Student Resources
Chapter 1
Mindmaps
Word Clouds
Chapter 2
Mindmaps
Word Clouds
Chapter 3
Mindmaps
Word Clouds
Chapter 4
Mindmaps
Word Clouds
Chapter 5
Mindmaps
Word Clouds
Chapter 6
Mindmaps
- Cognitive-Behaviour Therapy
- Gestalt Therapy
- Multimodal Therapy
- Neurolinguistic Programming
- Rational Emotive Behaviour Therapy
- Transactional Analysis
Word Clouds
Therapy in Action
- Psychoanalytic Therapy
- Person-Centered Therapy
- Behavior Therapy
- Cognitive Therapy
Resources and Links
Resources
Please see below for a list of resources to improve understanding and expand appreciation of the topics. For each of these resources, consider what insight they can provide about counselling and psychotherapy. Do they give us a flavour of a particular approach? Do they offer some additional information or a unique perspective on a certain therapy? Do they show us how therapy is perceived by the media? Reflect on the thoughts and feelings generated by the resource and explore how the resource has contributed to your understanding of counselling and psychotherapy.
Movies
See below for fictional and non-fictional movies incorporating elements of counselling and psychotherapy.
- As Good as It Gets (1997)
- What about Bob? (1991)
- Analyse This (1999)
- Nuts (1987)
- One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest (1975)
- Girl, Interrupted (1999)
- I Never Promised You a Rose Garden (1977)
- Three Faces of Eve (1975)
- Silence of the Lambs (1991)
- Good Will Hunting (1997)
- A Dangerous Method (2011)
- Freud: The Secret Passion (1962)
- Spellbound (1945)
- Equus (1977)
- Prince of Tides (1991)
- Zelig (1983)
- Child of Rage (1992)
- A Beautiful Mind (2001)
- K-Pax (2001)
- Freud (mini-series 1984)
- In Treatment (series 2008)
- Bob Newhart Therapy Skit (2001)
Books
See below for fictional and non-fictional books incorporating elements of counselling and psychotherapy.
- Couch Fiction (Perry & Graat)
- Tales from the Therapy Room: Shrink-Wrapped (Lapworth)
- One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest (Kesey)
- Girl, Interrupted (Kaysen)
- I Never Promised You a Rose Garden (Greenberg)
- Red Dragon; Silence of the Lambs; Hannibal (Harris)
- The Interpretation of Murder (Rubenfeld)
- A Most Dangerous Method: The Story of Jung, Freud and Sabina Spielrein (Kerr)
- The Three Faces of Eve (Thigpen & Cleckley)
Documentaries
See below for documentaries incorporating elements of counselling and psychotherapy.
- The Iceman Tapes (1992)
- Child of Rage (1990)
- Dolphin Boy (2011)
- Asylum (1972)
- Inside Outside: Building a Meaningful Life After the Hospital (2004)
- Three Approaches to Psychotherapy (Gloria tapes) (1964)
Poems
See below for poems incorporating elements of counselling and psychotherapy.
- On the Way Out (Wright-Wilson)
- Cheap Therapy (Weilert)
- The Useless Counsellor (Tyler)
- Please, Just Listen (Anon)
- A Counsellor's Perspective (Michell)
- The Invitation (Oriah Mountain Dreamer)
- When my Angel Cries (Gates)
- The Door (McClure)
- Wanting to Die (Sexton)
- The Marriage of Heaven and Hell (Blake)
Websites
See below for websites incorporating elements of counselling and psychotherapy.
