Types of Psychotherapy
Bernice has issues. And sure, we all do. But hers are getting out of hand. At times, she goes through bouts of depression that make it hard for her to even get out of bed. Sometimes, she suffers from serious anxiety around things like test-taking, flying, and lots of things, all of which are brutalizing her self-worth and affecting her performance in work and life. She's ready to get professional help. Lucky for Bernice, she has a lot of options. Psychotherapy, perhaps the predominant type of psychological treatment involves a therapist using a range of techniques to help a patient overcome troubles, gain insight, and achieve personal growth. Now, you know by now that there are all kinds of perspectives on the human mind and lots of different philosophies on how to approach it.
So it may not come as a surprise that there's also a variety of ways that experts analyze and treat ailments of the mind. They each create their own kind of experience for a person seeking help, and to be honest, some approaches are better suited for treating certain psychological conditions than others. So with Bernice as our guide, we can see how each of these techniques works, and maybe in the end we can get her out of bed feeling more calm and confident, and back in the swing of things. He's back. If we're going to talk about psychotherapy, we've got to start with Freud, right? Psychotherapy, you will recall, is commonly grouped into four major schools, or orientations. The psychodynamic, existential-humanistic, behavioral, and cognitive therapies.
Freud's famously on-the-couch-and-talk psychoanalysis is just one of several related therapies in the psychodynamic family, and it was basically the first. In essence, Freud assumed that we didn't really know, or at least fully understand, ourselves or our motivations. So psychoanalysis served as a kind of historical reconstruction that helped patients access repressed feelings memories and unconscious thoughts by using free association and dream analysis with helpful interpretations from the therapist until they gained some self-insight. As you free associate, talk about your past, and answer questions, your psychoanalyst picks up on sensitive subjects around which you appear to show resistance, mental blocks that keep you from your consciousness because they cause you anxiety. The psychoanalyst notes these resistances and offers interpretations of what might be going on to help promote insight.
So if Bernice was visiting a psychoanalyst talking about her day, the therapist might say, tell me more about that dream with the birds with the broken wings, or he might point out resistance. Like, I noticed that when you mention your fear of flying, you tend to bring up your childhood. But you never talk about your mother. Why might that be? The therapist points out what may be unconscious themes to coax them into the light. Maybe Bernice needs to deal with a traumatic childhood memory, or the fact that her mom ran away with a pilot or something to understand the roots of her fear. Today, traditional psychoanalysis is less common. Critics have pointed out that psychoanalytic interpretations aren't easy to prove or disprove, which is a problem when you're
trying to take the scientific approach. Plus, psychoanalysis tends to involve many sessions, sometimes four or five a week over a long period, and health insurance just won't cover that anymore. Therapists who have branched off from the psychoanalytic school fall into the psychodynamic family, which includes not just Freudian theory, but also ideas from Carl Jung, Alfred Adler, Karen Horney, and others. The terms psychoanalytic and psychodynamic are often confused, but you can think of psychoanalysis as Freud's particular baby, while psychodynamic theory is really the family descended from that baby. Similar to psychoanalysis, psychodynamic therapy focuses on helping people gain insight on the impact of unconscious internal forces, early relationships, and critical childhood experiences. But these therapies don't dwell on the aid in the ego and superego, or all the sex stuff.
at least not like traditional psychoanalysis does. And not all psychologists are interested in rooting through your deep unconscious recesses like it was your underwear drawer. Some therapies focus more on conscious material and believe the present and future are worth more attention than the past. These include the existential-humanistic therapies championed by Carl Rogers, Viktor Frankl, Fritz Perls, and others, who emphasized people's inherent capacity for making rational choices, achieving self-acceptance, and attaining their maximum potential. Like the psychodynamic school, existential-humanistic therapy is still insight-oriented, but it's much more about promoting growth rather than curing illness. Instead of calling folks patients, humanistic therapies refer to those they help as clients, or just, you know, people. In the mid-1900s, Rogers developed a humanistic technique called client-centered therapy.
He encouraged therapists to help their clients by providing an empathetic, genuine, and accepting environment, and using active listening, where the therapist echoes and clarifies what their clients are saying and feeling. Rogers believed these techniques helped to provide a safe, non-judgmental place where clients could accept themselves, feel valued, and work towards self-actualization. But other therapists in this school brought in more somber topics. Pearls, Frankel, and others incorporated the existentialist perspective, Understanding anxiety and limits to personal growth is driven by the human impulse to deny the fact that, let's face it, we're all gonna die. Sounds a little grim, but much like the existentialist philosophers, these theorists thought to maximize human potential and meaning in life in the face of those scary existential fears, helping people access their genuine selves.
