Clients come to therapy because their inner self or their relationship feels like it is withered and dying, like a fallow garden.
So many of
my clients come to therapy to investigate how they feel about their partners, to evaluate if they are in a relationship that is healthy and loving, and to explore whether their relationship can stand the test of time.
Many of
my clients come to therapy seeking relief from a traumatic experience.
«Over the past 20 years I have learned that
my clients come to therapy to be heard, understood, and to make sense of the complicated issues and relationships in their lives.
Often times,
clients come to therapy and complain about their partners.
I tailor treatment to each individual client, as
each client comes to therapy with their own unique background, strengths, resiliency, and needs.
Not exact matches
I also fear that
clients who think their abuse will be reported will be reluctant
to come to therapy at all.
Coming from a tradition of Contextual Family
Therapy, Attachment Theory and Neuropsychology, the RT model keeps both therapist and
clients organized
to make sound systemic changes in individuals and relationships.
I also have a more holistic approach
to working out too; I train my
clients with a bit of spiritual
therapy, which isn't about just
coming for physical training but mind and spirit training as well.»
I realized that I started having
to hold my tongue when talking
to my
clients about their fitness goals because they were
coming to me
to tone up their so - called trouble areas — not
to have a
therapy session.
Being an alternate healer, I have incorporated my newly acquired knowledge into my practice, and use it
to help my patients /
clients, whether they
come for health coaching, life coaching, Reiki, weight management, or multi-radiance
therapy.
After completion of this training, participants have
come away equipped with the tools and resources
to confidently provide value - added offerings and resources for their
clients and students, and have a deep and broad understanding of how the thyroid is supporting using integrative and holistic
therapies.
For example, if both parties are, and have been, in
therapy and are consistently communicating clearly with one another, a Coach may not be absolutely necessary (although I believe a Coach is almost always advisable because it is impossible
to predict exactly what may
come up in the divorce discussions and the
clients will be triggered by what
comes up) if the
clients legitimately can not afford
to cover the Coach's fees.
In this interview, she discusses how she
came to the profession, the various trauma
therapy technologies she uses with
clients, and how...
Between - session tasks:
Clients never
come to therapy just
to feel good for the hour they are in the therapists» office.
Therapy clients who
come to my sessions are often comfortable because I reflect calmness, compassion, creativity, and connectedness.
«I believe that my
clients possess the strengths and competencies that they need in order
to fulfill their goals before they even
come to therapy.
«My
clients come to me because they are suffering from anxiety, depression or relationship issues despite all they have tried before, sometimes even
therapy.
«I
come from a strength based approach, believing each individual, no matter what the circumstance and current struggles, has unique gifts and purpose in this world.Therefore, I start the
therapy process by
coming alongside my
clients and working
to build trust with compassionate listening without judgement, in order
to find out what goals are important and collaboratively developing a plan
to reach those goals.
We offer short and long term
therapy for
clients who
come to us with a wide range of issues.
My ideal
client is one
comes to therapy understanding that change will be essential for healing and growth.»
- Ever had a
client who
came to therapy of their own volition, but then becomes taciturn and suspicious when you try
to engage?
I want you
to feel really comfortable about the decision, and also the person that you're going
to be seeing.So,
to give you some ideas on how we work with our DC
therapy clients, people will
come in and we'll typically do a lot of listening and a lot of question asking.
«I prefer
to work with a
client who will
come to sessions even when it is challenging
to do so and allow the
therapy relationship
to open up space for safe exploration of the realities of life, ways
to cope with reality, and improve spiritual and mental strength.
From play
therapy for grief
to play
therapy for autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and even play
therapy for children in military families, this book has targeted exercises for any problem a
client might
come in for.
CBT is a goal - oriented
therapy in which the
client comes to the therapist with problems that they need help resolving.
«PLEASE NOTE: I am no longer taking new
clients; if you are an established
client looking
to come back
to therapy, please contact me.»
I was initially trained
to believe that
therapy was a long - term proposition and that
clients needed
to come for years
to benefit from it.
Especially with
clients who
come in with serious anxiety and depression problems, I've begun
to put aside my idealized view that unless people overcome their difficulties once and for all,
therapy is somehow a failure.
After seeing a
client session after session, week after week, it's a good possibility that the
therapy will
come to a point where it feels like progress has stalled.
I couldn't see a way
to bring a citizen dimension into
therapy without «changing the subject» when
clients came to sessions with personal concerns or environmental stresses — this despite the fact that in another part of my career I'd been engaging fellow community members in social - action projects.
So this video is a great way for me
to introduce
to you who we are, how we work with our
clients, and also give you some idea of what
to expect when you
come to therapy.
She has
come to the work of Expressive Arts
Therapy later in her career and has found a new joy in the work of healing and support both personally and with
clients.
I enjoy working with
clients to create a hopeful perspective that can
come from understanding their own values, and I often rely on acceptance and commitment
therapy to facilitate the process.
«I understand how difficult it is
to come into
therapy and which is why it is so important for me
to build a safe and trusting relationship with my
clients.»
Layne sees
client when
clients can actually
come to therapy — so she has both daytime and evening appointments available.
Often, the issues that bring
clients to therapy took years
to build up, but when
clients can start
to observe patterns in their lives and learn skills
to move differently in their interactions, they will certainly notice improvement that
comes from effective
therapy.
«My
clients come to me because they are struggling and feel trapped with their problems and no matter what they have tried (and many have tried
therapy before) they can't pull themselves out of the repetitive difficult times.
As a systems therapist, incest survivor, and recovering alcoholic, I've lived through several stages of our culture's attempt
to come to terms with child sexual abuse — as a victim in the silent 1950s; as a
therapy client in the oblivious 1960s and 1970s; and as a psychotherapist in the 1980s and 1990s, when once - dismissed accounts of abuse filled my
therapy practice (and my television screen) only
to be partly discredited within the decade during another swing of the cultural pendulum.
Sometimes
clients come in with an unclear idea of what they want from
therapy, and there is only so much a therapist can do
to clarify what the goals are if they are unclear
to the
client.
The therapists often provide coaching
to international
clients, and those who live away from Oklahoma City, if they aren't yet able
to physically
come to the offices for
therapy for various reasons.
About Amanda: Amanda understands the vulnerability and courage it takes
to start the work of
therapy and she is honored
to come alongside her
clients as they move towards hope and healing.
Using rational emotive behavior
therapy (REBT),
clients learn
to identify what isn't working for them, and
come up with a new set of directions
to get where they want
to be.
I also recommend when it
comes to therapy, that
clients give it around four sessions before deciding (unless something occurs that is inappropriate or really uncomfortable).
My
client is a Thai massage therapist who found a great space for her business and needed help designing it... that's where I
came in... creating a flowing furniture placement (including a meditation area, a massage
therapy area, and an area for her
client + her
to chat before the session), plus finding new items for her
to incorporate in her new space with furniture / accessories that she already owned.