- www.bacp.co.uk/
- www.bps.org.uk/
- www.apa.org/
- www.bapca.org.uk/
- www.ipa.org.uk/
- www.babcp.com/
- http://albertellis.org/
- www.rebtnetwork.org/
- www.ericberne.com/
- www.itaaworld.org/
- http://iaba.com/
- www.mind.org.uk/
- www.rethink.org/
- www.butyoudontlooksick.com/
- www.nhs.uk/conditions/counselling/Pages/Introduction.aspx
Glossary
ABC Model: Antecedent – Behaviour – Consequence; shows that behaviour is prompted by stimuli in the environment and results in specific consequences (from behavioural theory)
ABCDE Model: Activating event – Belief (about the event) – Consequences (emotional and behavioural) – Disputing irrational beliefs – Effects (from REBT)
Absolutistic Neurosis-inciting Musts: irrational demands which come from irrational beliefs
Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT): a development from CBT which focuses on acceptance and mindfulness techniques
Active Psychoeducation: therapeutic intervention in which the therapist provides specific advice and guidance in addition to general information and educational material
Adaptive Self-talk: restructuring internal dialogue by replacing irrational faulty beliefs with rational constructive beliefs
Adult: the TA ego state in which thoughts, feelings and behaviours are appropriate to the here and now
Advanced Empathy: sensing the expressions not communicated directly by the client; reflecting that which currently sits just outside the client’s awareness
Advice: to offer specific information about what to do; persuasive one-way exchange involving the advice- iver offering an opinion, making a judgement or making a recommendation
Affect: our feelings about self, others and events (multimodal)
Alliance: the relationship between counsellor and client (as in 'the therapeutic alliance')
Analgesic: a remedy that relieves pain
Analytic Framework: the process of psychoanalysis; the basic rules of the therapeutic relationship
Analytical Psychology: the Jungian school of psychodynamic theory
Anchoring: an NLP technique to set and access positive resource states, based on the principles of classical conditioning
Animal Research: experiments on animals in developing theories of classical and operant conditioning (behavioural)
Antithesis of Games: once you know that you are playing a game, end the game
Anxiety Hierarchy: a graded list of anxiety-provoking stimuli
APA: American Psychological Association
Aphasia: inability to understand language
Approach: the umbrella term for all theories and concepts converging on a similar set of principles
Arbitrary Inferences: drawing conclusions on the basis of limited evidence
Aspiration: a desire or goal
Assessment: collecting information about a client to inform the therapeutic process
Assimilative Integration: a form of integration where a therapist using a single model assimilates techniques from other approaches over time
Assumptions: things taken for granted
Attachment Pattern: repeated sets of a behaviour in attachment theory
Auditory: hearing, one of the senses, also known in NLP as representation systems
Autonomy: the overall aim in TA; behaving, thinking and feeling in response to the reality of the here and now rather than responding to script beliefs; respect for the client’s right to be self-governing (BACP ethical framework)
Awareness: a term used in a number of approaches, generally meaning to become more aware of thoughts, feelings and behaviours
Baby Tender ‘Aircrib’: designed by Skinner to reduce problems associated with a traditional crib
BACP: British Association for Counselling and Psychotherapy
BASIC ID: behaviour, affect, sensation, images, cognition, interpersonal and drugs/biology; the seven modalities of human experiencing (multimodal)
Beck Depression Inventory: the most widely used assessment scale for the clinical diagnosis of depression; 21 items each presenting four options indicating current and recent emotional and cognitive states; designed by Aaron Beck
Beck Institute for Cognitive Therapy and Research: Aaron Beck’s cognitive therapy centre
Becoming: to be constantly striving to be more effective and moving towards self-actualisation
Behaviour: action or reaction in response to a stimulus
Behaviour Analysis: focuses exclusively on observable and measurable behaviour; analysing behaviour as an external evidence of cognitive states
Behaviour Shaping: reinforcement and (to a lesser extent) punishment for specific behaviours in order to shape behaviour towards a desirable goal
Behaviour Therapy: a term first used by Lazarus, 1958 (multimodal)
Behavioural Change Programmes: a combination of applications to enhance positive behaviour and to reduce negative behaviours
Behavioural Techniques: specific applications to enhance positive behaviour and to reduce negative behaviours
Behaviourism: approach focusing on observable behaviours
Behaviourist Manifesto: produced by Watson, 1913; publication entitled Psychology as the Behaviourist views It
Beliefs: ideas we hold to be true; beliefs underpin our values, ideas and assumption about ourselves, others and the world
Beneficence: commitment to promoting the client’s wellbeing (BACP ethical framework)
Bias: a preference that prevents impartial judgement
Biological Sex: the classification of being either male or female
Blank Slate: humans are born as a tabula rasa or blank slate on which experience writes the patterns of their future behaviour (behavioural)
Boundaries: the rules that an individual holds about the appropriate and acceptable ways to interact with others; for the therapeutic relationship they should be established through collaboration between the therapist and client
BPS: British Psychological Society
Brandon Report: a set of training, practice and research recommendations produced by the UK Royal College of Psychiatrists
Bridging: meeting the client in their preferred modality in order to move them to another modality (multimodal)
Business Contract: duration of sessions, number of sessions, charges of sessions, cancellation expectations, etc.
