Assumptions of the Modality
Concepts
Goals
Role of Therapist
Interventions and Change
100

"Story"

Based on the premise that we "story", that we each have stories, and we create the meaning of life for ourselves.Stories organize our experience & shape our behavior. 

100

Who created Narrative Therapy?

It was developed by David White and Michael Epston.

100

Deconstruct problem-saturated stories into...

...more helpful stories that the client can use, along with their strengths to promote growth.

100

What is the Narrative Therapist's Role?

Collaborator
Investigator
Co-author

100

How does change occur in Narrative Therapy?

Separating clients from their problem(s) and creating a new, strengths-based narrative. 

200

"Reality"

Reality is shaped by the language used to describe it – language and experience (meaning) are recursive. 

Reality is socially constructed. 

200

What is the "Dominant Narrative"?

Beliefs, values, and practices based on dominant social culture

200

Find the preferred story...

...that is not problem-saturated. 

200

How does a Narrative Therapist view their client?

As the experts on their own lives. 

200

What is externalizing?

Separating the person from the problem story; Example: "What is anxiety trying to tell you to do?"

300

"Truth"

Truth may not match historic or another person’s truth, but it is true to the client.

300

What is the "Subjugated Narrative"?

A person’s own story that is suppressed by dominant story. 

300

Give options to...

..different stories that don't include problems.

300

What is identifying unique outcomes?

Times in the client's life during which the client was able to resist the effects of the problem.

300

What is Mapping the Influence?

Process of eliciting from the client a detailed description of the problem's effect and influence on client's life and relationships.

400

"Problems"

Focus on effects of the problem, not the cause (how problem impacts family; how family affects problem). 

The problem is the problem; the person is not the problem

400

What is the "Alternative Story"?

This is the story that’s there but not noticed. 

400

What is Enacting Preferred Narratives?

Identifying new ways to relate to problems that reduce their negative effects. 

400

How do you "Meet the Person"?

Beginning stage of therapy; meeting the client apart from the problem. Learning who they are outside of their problem that they came to therapy for.

400

What is letter writing in Narrative Therapy?

The client writes a letter to self and others to reinforce the new story that has been created through the therapy process. 

500

"Society" 

The stories we tell ourselves are often based on messages received from society or our families (social construction). 

People have their own unique filters by which they process messages from society. 

500

What is "Deconstruction"?

Take apart problem saturated story in order to externalize & re-author it (Find missing pieces; “unpacking”). 

500

What is solidifying? 

Strengthening preferred stories and identities by having them witnessed by significant others in a person's life. 

500

What is "scaffolding"?

Enacting conversations to move clients from that which is familiar to that which is novel, to help create and author a new story/narrative. 

500

How does the term possibilities play into Narrative work?

Through narrative work, the client can see that there are numerous possibilities. We want them to have an expanded sense of self.