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Theory and Practice of Counseling and Psychotherapy

Theory and Practice of Counseling and Psychotherapy. Psych422 Chapter10: Cognitive Behavior Therapy. Rational Emotive Behavioral Therapy (REBT). Stresses thinking , judging, deciding, analyzing, and doing

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Theory and Practice of Counseling and Psychotherapy

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  1. Theory and Practice of Counseling and Psychotherapy Psych422 Chapter10: Cognitive Behavior Therapy

  2. Rational Emotive Behavioral Therapy (REBT) • Stresses thinking,judging, deciding, analyzing, and doing • Assumesthat cognitions, emotions, and behaviors interact and have a reciprocal cause-and-effect relationship • Is highly didactic,very directive, and concerned as much with thinking as with feeling • Teachesthat our emotions stem mainly from our beliefs, evaluations, interpretations, and reactions to life situations

  3. View of Human Nature • We are born with a potential for both rational and irrational thinking • We are self-talking, self-evaluating, and self-sustaining. • We have an inborn tendency toward growth and actualization • We learn and invent disturbing beliefs and keep ourselves disturbed through our self-talk • We have the capacity to change our cognitive, emotive, and behavioral processes

  4. View of Emotional Disturbance • We learn irrational belief from significant otherduring childhood • Teach clients to feel undepressed even when they are unaccepted and unloved by significant others. • Blame is at the core of most emotional disturbances • Irrational idea (e.g., I must be loved by everyone) internalize  self-defeating • We have a tendency to make ourselves emotionally disturbed by internalizing self-defeating beliefs

  5. The A-B-C theory of personality

  6. Case discussion 1 • Tom, a college sophomore, want to overcomes his shyness around women. He doe not date and even des his best to keep away from women because he is afraid they will reject him. But he want to change this pattern. • Using A-B-C-D-E-F to analyze and help Tom

  7. Case discussion 2 • Mary would like to take a course in creative writing, but she fears that she has no talent. She is afraid of failing, afraid of being told that she is dumb, and afraid of follow through with taking the course. • Using A-B-C-D-E-F to analyze and help Mary

  8. Case discussion 3 • Each week John comes to his sessions with a new excuse for why he has not succeeded in following through with his homework assignments. Either he forgets, gets too busy, gets scared. Or puts it off—anything but actually doing something to change what he says he wants to change. Instead of really doing much of anything, he whines each week about how rotten he feels and how he so much would like to change but just doesn’t know how. • What are the possible irrational beliefs, which keep John from taking actions • What homework assignment might you suggest?

  9. Case discussion 4 • Brent feels that he must win everyone’s approval. He has become a “super nice guy” who goes out of his way to please everyone. Rarely does he assert himself, for fear that he might displease someone who then would not like him. • What are the possible irrational beliefs? • How do you help Brent? • If Brent is Asian American, what cultural components you might take into account?

  10. Irrational Ideas • Irrational ideas lead to self-defeating behavior • Some examples: • “I must have love or approval from all the significant people in my life.” • “I must perform important tasks competently and perfectly.” • “If I don’t get what I want, it’s terrible, and I can’t stand it.”

  11. The Therapeutic Process • Therapy is seen as an educational process • Clients learn • To identify and dispute irrational beliefs • To replace ineffective ways of thinking with effective and rational cognitions • To stop absolutistic thinking, blaming, and repeating false beliefs

  12. Therapeutic Goals • A basic goal is to teach clients how to change their dysfunctional emotions and behaviors into health ones. • Two main goals of REBT are to assist clients to achieving unconditional self-acceptance and unconditional other acceptance. • As clients become more able to accept themselves, they are more likely to unconditionally accept others.

  13. Therapist’s function and Role • 1. Encouraging clients to discover their irrational beliefs and ideas • 2. Making connection of how these irrational beliefs lead to emotional disturbances • 3. Challenging clients to modify or abandon their irrational beliefs. • 4. Dispute the irrational beliefs and substitute rational beliefs and behaviors.

  14. Client’s Experience in Therapy • A learner---learn how to apply logical thoughts, experiential exercises, and behavioral homework to problem solving and emotional change. • Focus on here-and-now experiences • Not spend much time to exploring clients’ early history and connecting present and past • Expect to actively work outside the therapy sessions.

  15. Relationship Between Therapist and Client • Intensive therapeutic relationship is not required. But, REBT unconditionally accept all clients and teach them to unconditionally accept others and themselves. (accept them as persons but confront their faulty thinking and self-destructive behaviors) • Ellis believes that too much warmth and understanding can be counter-productive, fostering dependence for approval. • Therapists shows great faith in their clients’ ability to change themselves. • Open and direct in disclosing their own beliefs and values • Transference is not encouraged, when it occur, the therapist is likely to confront it (e.g., clients believe that they must be liked and loved by their therapists.)