Cause and Effect: the relationship between one thing and another; challenging distortions where a client assumes that one thing will cause another (NLP meta model)
Center for the Studies of the Person: focusing on therapy and psychoeducation, founded by Carl Rogers in 1968
Central Nervous System: the majority of the nervous system consisting of the brain and spinal cord
Cerebral Paralysis: cerebral palsy; Freud’s view was that it was caused by damage to the brain while the central nervous system was developing in the foetus
Challenges: counsellor skills to help the client to gain new perspectives and insights
Child: the TA ego state in which thoughts, feelings and behaviours are from childhood
Child Psychoanalysis (Play Therapy): developed by Melanie Klein, play is regarded as symbolic activity indicating underlying drives
Classical Conditioning: repeated pairings of an unconditioned and neutral stimulus will result in a conditioned response
Client: the person receiving the counselling
Client Protection: legislation designed to look after the wellbeing of the child; one of the reasons why confidentiality would be broken
Client–Therapist Rapport: the basis of the therapeutic relationship
Clinical Psychologist: a professional who works with individuals suffering severe physical or mental disorders and impairments
Cognition: the mental processes mediating between stimuli (external world) and response (our behaviour)
Cognition-Driven Emotions: feelings that result from thoughts
Cognitive: of cognition (thinking)
Cognitive Dissonance: discomfort experienced when having two conflicting thoughts
Cognitive Distortions: faulty thinking
Cognitive Psychology: scientific study of mind
Cognitive Restructuring: disputing and replacing irrational or unhelpful thoughts
Cognitive Revolution: the cognitive reaction to the three 'forces' of psychology
Cognitive Techniques: ways of challenging negative, dysfunctional cognition
Cognitive Therapy: approach that focuses on thought processes and how these affect feelings and behaviours
Cognitive Triad: thoughts related to the three domains of self, the world and the future
Cognitive-Behaviour Modification: a form of CBT developed by Donald Meichenbaum
Cognitive-Behaviour Therapy: an integrative approach favoured by the NHS in the treatment of anxiety and depression
Collaboration: the counsellor and client working together to achieve the aims of the therapy
Collaborative Empiricism: the client and the counsellor are co-investigators in the process
Collaborative Therapeutic Relationship: the working relationship between counsellor and client
Collectivist Cultures: cultures where the group (e.g. family, society) is more important than the individual
Common Factors: identifying similarities in approaches; one of the types of integration
Communication: interactions between individuals
Compensation: developing specific traits to make up for deficiencies in other areas
Competence: effective use of skills and knowledge
Completion: the final stage in the Gestalt cycle (of awareness)
Complex: a group of emotionally laden thoughts and feelings which result in dysfunctional behaviour
Complex equivalence: assumes that two things are synonymous
Computerised CBT: a development of cognitive-behavioural therapy in which an individual can access an online programme for self-help
Conditioned Fear: fear installed by classical conditioning
Conditioned Reflex: a response that is associated with a previously unconnected stimulus; classical conditioning
Conditioned Response: the result of pairing an unconditioned and neutral stimulus; classical conditioning
Conditions of Worth: the evaluations made by significant others about the correct way to act, think and feel in order to receive conditional positive regard
Confidentiality: keeping private, within agreed limits, the content of the counselling session
Configurations of Self: a coherent pattern of feelings, thoughts and behaviours symbolised by the person as a different aspect, or part, within the self
Conflict of Interest: a boundary issue in counselling, for example being both manager and supervisor
Confluence: a loss of the distinction between the individual and the rest of the world
Congruence: being open and honest, one of the three Rogerian 'core' conditions, also known as genuineness
Conscious: that which is in awareness, one of three parts of the mind in Freudian analysis
