COUNSELING PROJECT: CONCEPTUALIZATION AND TREATMENT PLAN 1 INSTRUCTIONS
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Running head: CONCEPTUALIZATION AND TREATMENT PLAN 1 1
CONCEPTUALIZATION AND TREATMENT PLAN 1 2
Case Conceptualization Using Person-Centred Therapy
Tamaya Carter
Liberty University
Abstract
This document theorizes the treatment of fictional characters selected from movies made by Tyler Perry. The fictional character receives a treatment plan for the question. Treatment planning focuses on a personality-oriented approach and its impact on client counselling. All studies related to this theory are explained to show the effect. The diagnosis is made by confirming the hypothesis. The argument is used to treat clients for drug addiction issues they may have. Ethical and
multicultural issues are also discussed. This theory covers the crisis that can occur. Finally, consider the spiritual application with the client. As for spiritual use, all clients talk about this. It is not enforced or performed without the client’s permission. This paper also examines the incompatibilities between theory and Christian beliefs.
Conceptualization and Treatment Plan 1
Introduction
Choosing the right and effective treatment plan for the client is very important. It is the responsibility of the consultant for them. The consultant should use all clients presenting the problem. There are many treatment plans and theories developed throughout the history of psychology (Holm-Hadulla,2018) These theories and
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strategies will help consultants relate to their clients. This document describes the idea of the theory of personality-oriented therapy and its application to the client’s treatment plan.
Conceptualizing Cases Using Person-Centred Therapy
Carl Rogers is known as the founder of people-centred therapy. Rogers grew up in a strict Christian home. (Jones & Butman, 2011). At age 12, his family moved to
the farm. The Roger family worked hard and became interested in agriculture. He went to college and majored in agriculture for two years. Rogers became interested in psychology after studying at Columbia University. (Kettley et sl.,2015). After changing degrees, Rogers began working in the world of psychology. He did some
work before starting to work on his theory. Rogers was one of the most influential psychologists of the 20th century.
Rogers agreed with Abraham Maslow’s theory and was a humanistic psychologist. He believed that people should grow up in an environment that provided them. Rogers focused on self-realization. “Organisms have one fundamental tendency, and we seek to recognize, maintain, and improve the beings we experience” (Kettley et al., 2015). Rogers believed in a self-sufficient person. Everyone can grow, change, and achieve.
Carl Ransom Rogers (1902-1987) was one of the leading psychotherapists in 40 years of history. He is known for his work as the author of 16 books, 200 articles,
and millions of copies worldwide. He was the founder of human-centered therapy that extended to all counsellors and supported professionals and students.
Jones and Butman (2011) describe human-oriented therapy as the basis of phenomenology. Carl Rogers requires authenticity (openness and self-disclosure), acceptance (found in an unconditional positive look), and empathy (heard and understood) for a person to truly grow. He was a humanist psychologist who believed that His point of view contrasted with psychodynamic and behavioural approaches, since an analysis of his understanding of the unconscious and other diagnoses compared to other diagnoses suggests that the client can be helped better. According to Rogers, “the basic nature of man with free functioning is constructive and reliable” (Clarke & Braun, 2018). Rogers believed that everyone could achieve goals, desires, and dreams of life. According to Jones and Butman (2011, p.
268), Rogers argues “unity, empathy, and unconditional willingness fully trust the biological assessment process and provide greater self-realization and core work for the therapist. Provide a safe and secure environment that encourages customers to reintegrate their means of self-realization and self-esteem. “
It took Rogers over 40 years to develop a cure. He experienced several name changes before deciding on a person-oriented therapy. This treatment has
undergone several extensive studies. Several studies have agreed that it is useful for Rogers to gain an unconditional positive outlook and empathic understanding. However, these studies also showed that not all customers should show changes. Roger’s theory may not be sufficient. There is judgment in his practice, but if
you focus on judgment rather than theory, you focus on the wrong.