  16. Therapeutic techniques and procedures • Cognitive methods • Disputing irrational beliefs • If I don’t get what I want, it is not at the end of the world • Doing cognitive homework • Applying ABC theory in daily life’s problems • Put themselves in risk-taking situations to challenge their self-limiting beliefs. • Replace negative self-statement to positive message • Changing one’s language • It would be absolutely awful..It would be inconvenient • Using humor • Humorous songs

  17. Therapeutic techniques and procedures • Emotional Techniques • Rational-emotional imagery • Imagine the worst things that could happen to them • Role playing • Shame-attacking exercises • Take a risk to do something that they are afraid to do because of what others might think…until they realize that their feelings of shame are self-created. • Use of force and vigor • From intellectual to emotional insight • Reverse role playing

  18. Therapeutic techniques and procedures • Behavioral Techniques • Use most of the standard behavioral therapy approaches. • Research Efforts • Most studies focus only on cognitive methods and do not consider emotive and behavioral methods.

  19. Applications of REBT • REBT has been widely applied to several areas: anxiety, depression, psychotic disorders, problems of sex, love, and marriage, crisis, couple and family therapy…

  20. Aaron Beck’s Cognitive Therapy (CT) • Insight-focused therapy • Emphasizes changing negative thoughts and maladaptive beliefs • Theoretical Assumptions • People’s internal communication is accessible to introspection • Clients’ beliefs have highly personal meanings • These meanings can be discovered by the client rather than being taught or interpreted by the therapist

  21. Theory, Goals & Principles of CT • Basic theory: • To understand the nature of an emotional episode or disturbance it is essential to focus on the cognitive content of an individual’s reaction to the upsetting event or stream of thoughts • Goals: • To change the way clients think by using their automatic thoughts to reach the core schemata and begin to introduce the idea of schema restructuring • Principles: • Observe automatic thoughts, identify cognitive distortions, and ask for evidences for reality testing the cognitive distortions

  22. CT’s Cognitive Distortions • Arbitrary inferences • Making conclusions without supporting and relevant evidence • Selective abstraction • Forming conclusions based on an isolated detail of an event • Overgeneralization • Based on one single incident and applying them to dissimilar events

  23. CT’s Cognitive Distortions • Magnification and minimization • Perceiving a case or situation in a greater or lesser light than it truly deserves • Personalization • Relate external events to themselves even when there is no basis for the connection. • Labeling and mislabeling • Portraying one’s identity on the basis of imperfections or mistakes made in the past • Polarized thinking • Thinking in all-or-nothing terms

  24. The Client-Therapist Relationship • Therapeutic relationship is necessary, but not sufficient, to produce therapeutic effect. • Encourage clients to take an active role in self-discovery. • Aim to teach client how to be their own therapist, educate clients about the nature of their problem, about the process of cognitive therapy, and how thoughts influence their emotions and behaviors.\ • Use homework to test their beliefs in daily-life situations

  25. CT’s Cognitive Triad • Pattern that triggers depression: 1. Client holds negative view of themselves and blames themselves 2. Selective abstraction: Client has tendency to interpret experiences in a negative manner 3. Client has a gloomy vision and projections about the future

  26. Application of CT • Treatment of depression and anxiety • Managing stress, in parent training, and in treating various clinical disorders

  27. Donald Meichenbaum’s Cognitive Behavior Modification (CBM) • Focus: • Changing client’s self-verbalizations or self-statements • Premise: • As a prerequisite to behavior change, clients must notice how they think, feel, and behave, and what impact they have on others • Basic assumption: • Distressing emotions are typically the result of maladaptive thoughts

  28. Meichenbaum’s CBM • Self-instructional therapy focus: • Trains clients to modify the instructions they give to themselves so that they can cope • Emphasis is on acquiring practical coping skills • Cognitive structure: • The organizing aspect of thinking, which seems to monitor and direct the choice of thoughts • The “executive processor,” which “holds the blueprints of thinking” that determine when to continue, interrupt, or change thinking

  29. How Behavior Changes? • 3 Phases of Behavior Change • 1. Self-observation • Listen to themselves, realize they contribute to their depression through how they think, and develop new cognitive structures • 2. Starting a new internal dialogue • See adaptive behavioral alternatives • 3. Learning new skills • Teaching more effective coping skills

  30. Coping Skills Programs • Coping skills programs – Stress inoculation training (3 phase model) • 1. The conceptual phase • Creating a working relationship with clients • 2. Skills acquisition and rehearsal phase • Giving coping skills to apply to stressful situations • 3. Application and follow-through phase • Transfer change to real world

  31. From a multicultural perspective • Contributions • Diverse populationsappreciate the emphasis on cognition and actions • Challenge rigid thinking (e.g., “should”) instead of questioning the values • Stress the relationship of individuals to the family, community, and systems

  32. From a multicultural perspective • Limitations • Exploring core beliefs is important in CBT-needs to sensitive to cultural background and context • Value “working hard”feel ashamed for not living up to the expectations; divorcebring shame to her family • Diverse clients may be hesitant to question their basic cultural values • Diverse clients may value interdependence and may feel difficult to be independent

  33. Summary and Evaluation • Contributions • REBT: focus on how we interpret and react to the events; put insight into action; teach clients ways to carry out their own therapy without depending on therapists • CT: research support that CT is as empirically validated treatment; focus on a detailed case conceptualization to understand clients; is an eclectic psychotherapy

  34. Summary and Evaluation • Limitations • Ellis: being too confrontational; ignoring “past”; power imbalance • CT: focusing too much on positive thinking, being too simplistic, denying past, being too technique-oriented, failing to use the therapeutic relationship, working only to reduce symptoms, failing to explore the underlying causes of difficulties, ignoring unconscious factors and emotions.

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