Consequences: results of our actions; in REBT the emotional and behavioural effects of our beliefs about an event
Constructive Personality Change: positive change in the client, as a result of offering the six conditions over a period of time in person-centred therapy
Contact Boundary: the boundary between self and the rest of the world (Gestalt)
Contamination: an individual thinking she/he is in Adult when in fact they are in Child or Parent ego state
Contingency Management: an umbrella term for techniques which are used systematically to reinforce positive behaviour
Contingent Attention: programs involve the client being reinforced or punished by being granted or denied attention
Continuous Reinforcement: reinforcement provided every single time the behaviour is exhibited
Contract: the agreed working alliance between the therapist and the client
Core Beliefs: fundamental beliefs about self, others and the world that influence our thoughts, feelings and behaviours
Core Conditions: unconditional positive regard, congruence and empathy. PCT theory states that if these are present in the relationship over a period of time then therapeutic change will occur
Counselling: facilitative two-way collaborative and supportive relationship that allows clients to explore their problem, understand their problem and resolve or come to terms with their problem
Counselling Psychologist: a qualified psychologist who works with individuals, couples or families experiencing mental health concerns
Counsellor/Psychotherapist: the qualified professional in the relationship; there is no recognised distinction between these two titles as both involve the same work role and accreditation process
Countertransference: transference from the counsellor to the client; it can be objective or subjective
Cultural Assumptions: assumptions made based upon the beliefs derived from one’s own culture
Cultural Awareness: counsellor understanding of the effects culture has on beliefs, values and assumptions
Cultural Bias: tendency to view the world from the perspective of one’s own culture
Cultural Empathy: an awareness of the different cultural world of the client
Cultural Heritage: the beliefs, values and assumptions gained from one’s own culture
Defensive Reactions: ways of managing anxiety
Deflection: failure to recognise or acknowledge aspects of the environment (Gestalt)
Deletions: exclusion of certain information
Denial: an ego defence mechanism where a person claims that an anxiety-provoking stimulus does not exist
Desensitisation: failure to attend to feelings and sensations (Gestalt)
Dialectical Behaviour Therapy (DBT): an approach developed for suicidal or self-harming clients with borderline personality disorder
Dialogical Relationship: Gestalt term for the nature of the counsellor/client relationship which is determined by the quality of the ongoing contact
Dichotomous Thinking: viewing the self, others and the world in extreme categories; all-or-nothing thinking
Discrimination: to treat unequally; to treat differently in either a positive or negative way
Displacement: redirecting emotions from the source to a less threatening target
Disputing Irrational Beliefs: a technique from REBT, part of the ABCDE model
Distortions: inaccuracies or assumptions in thinking
Diversity Awareness: an understanding of difference and diversity in clients
Drama Triangle: a way of analysing the roles played in TA games (Karpman)
Dream Analysis: Freudian analysis of dreams to access the unconscious
Dream Work: Gestalt technique to help the client to achieve integration
Drugs/biology: one of the seven modalities in multimodal therapy
Dysfunctional Assumptions: assumptions made through faulty thinking
Eclectic: drawing upon a variety of approaches
Ecological Validity: in NLP, a check to see both the positive and negative implications of change
Ego: governed by an understanding of the realities of the social world; one of the three parts of the personality (Freud)
Ego Defence Mechanisms: strategies for coping with internal conflict between the id and the superego
Ego-state Model of Personality: also known as the PAC model, the basic model in TA
Egotism: a boundary disturbance which involves dissociation with the environment to become a neutral observer (Gestalt)
Electra Complex: part of the Freudian phallic stage where the girl sexually desires the father before forming a relationship with the mother
Emotion: the label we attach to a feeling
