FUNCTION AND ROLE

    Characteristics:

    y Remains anonymousy Engages in very little sharing of his or her own feelings and experiences.y Establish a working relationshipy Do a lot of listening and interpreting

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    y Pays particular attention to resistance of the patienty Listens for gaps and inconsistencies in the clients storyy Infers the meaning of the clients reported dreams and free-associatingy Carefully observes the client during therapy sessiony Remains sensitive to clues concerning the clients feelings toward the analyst

    Concerns:

    y mainly with assisting the client in achieving self-awareness, honesty, and more effectivepersonal relationships

    y in dealing with anxiety in a realistic wayy in gaining control over impulsive and irrational behavior.

    THE CLIENTS EXPEREINCE IN THERAPY

    y Intensive and long term therapy processy Several times weeklyy For 3-5 yearsy Last an houry Lies on the couchy Free associationy Agreement with paying fees, attending sessions at a certain time, and making a

    commitment to an intensive process.

    Stages:

    y Developing a growing relationship with the analysty Experiencing treatment crisisy Gaining insight into his/her past and unconscious

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    y Developing resistances to learning more about himself/herselfy Developing a transference relationship with the analysty Deepening the therapyy Working through the resistances and uncovered materialy Termination of therapy

    THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THERAPIST AND CLIENT

    Transference allows the client to attribute to the therapist unfinished business from the

    clients past relationships with significant people.

    Treatment process involves the clients reconstruction and reliving the past.

    Hostile feelings = negative transference

    Falling in love, wish to be adopted, seek love, acceptance, and approval = positive transference

    Countertransference can consist feelings of dislike or excessive attachment and

    involvement.

    APPLICATION: THERAPEUTIC TECHNIQUES AND PROCEDURE

    Techniques:

    y Geared to increasing awarenessy Gaining intellectual insights into the cleints behaviory Understanding the meanings of symptoms

    5 basic techniques of psychoanalytic approach:

    o Free Association Central technique

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    A method of recalling past experiences and of discharging the emotionsassociated with past traumatic situations, known as catharsis.

    The analyst instructs the client to clear his mind of day-to-day thoughts andpreoccupations and, as much as possible, to say whatever comes to mind,

    regardless of how painful, silly, trivial, illogical, or irrelevant it may be.

    The analyst task is to identify the repressed material that is locked in theunconscious.

    o Interpretation Basic procedure used in analyzing free associations, dreams, resistances and

    transferences.

    The analyst points out, explains, and even teaches the client the meanings ofbehavior that is manifested by dreams, free associations, resistances and the

    therapeutic relationship itself.

    Function: to allow the ego to assimilate new material and to speed up the process of

    uncovering further unconscious material.

    General rule:

    (1) It should be presented at a point where the phenomenon to be interpreted is

    close to the clients conscious awareness.

    (2) It should always start from the surface and go only as deep as the client is able to

    go while experiencing the situation emotionally.

    (3) It is best to point out a resistance or defense before interpreting the emotion or

    conflict that lies beneath the resistance or defense.

    o Dream Analysis Important procedure for uncovering unconscious material and giving the patient

    an insight into some areas of unresolved problems.

    Dreams royal road to the unconscious2 levels of content:

    i. Latent Content consists of the disguised, hidden, symbolic, andunconscious motives.

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    ii. Manifest Content - the dream as it appears to the dreamer.Dream work the process by which the latent content of a dream is

    transformed into the less threatening manifest content.

    o Analysis of ResistanceResistance a fundamental concept to the practice of psychoanalysis, is anything that

    works against the progress of the therapy and prevents the client from producing

    unconscious material.

    - Unconscious dynamic that attempted to defend the person againstintolerable anxiety.

    o Analysis of Transference- A central technique in psychoanalysis for it allows the client to relive

    his/her past in therapy.

    - Enables the client to achieve insight into the nature of his/herfixations and deprivations, and it provides an understanding of the

    influence of the past as it relates to present functioning.

    CARL ROGERS CLIENT-CENTERED THEORY

    Client-Centered Therapy based on a subjective view of human experiencing, it places more

    faith in and gives more responsibility to the client in dealing with problems.

    - A specialized branch of humanistic therapy that highlights theexperiencing of a client and his/her subjective and phenomenal

    world.

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    - Puts great faith in the clients capacity to lead the way in therapy anfind his/her own direction.

    The therapist functions mainly as a facilitator of personal growth by helping the client discover

    his/her own capacities for solving problems.

    VIEW OF HUMAN NATURE

    o Rejects the concept of the individuals basic negative tendencies.o Sees people as socialized and forward-moving, as striving to become fully functioning,

    and as having at the deepest core a positive goodness.

    o Rejects the concept of therapists as the authority who knows best and that of thepassive client who merely follows the dictates of the therapist.

