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Published Online: 2009, pp. 103–209

Providing Therapy Can Be Therapeutic for a Therapist

Abstract

In this paper, the case is made that providing therapy to a client can he therapeutic for the therapist. Therapist change is not intentionally sought nor professionally delivered, but is from those client interactions experienced as healing. The possible mechanisms of change for the therapist include exposure of much about him- or herself, being “on the line” in therapy, and the therapeutic relationship as a collaborative, two-way system. In the collaborative system, much might affect a therapist, including how the client understands and reacts to the therapist’s disposition, motivation, self-disclosure, and skill and what the client reveals about his or her life that may lead the therapist to a new sense of her or his own life.

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Published In

Go to American Journal of Psychotherapy
Go to American Journal of Psychotherapy
American Journal of Psychotherapy
Pages: 169 - 181
PubMed: 19711769

History

Published in print: 2009, pp. 103–209
Published online: 30 April 2018

Keywords:

  1. psychotherapeutic processes
  2. therapist characteristics
  3. psychotherapists
  4. life experience
  5. countertransference

Authors

Affiliations

Paul C. Rosenblatt, Ph.D. [email protected]
Department of Family Social Science, University of Minnesota.

Notes

Mailing address: Family Social Science, 290 McNeal Hall, 1985 Buford Avenue, University of Minnesota, St. Paul, MN 55108. e-mail: [email protected].

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