Empathic Understanding: making sense of the client’s world
Empathy: experiencing another’s world as if it were your own
Empty Chair Exercise: a Gestalt exercise where the client is encouraged to externalise the dialogue by using an empty chair to house the other person or part of self
Enlightenment/Nirvana: the highest level of actualisation
Equality: an ethical principle to treat all individuals with respect
Eros: the life instinctual drive, also known as the libido (Freud)
Ethical Guidelines: framework for good practice laid out by a professional body
Ethics: the guiding principles for good therapeutic practice
Evidence-based Practice: counselling based upon proven techniques and approaches
Exaggeration Exercise: a Gestalt exercise where the client is encouraged to exaggerate certain movements, postures or expressions
Exclusions: when an individual shuts out an ego state, for example not having the Adult ego state available in a meeting with a manager
Exercises: ready-made techniques preplanned to encourage therapeutic progress
Existential Philosophy: dealing with the basic issues of existence
Expectations: something either good or bad that is anticipated in the future
Experiential Learning: learning through doing
Experiments: specifically designed techniques to encourage therapeutic progress
Explicit Contract: clearly stated therapeutic and business contract set up prior to therapy
Exploitation: to take advantage of (a person or situation)
Exposure Therapy: safely exposing a client to stimuli that create anxiety or fear
Expressive Arts: the use of creative arts as a form of therapy
Fairness: consistent application of appropriate criteria to inform decisions and actions
False Memory Syndrome: falsely believing that a thought is a real memory
Family Therapy: a therapeutic approach that works with family groups rather than individuals
Faulty Cognitive Processes: dysfunctional thoughts
Feminist Psychology: area of psychology based on the principles and values of feminism
Fidelity: honouring the trust placed in the practitioner; one of the principles in the BACP ethical framework
Field Theory: interactions between an individual and the environment, or the total field; developed by Kurt Lewin, a Gestalt psychologist
Figure and Ground: shows how our attention works; how some things become important (figure) until they are completed when they fade back into unimportance (ground)
Flashbulb Memories: vivid recollections of specific moments in time
Flexibility: the ability to respond from a range of options in any given situation
Flooding: a behavioural technique that encourages the client to experience as fully as possible the stimulus that creates the negative response
Focusing: an approach that developed from PCT, encouraging the client to focus on, and stay with, internal sensations
Formulation: in CBT, building up an understanding of the client’s problem
Frame of Reference: the perspective from which one is viewing the world
Free Association Analysis: Freudian technique encouraging the client to express without censoring, and then analysing what is expressed
Free Will: the ability to make choices independent of external constraints
Freudian Blocks: conflicts located in the unconscious
Freudian Psychoanalysis: Freudian practice based on his theories
Freudian Slip: when we say something that comes from outside our awareness, originally known as parapraxis (Freudian)
Fully Functioning Person: the idealistic aim of person-centred therapy; self-actualisation
Games: a series of transactions played outside of awareness with an ulterior motive (TA)
Gender Role Identity: how an individual identifies themselves in terms of thoughts, feelings and behaviours in relation to gender
Generalisations: the use of absolute sweeping statements
Genuineness: one of the PCT core conditions, also known as congruence
Gestalt Cycle: a seven-stage process through which we move from awareness to completion, also known as the cycle of awareness or cycle of experience
Gestalt Therapy: an existential-humanistic approach developed by Frederick and Laura Perls
Good Enough Mother: Winnicott’s statement that mothers should trust their own intuition to be ‘good enough’ for the child
Guidance: encouraging one-way exchange involving the guide showing the way, educating, influencing or instructing
Guided Discovery: being directed to gain new insights, for example through Socratic questioning