In 2013, the Fourth World Conference on Psychology, Counselling, and Guidance (WCPCG) took part in a study of 55 unmarried teenage girls who became pregnant. The test was to show the effectiveness of Rogers’ self-esteem, as well as depression and resistance. Teenagers were treated weekly for seven weeks. The results show that “person-centred group counselling can improve self-esteem, reduce depression, and increase the resilience of unmarried pregnant teens which states that if the psychological situation is timely, individuals should change when self-esteem changes.
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Since the questions presented are egocentric, personality-oriented therapy is suitable for my client. Customers have many problems because of self-realization. Clients should help increase self-esteem and reduce depression. This is an ideal theory for treatment planning and treatment of clients. No ethical issues should
arise when a client uses a person-oriented theory. No multicultural problems occur when using a person-centred theory. The client uses the past and his
environment to help grow. There are no problems with multiculturalism.
Human-oriented therapy can be used in critical situations. Human-oriented therapy is a very safe therapy. It can be used to empower, promote, and influence
customers: client focus shift and client control. The client controls the pace and manages the process. This treatment can help clients stop focusing on the past
and stop worrying too much about the future.
Person Centre Therapy treats addicted clients. “Despite the fact that client-oriented therapists do not diagnose clients and do not directly address a specific
disorder, it should be noted that this approach is still beneficial. This can lead to alcoholism, drug addiction, which is why it is often used as part of a more comprehensive program of inpatient or outpatient treatment for problems such as eating disorders.
Rogers believed that everyone could achieve goals, desires, and dreams of life. According to Jones and Butman (2011, p. 268), Rogers states: “The will of
unity, empathy, and unconditional positive will is completely dependent on the process of evaluating living things and is a key factor for greater self-realization and therapists. Encourage them to work.” Provide a safe and secure environment that encourages customers to reintegrate their processes of self-realization and self- esteem. “Human-oriented therapy works following three basic principles that reflect the therapist’s attitude towards the client. 1. The therapist is consistent with
the client. 2. The therapist provides an unconditional positive attitude towards the client. 3. The therapist demonstrates a sensitive understanding of the client.
Each is further described in this paper.
Intervention
Angela came to treatment for help on some issues in her life. Angela’s husband uses this to play professional football but was injured during the match. This
completes his career. Angela knows that all family expenses must be handled. She owns a salon bought by her husband. Angela and her husband share the
daughter of her husband from a previous relationship with two children. Angela’s husband began to deceive her, working late in the salon to earn as much money as possible for his family. All these problems made Angela choose a drinking habit.
Angela was given three goals during a treatment planning session. My first goal was to spend time with my family away from work. Her children are neglected,
and they need a lot of time with her mother. The second goal was to show her husband anxiety about cheating. Angela’s husband should know that she knows
about his misconduct and must take measures to restore her marriage. The ultimate goal for Angela is to cope with her habits. She must admit that she has
problems with drinking.
Congruence
Compatibility or congruence is Rogers’ most important attribute. The consultant will then build trust and ensure transparency. By doing this, the client is free to
express their emotions and problems without judgment. At first, this is perfect for Angela and helps her plan her goals. Angela can express her feelings in
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e p ess t e e ot o s a d p ob e s t out judg e t. t st, t s s pe ect o ge a a d e ps e p a e goa s. ge a ca e p ess e ee gs
everything that happened in her family. She can reach out to her children and take care of how depressed she is. Her second goal becomes much more comfortable when she begins to talk about her husband’s infidelity. This is the most challenging goal that Angela can face. She should tell her husband about his flirting,
about how this is related to her depression, anxiety, and problems with alcohol. All these goals for her play with each other. Angela can use this for objective
three. She has to deal with the issue of drinking alcohol, and she may be puzzled by this. This opens the door to being true to yourself in a safe environment.
Unconditional positive points
This shows care and real attention to the client. The consultant cannot approve the words or actions of the client but accepts them. They are not there to make a
decision. This condition helps Angela to tell her the most terrible thoughts and feelings, without condemning and not looking down. She can say some disgusting things about her husband’s business. Angela does not frown, expressing herself and the way cheaters made her feel. She is free to tell everything she wants to speak.