    Characteristics:

    o Focuses on the clients responsibility and capacity to discover ways to more fullyencounter reality.

    o Emphasizes the phenomenal world of the client.o The client experiences psychotherapeutic growth in and through the relationship with

    another person who helps the client do what the client cannot do alone.

    o Not a set of techniques, nor is it a dogma.

    THE THERAPEUTIC PROCESS

    THERAPEUTIC GOALS

    y Basic Goal: To provide a climate conductive to helping the individual become a fullyfunctioning person.

    Characteristics:

    1. Openness to Experiencea. Entails seeing reality without distorting it to fit a preconceived self-structure.

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    b. Implies becoming more aware of reality as it exists outside oneself.c. Means that ones beliefs are not rigid; one can remain open to further

    knowledge and growth and can tolerate ambiguity. One has an awareness of

    oneself in the present moment and the capacity to experience oneself in fresh

    ways.

    2. Trust in Ones Organisma. As clients become more open to their experiences, their sense of trust in self

    begins to emerge.

    3. An Internal Locus of Evaluationa. Looking more to oneself for the answers to the problems of existence.b. One substitutes self-approval for the universal approval of others.c. One decides ones own standards of behavior and looks to oneself for the

    decisions and choices to live by.

    4. Willingness to Be a Processa. Growth is a continuing process.b. The therapist does not choose specific goals for the client, but the client have

    the capacity to define and clarify their own goals.

    THE THERAPISTS FUNCTIONS AND ROLE

    Role: rooted in his/her ways of being and attitudes, not in the implementation of techniques

    designed to get the client to do something.

    The therapists role is to be without roles.

    Function: to establish a therapeutic climate that facilitates the clients growth along a process

    continuum

    Through the therapists attitudes of genuine caring, respect, acceptance, and understanding,

    the client is able to loosen his/her defenses and rigid perceptions and move to a higher level of

    personal functioning.

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    6 Conditions for personality changes:

    1. Two persons are in psychological contact.2. The first, whom we shall term the client, is in a state of incongruence, being vulnerable

    or anxious.

    3. The second person, whom shall term the therapist, is congruent or integrated in therelationship.

    4. The therapist experiences unconditional positive regard for the client.5. The therapist experiences an empathic understanding of the clients internal frame of

    reference and endeavors to communicate this experience to the client.

    6. The communication to the client of the therapists empathic understanding andunconditional positive regard is to a minimal degree achieved.

    3 Personal Characterisctics/Attitudes of the Therapist:

    1. Congruence implies that the therapist is real, genuine, integrated, and authenticduring therapeutic hour.

    Client-centered therapy does stress the value of nonexploitive, authentic, personal

    relationship and the potential value of open and honest feedback when meaningful

    communication is blocked. It also stresses that counseling will be inhibited if the

    counselor feels one way about the client but acts in a different way.

    2. Unconditional Positive Regarda. A deep and genuine caring for the client as a person.b. It is not an attitude of Ill accept you when; rather, it is one of Ill accept you

    as you are.

    c. Acceptance is the recognition of the clients right to have feelings; it is not theapproval of all behavior.

    3. Accurate Emphatic UnderstandingAim:

    y to encourage the client to get closer to himself/herselfy to experience feelings more deeply and intenselyy to recognize and resolve the incongruity that exists within the client.

    Empathy more than a mere reflection of feeling.

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    - Deep and subjective understanding of the client with the client.Teachers Can Make a Difference (1973)

    1. Discover what the teacher wants and strive to please the teacher.2. Never question the teachers authority.3. Learning is the result of external motivation.4. Learners should always search for the one right answer.5. Learners should be passive.6. Learning should is a product rather than a process.7. School learning is separate from living.8. The self is ignored in education.9. Learners are objects, not persons.10.Feelings are not important in education.11.Teachers ought to keep at a distance from students.12.Schools teach us to be dishonest.13.Students are not to be trusted.

    CONTRIBUTIONS:

    - Emphasizes active listening- Respecting the client- Adopting the internal frame of reference of the client- Staying with the client as opposed to getting ahead of the client with interpretations

    PERIODS OF DEVELOPMENT

    1. Period 1 (1940-1950) Nondirective psychotherapya. This approach emphazised the therapists creation of a permissive and

    noninterventive climate.

    b. Acceptance and Clarification2. Period 2 (1950-1957) Reflective psychotherapy

    a. A client was able to develop a greater degree of congruence between self-concept and ideal self-concept.

    3. Period 3 (1957-1970) Experiental therapya. Therapy focuses on the clients experiencing and the expression of the

    therapists experiencing.

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    b. The client grows on a continuum by learning to use immediate experiencing.