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Old Dec 24, 2016, 05:49 PM
kecanoe kecanoe is offline
Grand Magnate
 
Member Since: Aug 2008
Location: Illinois, USA
Posts: 3,052
Quote:
Originally Posted by Argonautomobile View Post
I'm not convinced that unconditional positive regard has anything to do with how blunt or gentle a clinician is. I think perhaps these are separate issues that are easy to conflate. That's why the conversation in the OP sort of confused me.

Couldn't one say, "Well, if The Reefer works so well for you, why do you keep coming back for treatment?" without being a **** about it? Or, even if one is a **** about it, does that dickishness really need to touch the core of who the client/patient is?

I think one can be frustrated with a behavior while still believing that the client is, at his or her core, a good and valuable person. To me, that's what unconditional positive regard is. That, whatever a person does, you maintain a core belief that they are worthy, valuable, etc.

Maybe that seems disingenuous to some--it's certainly different than the more natural, spontaneous thing that is affection or genuinely liking someone. Liking may or may not co-exist with unconditional positive regard, or it may wax and wane.

I like some of my students better than others, for reasons that have more to do with me than them. I make the decision to hold all students in positive regard, and I'm mostly successful. How blunt/gentle I am with them has to do with what I think they'll respond best to, not how much I like them or whether I hold them in positive regard.

Mostly. Sometimes I get snappish. No one's perfect.

I always figured it was more or less the same way with T's. But I could be wrong.
Yes, I agree. In my professional life, I do like some people better than others. That IMO is true of just about everybody. But I still choose to see people as having basic worth and being loved by their creator. (Sorry if that got too religious). But it is not fake on my part. I believe that to be true. In acting on that belief, sometimes it is harder than others.

And as it relates to therapy, I have a part that was very angry, very defiant, hostile. When t1 encountered her, he didn't freak out or confront or back away. He was just curious. His curiousity rather than fear or condemnation was amazing to me, and allowed that part to deal with some of her stuff. She became cooperative instead of rebellious. And she is now very helpful to me and to the therapy process. I experienced that as unconditional positive regard. He believed that she had a useful purpose and that she was doing the best she could to be helpful.
Thanks for this!
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