
Feb 03, 2013, 04:48 PM
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Member Since: Dec 2012
Location: California
Posts: 2,248
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Anne2.0
This type of therapy has been around since the 50's. At its core, this just means that you reflect back to people what they say to you and make sure you have understood them and that they hear you. My friends in clinical psychology school learned this first, and they got super annoying practicing it on the rest of us, as to me at least, someone repeating, "what I hear you saying is . . . . " makes me want to smack them, after about 3 iterations of this. I have interviewed T's who seemed to only have this trick up their sleeve, and they couldn't even restate what I'd said properly. Fail and fail.
Like any T approach, it's not the be-all-end-all of therapy. I wouldn't strive, if I were in T school, to make this my one trick pony.
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I believe PC therapy is much more nuanced and complex than just reflecting, is not covered well in overview courses. PC therapy isn't just a technique, it has an entire view of the person and the process. I agree with you that some people/therapists see PC therapy as simply reflecting, and that gets very old very quickly.
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