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Old Jun 18, 2012, 01:47 AM
KazzaX KazzaX is offline
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Member Since: Mar 2011
Posts: 852
Through 20 years experience I would say that the mystery lies in the methods that the T uses to coax information out of you. They aren't allowed to talk about it to you (I tried talking about it many times, I think its like they are giving the game plan away if they tell you - thats the impression I got). They say just the appropriate thing at the appropriate time and it leads you to give them the sort of emotional reaction they are looking for, so they can get the information they need. EG. if they want to know how you feel about a certain situation and you wont tell them, they say certain things to get you to break down into an emotional mess and they get aaaallll the info they need from that! They don't do it just for kicks - its what they are trained to do and that is how the therapy works. They then use that information to help you deal with whatever it is you are dealing with.

If you read psychotherapy casebooks (I had somewhat of an addiction to these in university, lol, not sure why) they are FULL to the brim with these "mysterious" methods. They explain them in detail and they do make a lot of sense. But the idea I get out of it is if the client knows in advance, they lose their effectiveness. You can't give the game plan away or else the client can put a defense up and then the gameplan is useless.

I used to love reading the casebooks from the 1930s and 40s - WOW they had a lot of nutty ideas back then. The ones from the 90s onwards were a bit more down to the planet earth (thank god) lol
Thanks for this!
SoupDragon