So, let's say Bernice sees an existentialist humanistic therapist and talks about her depression and how it's keeping her from living a full life. By focusing on the present, this therapist might suggest that Bernice is afraid and avoidant of her true emotions, the bad and scary ones as well as the good ones, which is why she feels emotionally lifeless and drained. So her therapist might say, say more about the feelings that you're having right now, in this moment, as you talk about your depression. The therapist would listen without interpreting, at least at first, and help Bernice understand that she was being heard and accepted, which hopefully would give her comfort and strength to begin dealing with the tough emotions that she's been avoiding. Now, if Bernice were to make her appointments with a behavior therapist.
she'd experience quite a different session. Behavior therapists argue that simply knowing that you're afraid of flying, for example, won't help you from freaking out at the thought of getting on a plane. Instead, these therapists suggest that the problem behavior is the actual issue, and the best way to get rid of unwanted automatic behavior is to replace it with more functional behavior through new learning and conditioning. In other words, behavior therapy aims to change behavior to change emotions and moods. Behavior therapy is rooted in the experiments of Ivan Pavlov and his classically-conditioned dogs that drooled at the sound of a bell, and work by E. L. Thorndike and B. F. Skinner on operant conditioning, or changing behavior by using positive or negative reinforcement.
So say Bernice is seeing a behavior therapist because of an intense fear of flying. We know her fear is keeping her from personal and career goals, like going to conferences and vacationing in Baja. but sometimes it even affects her ability to look up at a blue sky or flip through a travel magazine. Her therapist might use counter-conditioning to evoke new responses to the stimuli that trigger this unwanted behavior, or she may use other behavior therapy methods like exposure, systematic desensitization, and aversive conditioning to help Bernice modify her reactions and behavior. So she doesn't dwell on having Bernice relive old memories or helping her self-actualize, she just wants to fix the problem behavior. Aversive conditioning is less common and usually involves pairing an unpleasant stimulus with the targeted behavior.
The classic example is giving someone with an alcohol problem a pill that makes them puke when they drink. Far more common and better studied, exposure therapies treat anxiety by having a person face their fears, by exposing them to real or imagined situations that they typically avoid. Systematic desensitization is a type of exposure therapy that associates a relaxed state of mind with gradually increasing anxiety-inducing stimuli. Taking Bernice from, say, just thinking about flying, to looking at photos of planes in the air, to sitting on a grounded plane, to eventually soaring in the skies for real. Behavior therapy works pretty well in treating specific fears and problems like phobias, And it can also work for people with generalized anxiety disorder or major depression, but it often needs a boost.
And we can get that boost from the cognitive therapies, the kind that teach people new, more adaptive ways of thinking. Cognitive therapy focuses more on what people think rather than what they do, assuming that if you can change a self-defeating thought, you can change the related behavior. This is the approach used by founding American cognitive therapist Aaron Beck. He and his colleagues pioneered the Socratic Questioning Method, to help clients reverse destructive and catastrophic beliefs about themselves, the world, or the future at large, such as everything that could possibly go wrong will go wrong. Sabernese has a big test coming up, like a really big all-or-nothing end-of-the-year exam. She's freaking out, and her anxiety around the test already has her depressed, imagining that she'll fail.
If she bombs the test, she fears that her dreams of getting into the graduate program she once would be dashed in her life will be over. Classic catastrophic thinking. A cognitive therapist would actively discuss all of this with her, challenging her thinking along the way, and in the end, help Bernice re-examine her assumptions about what's gonna happen if she does fail. Like, the world will not end and she will not utterly fail at life. Helping her work toward thinking more positive thoughts about herself and her future. A cognitive therapist helps patients understand that changing what we say to ourselves is a very effective way to cope with our anxieties and modify our behavior. In other words, it really is the thought that counts.
Not surprisingly, the cognitive and behavior schools have joined forces frequently enough that cognitive behavior therapies are typically considered a single school, and a lot of therapists use integrative approaches that try to use the best elements of all of these schools of thought. But all these different psychotherapies don't always mean being alone with your therapist and your thoughts. most of them can be done in groups, too. Group therapy fosters the therapeutic benefits you get from interacting with other people. Not only does it help with the social aspects of mental health, but it also may remind clients that they're not alone. Similarly, family therapy treats a family as a system and views an individual's problem behaviors as being influenced by or directed at other family members.
Family therapists work with multiple family members to heal relationships, improve insight and communication, and mobilize communal resources, so... The big question remains, does psychotherapy work? You're going to have to wait until next time to find out, because that is what we will be talking about, along with a look at the biomedical approach to therapy. For now, you've learned about the major types of psychotherapy. These include psychodynamic therapy and Freud's famous psychoanalysis, existential humanist therapy Rogers' client-centered focus, and behavior and cognitive therapies. We also took a quick look at group and family therapy.
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