Angela may want to shout or strike something. This technique allows her to do this and feel safe with it.
Empathy
It allows the consultant to understand how the client feels. Rogers states “the impression is that the client’s world is his own, but without the” loss “of quality, this empathy is necessary for treatment.” (Kettley et al., 2015).
Spiritual Application (Phase 1)
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In her case, there are no spiritual problems, since Angela has no issues with a spiritual application. Angela is not religious. She could not serve in the church for work. The Bible is a great way to begin a spiritual approach with Angela. She is already familiar, and it will be the open door that she needs.
Some of the positive aspects of Rogers’ theory include “his assertion about understanding a person in a holistic, rather than foggy, restorative way” (Schmid, 2018). His emphasis is on the ability to grow and grow awareness and understanding of people’s emotions and internal conflicts, as well as on his faith that everyone can grow in their way. Besides, his only contribution to understanding the dynamics and power of empathic listening, as well as his emphasis on the growth that occurs when people have an honest, open, and unconditionally positive relationship, many deserve praise. The first person-oriented treatment is for counsellors to receive clients without judgment. In the eyes of God, we are equal, He loves us all, and we must love all his creations. God, the Creator, has the right to judge us and not judge
others.
The second way to ensure compatibility of a person-centred treatment is the ability to provide unconditional support regardless of the situation or problem of the client. As a consultant, using face-to-face intensive care is key to a successful recovery is through support and full understanding. As any Christian believes, we
must support those who follow our path at the right level.
A third way that a person-centred treatment is compatible is through communication. Choosing a counsellor is the ability to hear and feel compassion and communication skills. Psalm 37:30 (ESV) “The mouth of the righteous speaks of wisdom, his tongue speaks of justice.” Communication and understanding are the
only ways consultants can succeed in helping. There is nobody around, especially a client like candy, so she understands what she and her family are going through.
The compatibilities
The first compatibility with Christianity is Christian love. A personal therapy centre expresses Christian love. The same love that God calls for Christians, true
love. Roger’s underlying condition is unconditional positive respect and empathy, which is an excellent example of this Christian love. The second compatibility with Christianity is that personality-oriented therapy is focused on clients, not on problems. Jesus saw the hearts of people, but not their actions. He knew their kind, even if they themselves did not know well. This is similar to the interaction between the therapist and the client when using human-oriented therapy. The ultimate
compatibility with Christianity is “an emphasis on the immediacy of the present existential moment” (Jones & Butman, 2011, p. 282). Personalized therapy is aimed at improving the current situation of the client, letting him know that he needs to let go of the past. Jones and Butman (2011) agree that Christians rely on God as
their “daily bread.” This allows them to focus on the present.
Incompatibilities
The first incompatibility with Christianity is a human-centred remedy, and some of us believe that we can control our faith (Jones & Butman, 2011). This is
incompatible because God rules our faith and God’s rules. The second incompatibility with Christianity is that human-centred therapy recognizes our own truth (Jones & Butman, 2011). “Self-realization trends are in tune with the biological assessment process, feel good and recognize that their decisions are correct,” (Jones & Butman, 2011, p. 272). Christianity emphasizes that revelation is true. People cannot go their way and sin is woven into human nature. The last incompatibility
with Christianity is that human-centred treatment does not recognize evil or sin (Jones & Butman, 2011). Rogers should have shown people good. Christians have acknowledged that people are guilty (Jones & Butman, 2011). Another way in which a person-oriented conversion is incompatible with Christian conversion is personal responsibility and freedom. Christians firmly believe that we are not only responsible for our choice, but also have the influence of others. Rogers’ person-
centred approach does not believe in this but refers only to individual responsibility for life.
