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Old Oct 02, 2014, 09:55 PM
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Lauliza Lauliza is offline
Grand Magnate
 
Member Since: Nov 2009
Location: United States
Posts: 3,231
Quote:
Originally Posted by Partless View Post
Regarding this part, I was trying to find a thread before I post this but I can't...but I remember somebody was mentioning something similar (therapist stroking their hair and a close hug, almost like a parent comforting a crying child) but don't recall anybody see it as inappropriate sexual contact, but in fact some admired that level of care and concern from the therapist. I think the only difference was that it was a female therapist.

So just to be clear, is stroking the hair of a crying patient always an ethical violation and punishable by law? And how long a hug is allowed? What about touching or rubbing, like if someone is crying and inconsolable and the therapist goes and sits next to them and rubs one of their shoulders while they cry, is that an ethical violation and punishable by law? And is that true of all forms of therapy?
Context is everything in this situation. Is it inappropriate if the T is a man and client is a woman (and both are straight), mostly yes. Then with embracing closely, texting much of the day outside of session, it is most definitely a boudary violation. If the T were female the hugging and hair stroking might be ok depending, especially if the client is a child of teen. Anything more than that is sketchy and yes probably boundary violations. Most of this is really left up to common sense - ethical Ts know better so it shouldn't be a problem.