A condition that results from having to face choices without clear guidelines and without knowing what the outcome will be
What is anxiety?
100
In this phase of existential counseling, therapists assist clients in identifying and clarifying their assumptions about the world
What is the first phase?
100
This individual coined the term "existential-humanistic" psychotherapy and was also a leading spokesperson for this approach
Who is James Bugental?
100
Freedom, choice and responsibility constitute this foundation
What is the capacity for self-awareness?
100
Existential therapists give central prominence to
What is the relationship with the client?
200
The distinctive capacity that allows us to reflect and to decide
What is self-awareness?
200
In this phase of existential counseling, clients are assisted in more fully examining the source of authority of their present value system
What is the second phase?
200
Existential therapy grew in Europe during the 1940's and 50's due to the detestation to many people's lives from this major event
What is World War II?
200
Individuals are free to choose among alternatives and therefore play a large role in shaping their own destiny according to this basic dimension
What is Proposition 2- Freedom and Responsibility?
200
Clients in existential therapy are clearly encouraged to assume for how they are choosing to be in their world
What is responsibility?
300
This term implies that we are living by being true to our own evaluation of what is a valuable experience for ourselves
What is authenticity?
300
In this phase of existential counseling, the focus is on helping people take what they are learning about themselves and put into action
What is the final phase?
300
Viktor Frankl developed this term which means therapy through meaning
What is logotherapy?
300
This dimension talks about how individuals are concerned with preserving their own uniqueness yet at the same time relating to others
What is Proposition 3: Striving for Identity and Relationships to Others?
300
The redirection of feelings and desires and especially of those unconsciously retained from childhood toward a new object (such as a psychoanalyst conducting therapy)
What is transference?
400
This term means when a client has a limited awareness of themselves and are often vague about the nature of their problems
What is restricted existence?
400
In this phase of existential counseling, the process of self exploration typically leads to new insights and some restructuring of values and attitudes
What is the second phase?
400
This contemporary Existential therapist drew his inspiration and ideas on Existentialism from European therapists and their themes
Who is Irvin Yalom?
400
Existentialists state that part of the human condition is the experience of this feeling
What is aloneness?
400
Existential therapy can also be practiced in this setting, where a small group of patients meet regularly to talk, interact, and discuss problems with each other and the therapist
What is group therapy?
500
This term means the powerful joining of forces which energizes and supports the long, difficult and frequently painful work of life-changing psychotherapy
What is the therapeutic alliance?
500
In this phase of existential counseling, clients examine their values, beliefs and assumptions to determine their validity
What is the first phase?
500
This Existential therapist was a prisoner in a concentration camp and lost his family in Auschwitz
Who is Viktor Frankl?
500
Questions such as "What am I here?" , "What do I want from life?" and "What gives my life purpose?" are all examples of the search for this
What is meaning?
500
Existential therapists help their clients by making themselves known through appropriate