Conclusion
A personality-oriented theory provides professional counsellors with theoretical guidance on how to connect clients to a therapeutic relationship (Joyce & Sills, 2018). There are some differences between the Christian point of view and this approach, but there are ample reasons for using the client in practice. Roger has a bright and positive outlook on people-centred therapy (Clarke & Braun, 2018). Angela can overcome all her problems using personality-oriented therapy. Roger’s theory
focuses on the present, and Angela has a bright future. “Individuals have many resources to understand themselves, change attitudes, and use these resources if there is a transparent psychological culture. In the case of Angela, Roger’s therapy is considered auspicious.
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She can turn into the consequences of events in her professional and personal life. This is the ultimate goal of her counselling treatment, which should be harmless to
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Reference
Clarke, V., & Braun, V. (2018). Using thematic analysis in counselling and psychotherapy research: A critical reflection. Counselling and Psychotherapy Research, 18(2), 107-110.
Holm-Hadulla, R. M. (2018). The art of counselling and psychotherapy. Routledge. Jones, S. L., & Butman, R. E. (2011). Modern psychotherapies: A
comprehensive Christian appraisal. InterVarsity Press. Joyce, P., & Sills, C. (2018). Skills in Gestalt counselling & psychotherapy. Sage. Kettley, S., Kettley, R., & Bates, M. (2015, September). An introduction to the person-centred approach as an attitude for participatory design. In Adjunct Proceedings of the 2015 ACM International
Joint Conference on Pervasive and Ubiquitous Computing and Proceedings of the 2015 ACM International Symposium on Wearable Computers (pp. 1101-1104).
Schmid, P. F. (2018). “A kind of liking which has strength”(Carl Rogers). Re-Visioning Person-Centred Therapy: Theory and Practice of a Radical Paradigm.
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CONCEPTUALIZATION AND TREATMENT PLAN 1 1 CONCEPTUALIZATION AND TREATMENT PLAN 1 2 Case Conceptualization Using Person-Centred Therapy
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CONCEPTUALIZATION AND TREATMENT PLAN 1 1 CONCEPTUALIZATION AND TREATMENT PLAN 1 2 Case Conceptualization Using Person Centered Therapy
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Ethical and multicultural issues are also discussed.
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Any ethical and multicultural issues will also be discussed
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Conceptualization and Treatment Plan 1
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CONCEPTUALIZATION AND TREATMENT PLAN 1
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Rogers grew up in a strict Christian home. (Jones & Butman, 2011). At age 12, his family moved to the farm. The Roger family worked hard and became interested in agriculture.
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Rogers grew up into a Christian home that was strict (Jones & Butman, 2011) At the age of twelve his family moved to a farm Roger’s family valued hard worked and became interested in agriculture
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He went to college and majored in agriculture for two years. Rogers became interested in psychology after studying at Columbia University.
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He went on to college and majored in agriculture for two years Rogers became curious about psychology after his classes at Columbia University
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After changing degrees, Rogers began working in the world of psychology.
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After changing his degree Rogers began working in the psychology world
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Rogers was one of the most influential psychologists of the 20th century. Rogers agreed with Abraham Maslow’s theory and was a humanistic psychologist. He believed that people should grow up in an environment that provided them. Rogers focused on self-realization.
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Rogers was one of the most influential psychologists of the 20th century Rogers agreed with Abraham Maslow’s theories and was a humanistic psychologist He believed that people had to grow in an environment that provides for them Rogers focused a lot on self-actualization
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Rogers believed in a self-sufficient person. Everyone can grow, change, and achieve.
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Rogers believed in the self-functioning person Everyone can grow, change, and achieve
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Carl Ransom Rogers (1902-1987) was one of the leading psychotherapists in 40 years of history. He is known for his work as the author of 16 books, 200 articles, and millions of copies worldwide.
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Carl Ransom Rogers (1902-1987) was one the influential psychotherapists in history for 40 years He is known for all his accomplishments as an author of sixteen books, two hundred articles, and millions of copies around the world
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Jones and Butman (2011) describe human-oriented therapy as the basis of phenomenology. Carl Rogers requires authenticity (openness and self- disclosure), acceptance (found in an unconditional positive look), and empathy (heard and understood) for a person to truly grow.
