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Pink Floyd - Time. Ticking away the moments that make up the dull day You fritter and waste the hours in an off hand wayKicking around on a piece of ground in your home townWaiting for someone or something to show you the wayTired of lying in the sunshine staying home to watch the rainYou are young and life is long and there is time to kill todayAnd then one day you find that ten years have got behind you
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1. Todays Class - 20 JuneTwo Thousand and Seven - the days are ticking Time - Pink Floyd
Experiential Exercise
Begin Existential Theory
Existential Psychotherapy - Review Principles and goals of therapy
Case study - Anthony Jr.
Other videos
2. Pink Floyd - Time Ticking away the moments that make up the dull day
You fritter and waste the hours in an off hand way
Kicking around on a piece of ground in your home town
Waiting for someone or something to show you the way
Tired of lying in the sunshine staying home to watch the rain
You are young and life is long and there is time to kill today
And then one day you find that ten years have got behind you
No one told you when to run, you missed the starting gun
3. Time, part II And you run and run to catch up with the sun, but it's sinking
And racing around to come up behind you again
The sun is the same in a relative way, but you're older
Shorter of breath and one day closer to death
Every year is getting shorter, never seem to find the time
Plans that either come to naught or a half page of scribbled lines
Hanging on in a quiet desperation is the English way
The time is gone the song is over, thought i'd something more to say
4. Important Influences Victor Frankl
Prisoner, Nazi Concentration Camps-1942-45-
lost entire family; Spiritual freedom & independence
of mind can be had in the worst situations;
Essence lies in searching for meaning & purpose
Rollo May
American psychiatrist; many books on existential
therapy, integrated psychoanalysis and existential
therapy - He had two failed marriages- wrote extensively
regarding questions of intimacy, monogamy, morals of
relationships, studied with Adler
Irvin
Yalom:
Therapy through Meaning, therapeutic love
themes of existential work
5. Existentialism Area of philosophy concerned with the meaning of human existence
Asking questions about issues of love, death and the meaning of life
How one deals with the sense of value and meaning of ones life
Frequently referenced as more of a philosophy than a specific theoretical approach - SOME DEBATE HERE
6. Nondeterministic Similar to client-centered approaches Existentialist argue that it is an oversimplification to view people as controlled by fixed physical laws
Focus on active, positive aspects of human growth and achievement
7. Existential perspective to key therapeutic dynamics: Resistance - Occurs when a client does not take responsibility, is not aware of feelings, or otherwise is inauthentic in dealing with life.
Rarely directed at therapist-- rather a way of dealing with overwhelming threats, an inaccurate view of the world, or an inaccurate view of the self.
Transference - important to note when clients attention focuses on the therapist - Work to make progress in the process of developing a real and authentic relationship
8. The Capacity for Self-Awareness The greater our awareness, the greater our possibilities for freedom
Awareness is realizing that:
We are finite - time is limited
We have the potential, the choice, to act or not to act
Meaning is not automatic - we must seek it
We are subject to loneliness, meaninglessness, emptiness, guilt, and isolation
9. Freedom and Responsibility People are free to choose among alternatives and have a large role in shaping personal destinies
Manner in which we live and what we become are result of our choices
People must accept responsibility for directing their own lives
10. The Search for Meaning Meaning ~ like pleasure, meaning must be pursued
Finding meaning in life is a by-product of a commitment to creating, loving, and working
The will to meaning is our primary striving
Life is not meaningful in itself; the individual must create and discover meaning
11. Tony Jr - Sopranos What is Tony Jr. Struggling with
What is the therapist trying to overview to Tony relative to the lecture?
What is the Grandmother in the nursing home struggling with - and how she has been able to overcome certain existential themes in her life
12. Steve Jobs commencement talk http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D1R-jKKp3NA
What did people see that had relevance to the lecture?
13. Anxiety, continued: 2 types Normal anxiety (also called existential anxiety):
Proportionate to its cause, does not require repression, and can be used constructively to identify and confront the dilemma from which it arose.
Neurotic Anxiety
When a person tries to evade normal or existential anxiety. It commonly manifests itself as a loss of a subjective sense of free will and an inability to take responsibility for ones own life.
14. Primary Goals & Techniques Pertaining To Anxiety Eliminate neurotic anxiety to degree possible
Help the client learn to tolerate the unavoidable existential anxiety of living.
Help clients to reach higher levels of authenticity
Techniques:
Identifying instances when the patient avoids responsibility, helping the patient to consider options make decisions, and pointing out how grief reactions and sadness about life milestones COULD BE related to underlying fears of isolation and death.
15. Role of the therapy relationship Very important - strive toward an honest, open, and egalitarian relationship with patients.
The goal is development of an authentic and intimate relationship between the therapist and the client. -- Serves to model authenticity, freedom of choice, and appropriate handling of anxiety circumstances
16. Awareness of Death & Nonbeing Awareness of death is a basic human condition which gives significance to living
We must think about death if we are to thing significantly about life
If we defend against death our lives can become meaningless
17. Central Tasks of Existential Therapists Inviting clients to recognize how they have allowed others to decide for them
Encouraging clients to take responsibility
Recognize ways clients passively accepted circumstances & surrendered control-
Although you have lived in a certain pattern, now that your recognize the price of some of your ways, are you willing to consider creating new patterns?
18. Stance on Techniques Little to not specific techniques designated within theory
Commonly integrated within other frameworks
19. Pros and Cons
PROS: Something to offer all counselors, stresses self-determination, accepting the personal responsibility, provides perspective for understanding the value of anxiety and guilt, the role of death, and the creative aspects of being alone and choosing for oneself.
CONS: Lacks a systematic statement of principles and practices; writers use vague and global terms or abstract concepts; little research, limited applications for lower-functioning clients, clients in extreme crisis who need direction, poor clients, and those who are nonverbal.