This ethical concept, also a legal duty in most states, requires therapists not to disclose any information about a client without their consent
What is confidentiality?
Who is considered the father of psychoanalysis.
Who is Sigmund Freud?
Founder of Adlerian Therapy
Who is Alfred Adler?
This term refers to the feeling of being disconnected or isolated from others, a key concern in existential therapy
What is loneliness?
This psychologist is best known for developing PersonCentered Therapy
Who is Carl Rogers?
These are unconscious beliefs that influence how we perceive others, often outside of our conscious awareness.
What are implicit biases?
The technique used in psychoanalysis where the therapist asks the client to say whatever comes to mind, regardless of how trivial or irrelevant it may seem.
What is free association?
The personal, internal belief system shaping experiences and behavior
what is private logic?
The term for the anxiety that arises from the awareness of one's own mortality.
What is death anxiety?
This type of relationship, characterized by genuineness and acceptance, is crucial in Person-Centered Therapy.
What is therapeutic alliance?
This strategy involves managing your own personal values so they do not influence the counseling process
what is "bracketing"
During therapy, Bob feels a strong urge to please her therapist, recalling how she always sought approval from her mother. Bob is experiencing ___
What is transference?
What is each goal-directed movement?
What is "movement toward, movement against, movement against self, movement away from, ambivalent movement"
Existential therapy emphasizes the importance of this capacity, which increases our freedom and awareness of choices.
What is self-awareness?
This technique involves restating or paraphrasing what a client has said to demonstrate understanding and encourage further exploration.
What is reflective listening?
This ethical and legal requirement involves providing clients with information about therapy, enabling them to make autonomous decisions about their treatment.
What is informed consent?
The defense mechanism where an individual reverts to behaviors characteristic of an earlier stage of development when faced with stress or conflict.
What is regression?
The Three Universal Life Tasks
what are "building friendships, establishing intimacy, and contributing to society?"
From a scientific perspective, existential therapy is easy or challenging to research? Why?
What is it is difficult to research because every existential psychotherapy experience is unique?
These are the three core conditions of Person Centered Therapy
What are authenticity (congruence), empathy, and unconditional positive regard?
500 Name two of the three scenarios in which a therapist is legally and ethically required to break confidentiality
danger to self/others, court order, abuse/neglect/exploitation of vulnerable population
The two elements of each psychosexual stage.
What are the erogenous zone (pleasure) and the developmental conflict?
The four phases of Adlerian Therapy
What is "establishing the relationship, assessing psychological Dynamics, Encouraging Insight, reorientation and reeducation?"
How does existential therapy view anxiety?
What is a normal condition of living that arises from freedom and choice?
After overcoming childhood adversity, Sarah has started pursuing her passion for painting and feels fulfilled. Sarah has experienced ____
What is self-actualization?