Quote:
Originally Posted by Bill3
Therapists are often in situations where it seems that there are two (or a few) possible answers and all have antitherapeutic drawbacks. Rather than give an antitherapeutic answer, the therapist can make a process comment. For example, the T could have said something along the lines of It matters deeply to you what I think of you; I feel a little like I am being put on the spot; I am touched that you noticed the depth of my feelings; etc.
I don't think that the question was manipulative. I see it as a genuine expression of the feelings that growlithing experiences, feelings that the T must be able to address therapeutically.
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I certainly didn't mean for the question to be manipulative. I didn't give it too much thought and that's just what I said. I could believe that maybe the question threw her off guard because the image clearly did make her feel something.
I didn't mean a letter in the sense that I'd rip it out and send it to her. She'd read it out of my own little book and give it back.