
by Mark Robinett, MFT
(originally
printed in "The Counseling and Psychotherapy Newsletter of the
Bay Area", Sept. 1995)
How many people really know how psychotherapy works? It is a question of some
importance today because people want to know; they no longer want to be kept
in the dark about how therapy is going to help them with their psychological
problems. The more the general public knows how therapy works and what a psychotherapist
is supposed to do, the more power people will have in their ability to discern
what is useful therapy and what is not. In addition, the more a person knows
about how therapy works, the more she can apply herself and give herself over
to the process of healing that occurs when therapy goes well.
There are over 200 different kinds of psychotherapy practiced today. The type
of therapy I discuss in this article is the therapy that I believe does the
deepest healing within an individual. It includes theory from four schools
of psychotherapy:
The Psychology of the Self, Control-Mastery theory, Object-Relations
theory and Trauma theory.
EMPATHY: The first and most important ability that
a therapist needs to offer to a client is the skill of empathic
attunement. A metaphor that I like to use for this tool is that
of an M.D. using a stethoscope to listen to a patient's heart while
he is breathing. In the same way, the therapist needs to be able
to listen to and "hear" what is emotionally in the heart of the
client as he talks. Hearing what is in the client's heart is usually
more important than what he is saying verbally (unless of course
he is connected with his heart). It is a matter of empathic attunement
to the deeper parts of one's being.
OPTIMAL RESPONSIVENESS: Empathic attunement is very
good stuff, but the client needs to hear or "get" in some way that
the therapist is empathically attuned. When a therapist is able
to express what she hears or senses is going on inside of the client,
and it is accurate and makes the client feel understood, we call
that optimal responsiveness. Optimal responsiveness can also be
being quiet on the therapist's part, and again it is an outgrowth
of empathy (a therapist's ability to sense what will be the optimal
response at the time). The therapist's responses do not need to
be optimal or accurate all of the time, but they need to be optimal
enough, enough of the time, so that within a client a powerful
inner experience is created of feeling understood at a deep level.
THERAPIST AS SELF OBJECT: When a client feels understood "enough" and
responded to "enough", he is able to use the therapist as a "self
object". The term self-object means that the therapist has become,
for the client, a special person that is there for the "self" of
the client. The self is one's true self that resides deep within,
and it holds one's true feelings, thoughts, values and aspirations.
When a person has a reliable (consistent enough) self object in
the therapist, his "self" becomes able to resume any delayed, blocked
or previously derailed developmental tasks due to (usually) deficits
in the childhood caretakers.
What this means, basically, is that the real self can grow, and the self will
grow in the areas that it needs to and wants to if it has this one most important
need met; the need for a reliable, consistent enough self-object. Most of the
work of therapy is facilitating new development, new growth and unsticking
what go stuck earlier in life.
PASSING TESTS: Not all clients will allow a therapist
to become a "self object" for themselves. Many clients require
their therapist to pass certain "tests" as they go further into
the process of therapy. These tests can range from something simple
like the therapist starting and ending on time, not talking too
much or too little, to much more sophisticated tests (often unconscious
on the part of the client even though she has created the test)
such as acting very weak and needing the advice of the therapist
for help with very tough decisions, for example.
If
the therapist doen't recognize the test and gives the advice,
the client, while seeming to enjoy getting the "special" advice
of the intelligent therapist, will unconscioulsy feel disappointed
and her real self will not be able to open up what it needs to
to the therapist; i.e. the need for someone to help her make
her own decisions because her parents made them for her. If the
tests are passed successfully by the therapist, two things can
happen, first, the client will open her self up to the therapist,
and allow the therapist to be that certain special person that
can be called a "self-object".
This happens because the client's deeper self believes that it is safe enough
to allow this therapist to be close to it (it needs someone to have close by
in order for certain parts of it to grow). Secondly, by passing the tests,
the therapist may be helping the client to work through old experiences where
her parents or other caretakers were not healthy or aware enough to provide
this need for the person. As in the example above, the therapist will pass
the test by not giving advice, and by assisting the client in making her own
decisions. The long-range goal of these tests is often the unconscious design
of the client to teach the therapist how to be the taylor-made healer for her
real self.
WORKING WITH DEFENSES: Usually in the course of a
therapy, a client's defenses will appear in one way or another.
Assisting a client in taking down unneeded defenses could be seen
as similar to how the U. S. and the Soviet Union are dismanteling
their nuclear arsenals. Some defenses are very necessary, and these
are often called boundaries, or ways to protect oneself from noxious
people and situations.
People often have other defenses, however, which block out the good things
that are available in life.
For example, if a man was, in childhood, criticized alot by his father he may
have formed the specific defense of not taking anything in from other men that
sounds anything like criticism. Friends might notice this defense as his not
listening to advice, even when it would be benefical for him to.
In therapy, a therapist might notice the defense whenever he (the therapist)
makes a neutral comment such as "I noticed that when you talked about what
you did at dinner yesterday, your voice became very quiet; do you know what
was going on inside?"
At which point the client might say, "I don't know!" in an angry voice.
The therapist's job at this point would be to ask about the noticed anger:
"You seemed angry as you answered me, do you know why?"
The client may not be able to say why, and the therapist may need to suggest
something like: "I had the feeling that you felt I was criticizing you when
I asked you about your voice being quiet..."
Sequences like this may need to be explored and gone over again and again until
the defensive pattern is worked into something more useful, such as an ability
to discern what is useful feedback from a person and what is not, and how to
respond to either in skillful ways.
Working
with defenses can also be about working with certain patterns
of being that interfere with enjoying, or simply experiencing
life, i.e. patterns that actually cut off the emotional and mental
experinences of living. These kinds of defenses often come from
traumatic experiences which have caused a person to withdraw
in some way from people and/or life. These patterns need to be
talked about, explored, explained by the therapist, and empathized
with, often over and over again until the patterns are dissolved.
In addition, the trauma needs to come out of the person by talking
about the traumatic experiences and expressing whatever feelings
are associated with the experiences. Another label for this kind
of work is trauma resolution.
Putting all of this together, what actually makes the wheels turn
in therapy are:
(1)There first needs to be a therpaist who is able to be
empathically attuned enough to the client, and is able to let the
cleint know (optimally respond) that he is "tuned in".
(2) As a client experiences being attuned to and optimally
responded to, the therapist becomes a self-object, or a very important
person to the cleint's real self.
(3) Then in order for the therapist to stay in this position,
he may have to pass some or many tests to prove himself worthy
of being a healer for the client, and continue to be experineced
as a self-object by the client. As long as the client continues
to experience the therapist as a reliable "self-object", over time
she will be able to resume developing (growing) delayed or buried
parts of herself. It could be thought of as a garden that hasn't
been watered for a long time, now being watered (and warmed by
the sun), and all the delayed or buried parts of a client being
like bulbs down in the ground waiting until enough water and warmth
comes.
(4) Sometimes complications besides tests also come in the
work of therapy in the form of defenses or negative behavior patterns,
both usually due to trauma. With these the therapist must know
how to help the client dissolve the defensive patterns and heal
the inner trauma. If the therapist can do this plus all of the
other things mentioned above, the wheels will turn and therapy
will work.
Back to the top |