¶ … Theoretical Orientation
My personal orientation lies in Gestalt (Fritz Perls), Person Centered (Carl Rogers) and Reality Therapy (William Glasser) psychotherapy.
What do you see as the time frame of counseling? Are you more oriented to the past, present, or future?
I am oriented to present; however, I believe that many problems can come from the past. Therefore, the past must be discussed at some point.
To take this a step further, do you believe counseling is intended to work on current issues and feelings or to help people with issues and feelings from the past? Or, do you believe that people need to focus on their future feelings, thoughts and behaviors.
I believe people should focus on their current issues first. However, every individual are different. Therefore, therapy should be aim at individuals' need.
B.
What is your view of people? Do you believe people are essentially good, bad, or neutral? I believe people can be essentially good
Do you believe clients are good people with issues to work out? Generally yes.
Conversely, are your clients bad people with an inherent defect that requires counseling? Are people somewhere in between, such as good people that do bad things?
Clients are all sorts of people with many different problems that requires counseling
C.
Who is in charge? Is the counselor in charge of the therapy or is the role shared equally with the client? Counselor can be in charge first, then the role can be shared equally
If the role is shared, how much of it belongs to the client and how much belongs to the counselor? If the counselor is in charge, how is that established? How do you view your role as a counselor? Are you an expert, consultant, or friend? Gestalt therapists wear a number of different "hats" in a therapeutic relationship, varying from time to time and over time as the needs of the client change.
D.
What do you want the client to learn? Is the emphasis of counseling to gain insight, action, or both? Both.
Are you comfortable with clients leaving counseling with insight about their behaviors and feelings? Yes
Do you pay attention to thoughts, feelings, behaviors, or all of them? All of them
Next, students will describe their emerging theoretical orientation and describe:
a)
The rationale for choosing the theory including key points of the theory as applied to a hypothetical client of your choosing.
The selection of gestalt theory as conceptualized by Fritz Perls, person-centered therapy as articulated by Carl Rogers and William Glasser's Reality Therapy was based on their respective strengths (as discussed further below) as well as their basis in forming my personal counseling orientation. The respective theoretical concepts and ideas that are unique to these theories are applied to a hypothetical client below.
b)
Theoretical concepts / ideas unique to the theory. The hypothetical client of interest for this case paper is a 61-year-old Vietnam combat veteran named "Brad" (not his real name), a medically retired staff sergeant with several physical disabilities as well as posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Brad's physical disabilities include a severe traumatic brain injury, fused right ankle and fractured right femur (which shortened his right left 1-1/2 inches), and a shortened left femur (performed to even his leg lengths to treat his back pain) and several associated orthopedic comorbidities that adversely affect his quality of life.
Over the years, Brad has experienced many of the events that characterize the lives of returning combat veterans, including problems with substance abuse, maintaining relationships (he has been married three times), some encounters with the law enforcement and criminal justice communities (two DUIs when he was younger after his divorces) and suicide ideations from time to time. Although he is still employed full time as an accountant, Brad reports increasing difficulties remaining at his desk for lengthy periods of time because of back problems and a stiff neck. At this point in his life, Brad is seeking help with his physical limitations as well as in maintaining his current relationship with his wife, children and grandchildren. In addition, Brad is concerned about his periodic suicidal thoughts. Taken together, Brad presents with a complex set of circumstances that requires a specialized approach to therapy as described further below.
Gestalt (Fritz Perls). According to Shane (2005), Fritz Perls developed gestalt therapy I collaboration with his wife, Laura, and Paul Goodman. The gestalt therapy conceptualized by Perls and his colleagues involves the interactions that take place between different levels of conscious and unconscious. For therapeutic interventions, these interactions optimally assume the form of recalling...
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