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Jones and Butman (2011), describe person-centered therapy as a base of phenomenology Carl Rogers was a humanistic psychologist who believed that in order for a person to really grow, they would require genuineness (openness and self-disclosure), acceptance (being seen with unconditional positive regard), and empathy (being listened to and understood)
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Rogers believed that everyone could achieve goals, desires, and dreams of life.
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Rogers believed that every person could achieve their goals, desires, and dreams in life
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According to Jones and Butman (2011, p.
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(Jones & Butman, 2011)
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It took Rogers over 40 years to develop a cure. He experienced several name changes before deciding on a person- oriented therapy.
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Rogers took over forty years to develop his therapy It went through several name changes before he decided on the Person-Centered Therapy
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There is judgment in his practice, but if you focus on judgment rather than theory, you focus on the wrong. In 2013, the Fourth World Conference on Psychology, Counselling, and Guidance (WCPCG) took part in a study of 55 unmarried teenage girls who became pregnant.
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There is judgment about his practices but if the focus is on the judgment and not the theory, you are focusing on the wrong thing A study was competed in 2013 by 4th World Conference on Psychology, Counselling and Guidance (WCPCG) on fifty -five pregnant out of wedlock teenage girls
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No ethical issues should arise when a client uses a person-oriented theory.
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There should not be any ethical issues that should arise when the client is using the Person-Centered theory
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The client uses the past and his environment to help grow.
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The client will use the past and her environment to help her grow
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Human-oriented therapy is a very safe therapy.
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Person-Centered Therapy is a very safe therapy
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client focus shift and client control.
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It shifts the focus client and the client has control
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“Despite the fact that client-oriented therapists do not diagnose clients and do not directly address a specific disorder, it should be noted that this approach is still beneficial. This can lead to alcoholism, drug addiction, which is why it is often used as part of a more comprehensive program of inpatient or outpatient treatment for problems such as eating disorders.
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“It should be noted that although client- centered therapists don’t diagnose their clients or address specific disorders per se, the approach can still be very beneficial This is why it’s often used as part of a more comprehensive residential or outpatient program for problems such as alcoholism, drug addiction, and eating disorders” (Addictions, 2015)
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Rogers believed that everyone could achieve goals, desires, and dreams of life.
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Rogers believed that every person could achieve their goals, desires, and dreams in life
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According to Jones and Butman (2011, p.
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(Jones & Butman, 2011)
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The therapist is consistent with the client.
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The therapist is congruent with the client
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The therapist provides an unconditional positive attitude towards the client.
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The therapist provides the client with unconditional positive regard
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Angela’s husband uses this to play professional football but was injured during the match.
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Angela’s husband use to play professional football but was injured in a game
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She owns a salon bought by her husband. Angela and her husband share the daughter of her husband from a previous relationship with two children.
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She owns a salon that her husband bought her Angela and her husband share two children together, plus her husband’s daughter from a previous relationship
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Angela was given three goals during a treatment planning session. My first goal was to spend time with my family away from work.
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Angela was given three goals during her treatment plan session The first goal was to take time off of work and spend time with her family
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The second goal was to show her husband anxiety about cheating.
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The second goal was to express her cheating concerns with her husband
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She must admit that she has problems with drinking.
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She has to admit that she has a drinking problem
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Compatibility or congruence is Rogers’ most important attribute.
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Congruence is Rogers most important attribute
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Angela can express her feelings in everything that happened in her family.
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Angela will be able to express her emotions on everything that has happened with her family
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This is the most challenging goal that Angela can face.
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This can be the hardest goal that Angela may face
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All these goals for her play with each other. Angela can use this for objective three.
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All of these goals for her play into each other Angela can also use this for goal number three as well
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Unconditional positive points
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Unconditional positive regard
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This shows care and real attention to the client.
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This shows the concern and genuine care to the client
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Angela may want to shout or strike something. This technique allows her to do this and feel safe with it.
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Angela may want to scream or punch something This technique will allow her to do so and feel safe while doing it
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The Bible is a great way to begin a spiritual approach with Angela. She is already familiar, and it will be the open door that she needs.
