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Existential%20Therapy

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Existential Therapy Activity Break into four groups Each group will receive lyrics to an existential song Read through the lyrics and as a group, decide how the ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Existential%20Therapy


1
Existential Therapy
2
Activity
  • Break into four groups
  • Each group will receive lyrics to an
    existential song
  • Read through the lyrics and as a group, decide
    how the song could be integrated into a
    therapeutic session
  • What type of client (age, presenting problem,
    etc.) would this song work best with?
  • How could the song encourage the client to change
    or focus on existential problems?
  • Do you think integrating music into existential
    therapy would be beneficial?

3
Role of the Therapist
  • To develop an authentic, honest, and mutually
    open therapist-client relationship
  • Help the client distinguish distortion from
    reality
  • Confront client when necessary
  • Use modeling and self-disclosure when appropriate
  • Offer ones own feelings to identify the clients
    contribution to his or her life predicament
  • Focus on themes that are part of the human
    condition encourage clients to make
    life-changing decisions (Corey, 2009)
  • To help uncover and appreciate the existential
    implications of decisions (Yalom, 1981)
  • According to May et al. (1958), being fully
    present is the most important role of the
    therapist in existential therapy

4
Role of the Therapist Death
  • Death is a major source of anxiety in
    psychotherapy It is the therapists role in
    situations where death anxiety is present to not
    focus entirely on pain alleviation, but instead
    to work through and discuss the situation and
    anxiety further (May Yalom, n.d.)
  • May (1977) stated that it is the therapists task
    to reduce anxiety to tolerable levels and then
    use that anxiety constructively
  • Increase everyday patients awareness of
    personal finiteness (May Yalom, n.d.)
  • write their own obituary
  • focus on milestones like birthdays or
    anniversaries
  • Focus on major life events like serious illness,
    retirement, commitment or separation from a
    relationship

5
Role of the Therapist Existential Isolation
  • It is the therapists role to help the client
    confront isolation
  • Self-enforced isolation
  • Guide the client to realize both the rewards and
    limits to isolation

6
Role of the Therapist Meaningless
  • To help reflect upon and understand ones
    existence (Corey, 2009)
  • Must attend to the overall focus and direction of
    the patients life
  • Help self-centered clients develop concern for
    others (esp. in groups)
  • Help clients become engaged (I.e. projects,
    ideas, others, etc)
  • Explore with the client obstacles that are
    preventing them from engaging in life, keeping
    them from enjoying work, blocking them from
    loving others, etc

7
Strengths of Existential Therapy
  • Primary applications in individual therapy
    however, various existential themes may be
    applied to other settings (i.e. couples therapy,
    group therapy, family therapy, etc) (May Yalom,
    n.d.)
  • New, positive understanding of once negatively
    viewed feelings (anxiety, frustration, isolation,
    etc.) (Corey, 2009)
  • Therapist is seen as a mentor more than an
    authority (Van Deurzen, 2002)
  • Can easily be integrated into many other
    theoretical orientations with different
    cultures (Corey, 2009)
  • Focus on universal human problems (Corey, 2009)
  • Can borrow techniques from other therapies
    (Corey, 2009)
  • The client is the center focus (Corey, 2009)

8
Limitations of Existential Therapy
  • Training is difficult to become an existential
    therapist, involves more than just mastery of
    knowledge (Van Deurzen, 2002)
  • Not useful in most short-term therapies, although
    some approaches may be incorporated (May Yalom,
    n.d.)
  • Therapy process and outcomes are not easily
    quantifiable (Cooper, 2003), limited amount of
    research to study its effectiveness (Corey,
    2009)
  • No well-developed set of techniques (Corey, 2009)
  • Concepts considered more philosophical, making it
    difficult to apply by some therapists (Corey,
    2009)

9
Case Study - Yalom (1981)
  • A 46-year-old mother accompanied the youngest of
    her four children to the airport, from which he
    departed for college. She had spent the last 26
    years rearing her children and longing for this
    day. No more impositions, no more incessantly
    living for others, no more cooking dinners and
    picking up clothes. Finally she was free.
  • Yet as she said good-bye she unexpectedly began
    sobbing loudly, and on the way home from the
    airport a deep shudder passed through her body.
    It is only natural, she thought. It was only
    the sadness of saying good-bye to someone she
    loved very much. But it was much more than that
    and the shudder soon turned into raw anxiety.
  • How would an existentially oriented counselor
    work with this client? What would the therapist
    focus on?

10
References
  • Cooper, M. (2003). Existential therapies. London
    Sage.
  • Corey, G. (2009). Case approach to counseling
    psychotherapy (7th Ed). Thomson Higher Education.
    Belmont, CA.
  • Corey, G. (2009). Theory and practice of
    counseling and psychotherapy (8th Ed). Thomson
    Higher Education. Belmont, CA.
  • May, R. (1977). The meaning of anxiety (rev.
    ed.). New York Norton.
  • May, R., Angel, E., Ellenberger, H. (Eds.).
    (1958). Existence A new dimension in psychiatry
    and psychology. New York Basic Books.
  • May, R., Yalom, I. (n.d.) Existential
    psychotherapy. Current Psychotherapies. 1-38.
  • Van Deurzen, E. (2002). Existential therapy. In
    Q. Dryden (Ed.), Handbook of individual therapy
    (4th ed., pp. 179-208). London Sage.
  • Yalom, I. (1981). Existential psychotherapy. New
    York Basic Books.
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