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Find Help
Just any therapist
won't do,
you want to locate someone
with the skill, experience
and sensitivity you need.
Follow link to:
AMHA National
Therapist Locator
or
in
Oregon & Washington
Call Toll-Free:
1-888-706-9933
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Revised:
June 21, 2009
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What
Is Psychotherapy?
Adapted with Permission From Creating
A Different Future, a booklet published by AMHA Massachusetts and The Consortium For
Psychotherapy
Revised: May 20, 2007
Psychotherapy is a process of discovery - - a learning
process. In this process, you and your therapist work together to discover what events,
situations, and relationships in your current life or earlier life are leaving you with
uncomfortable feelings or ways of dealing with your world. You work toward acquiring new,
effective, helpful ways of understanding your experiences and the events in your life,
your responses to them, and the actions you take. In this way your actions will become
less automatic and based more on understanding and choice. Your partner, your child
or your entire family might participate in the processes of discovery, learning, and
change that are characteristic of psychotherapy
Psychotherapy is an unfolding process. It begins by creating the private
and confidential context in which it can do its job. Confidentiality is essential. The
work involved in psychotherapy depends on your needs and desires. In some cases the work
is to uncover experiences of the past that are brought to the surface by current events,
situations, and relationships. This allows present circumstances to be understood and
dealt with in a different way. In the course of this exploring painful or uncomfortable
symptoms such as persistent symptoms of depression, our fearfulness and unwanted habits
and thoughts may decrease in intensity and frequency. Ways of responding and acting which
have been ineffective can also be changed.
Psychotherapy looks at the whole human being and at the
many complex factors that have contributed to making every person unique. Symptoms such as
anxiety or depression, are viewed not just as a problem, but also as a sign that something
is hurting inside that some aspect of the person needs attention,
Psychotherapy assumes that there are aspects of our lives of which we
are not fully aware. Our thoughts, feelings, behaviors, dreams, and our reactions to
people and events are based on hidden assumptions, expectations, and on memories of
earlier events. Our lack of awareness, lack of skill and choice, and many of our old
wounds limit much of our untapped creative energy. Psychotherapy affords an opportunity to
uncover, describe, explore, learn about, and appreciate our perceptions, our hidden
assumptions, the ways we have adapted to life -- as well as how all these have evolved.
In cases in which a couple or family work together, the therapist may
assume an educational stance. Psychotherapy can facilitate a more effective
understanding of the current relationships, along with a fuller understanding of what you and the others may feel, say, and do in
those relationships. This work can help you and the partner or family member resolve
conflicts more productively and easily. If children are involved, it may help them grow
with less pain and difficulty. In a partnership, greater intimacy can be created and
maintained.
Psychotherapy takes place in the context of a solid, trustworthy working
relationship between the client and the therapist. It helps create the context, the
insight, and under standing, the vision, and the support within which durable growth and
desirable change can take place. Psychotherapy is not advice
giving, but it can involve giving advice. It empowers the client to come to useful
personal understanding, to make clearer choices, and to a more achieve lasting
independence,
As we become more aware and more appreciative of what
we are like, we can resolve or come to terms with our problems and our reactions to people
and external events. We feel in better possession of ourselves and more able to make
positive and life-affirming decisions. Creative energies no longer need to be spent on
keeping old troubles in control, and there is more energy for love, work and play. We can
see past or present events and people more clearly, and we may come to know more about who
we are independent of other peoples definitions. Some have referred to the
psychotherapy experience as the awakening of aspects of the inner self which have been
hidden. Others may describe psychotherapy as education, problem solving, changing our
environment and minds.
In the process of psychotherapy, you can see beneath the surface and
integrate intellectual understanding with your emotional experiences. The confidential
psychotherapy sessions encourage your thoughts and emotional experiences to flow freely.
In this free-flowing process, a variety of thoughts and feelings emerge; they create a
window through which you can understand your inner processes more directly. You and your
therapist jointly examine these moment-to-moment experiences in a non-judgmental manner
that provides new understanding about your experience of the world. The process gradually
becomes a part of your internal experience and goes with you after therapy is completed.
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