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Scripture is a great way to start the spiritual approach with Angela She is already familiar, and it will be the open door that she needs
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In the eyes of God, we are equal, He loves us all, and we must love all his creations. God, the Creator, has the right to judge us and not judge others.
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In gods’ eyes, we are all his children, and god loves us and tells us we must love all his creations God our creator with the power to judge us and not us judge others
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As a consultant, using face-to-face intensive care is key to a successful recovery is through support and full understanding. As any Christian believes, we must support those who follow our path at the right level. A third way that a person-centred treatment is compatible is through communication.
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As a counselor using in person centered therapy, the key to a successful recovery is through support and full understanding As any Christian believes, we must show support to anyone that comes in our path in the right level The third way that person-centered therapy is compatible is the communication
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Psalm 37:30 (ESV) “The mouth of the righteous speaks of wisdom, his tongue speaks of justice.” Communication and understanding are the only ways consultants can succeed in helping.
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Psalm 37:30 (ESV) “The mouth of the righteous utters wisdom, and his tongue speaks justice.” Communicating and understanding is only way a counselor is successful in helping
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The first compatibility with Christianity is Christian love.
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The first compatibility with Christianity is Christian love
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The same love that God calls for Christians, true love.
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The same love that God calls Christians to display, real love
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This is similar to the interaction between the therapist and the client when using human-oriented therapy. The ultimate compatibility with Christianity is “an emphasis on the immediacy of the present existential moment” (Jones & Butman, 2011, p.
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This is similar to the interaction between the therapist and the client when Person- Centered Therapy is used The final compatibility with Christianity is “values the immediacy of the present existential moment” (Jones & Butman, 2011, p.282)
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Jones and Butman (2011) agree that Christians rely on God as their “daily bread.” This allows them to focus on the present.
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Jones and Butman (2011) agrees that Christians depend on God for their “daily bread”
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The first incompatibility with Christianity is a human-centred remedy, and some of us believe that we can control our faith (Jones & Butman, 2011). This is incompatible because God rules our faith and God’s rules. The second incompatibility with Christianity is that human-centred therapy recognizes our own truth (Jones & Butman, 2011). “Self- realization trends are in tune with the biological assessment process, feel good and recognize that their decisions are correct,” (Jones & Butman, 2011, p.
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The first incompatibility with Christianity is that the Person-Centered Therapy that some of us believe that we control our own faith (Jones & Butman, 2011) This is incompatible because God controls our faith and he is in control The second incompatibility with Christianity is that Person-Centered Therapy acknowledges the truth that we have in ourselves (Jones & Butman, 2011) “Self-actualizing tendency is in tune with the organismic valuing process, they will feel good about themselves and recognize that their decisions are the right ones” (Jones & Butman, 2011, p
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The last incompatibility with Christianity is that human-centred treatment does not recognize evil or sin (Jones & Butman, 2011).
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The last incompatibility with Christianity is that Person-Centered Therapy does not acknowledge any evil or sin (Jones & Butman, 2011)
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Christians firmly believe that we are not only responsible for our choice, but also have the influence of others.
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Christians believe strongly not only we are responsible for our own choices, but we have the effect of others as well
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Angela can overcome all her problems using personality-oriented therapy. Roger’s theory focuses on the present, and Angela has a bright future.
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Angela can overcome all of her issues with using Person-Centered Therapy Roger’s theory focuses on the present and Angela has a bright future
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L., & Butman, R.
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L., & Butman, R
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A comprehensive Christian appraisal.
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A comprehensive Christian Appraisal
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In Adjunct Proceedings of the 2015 ACM International Joint Conference on Pervasive and Ubiquitous Computing and Proceedings of the 2015 ACM International Symposium on Wearable Computers (pp.
Original source
In Adjunct Proceedings of the 2015 ACM International Joint Conference on Pervasive and Ubiquitous Computing and Proceedings of the 2015 ACM International Symposium on Wearable Computers (pp