Here and Now: Gestalt term for being in the present rather than talking about the past or the future
Heuristics: cognitive short-cuts which provide us with a simple judgement operation to avoid the complexities of dealing with experiences
Hierarchy of Needs: Maslow developed the hierarchy to explain how the tendency towards self-actualisation is the highest need for the individual to achieve, but it can only be sought when all other needs are being met
High-Risk Clients: those clients who are in real danger of doing serious harn to themselves or others
Holistic: relating to both physical and psychological aspects of the person; treating a person as a complete whole
Homework: activities set for the client to do between sessions (CBT)
HPC: Health Professions Council
Human Motivation: inner drive to work towards a desired goal
Humanistic: focusing on the individual as a unique human being
Humanistic Manifesto: published by Bugental, outlined five key postulates for the approach: human beings cannot be reduced to components, have in them a uniquely human context, have an awareness of oneself, have choices and responsibilities, and seek meaning, value and creativity
Humanistic Movement: reaction to the behaviourist and psychodynamic forces of psychology; focuses on the individual human experience, rather than objective scientific enquiry
Humility: ability to assess accurately and acknowledge one’s own strengths and weaknesses
Hypnosis: induced state of relaxation in order to access deeper parts of the mind
Hypnotherapy: therapeutic approach for treating clients using hypnosis
Hysteria: symptoms that appear, but are not, physical (Freud)
Id: basic drive for gratification; one of the three parts of the personality (Freud)
Images: internal visual pictures created by the individual
Imagined: thoughts, feelings and experiences created by the individual
Implicit Contract: any parts of the therapeutic and business contract that are not clearly stated
Incongruence: not congruent, a discrepancy between; e.g. self-concept is incongruent with the organismic self (PCT)
Increasing Existential Living: being fully open to new experience without defensiveness; being a participant in and an observer of the ongoing process of organismic experience (Rogers)
Increasing Trust in Organism: evaluating each situation and experience based on the available data, rather than relying on prejudice, bias, fear and defensiveness
Individual Psychology: the approach developed by Alfred Adler
Individualist Cultures: cultures where personal choice and responsibility are valued as more important than the group
Inferiority Complex: based in a child’s experience of perceived weakness or illness; Adler believed that this feeling was the basis for neurotic symptoms
Informed Consent: giving the client all relevant information and getting the client’s agreement (when contracting)
Injunctions: negative messages from the Child ego state of parents to the Child ego state of the child
Integrative: combining techniques from more than one model
Integrity: commitment to being moral and honest in dealings with others
Intellectualisation: focusing excessively on intellectual details rather than dealing with the associated emotions
Interdisciplinary Approach: an approach that includes elements from other approaches, for example modern behavioural analysis
Internal Frame of Reference: seeing the world based on our (rather than others' – external) beliefs, values, knowledge, experiences, feelings, etc.
Internal Objects: how early interactions with parental figures through the paranoid-schizoid and depressive positions impact on later life (Klein, object relations)
Interpersonal Skills: another term for communications skills
Interpretation: an explanation of the meaning of part of the client’s story (e.g. dream, statements, behaviours)
Intimacy: living fully in the moment without using games or script behaviours (TA)
Intrapsychic Conflict: internal conflict between different parts of self
Introjection: internalisation of the environment without critical evaluation
In vivo: exposure to the actual stimuli (rather than imagined) (behavioural)
Isolation: withdrawal from the outside world (situations or people)
Justice: fair and impartial treatment of all clients and the provision of adequate services (BACP ethical framework)
Kinaesthetic: feeling, one of the senses, also known in NLP as representation systems
Kleinian Psychoanalysis: object relations theory developed by Melanie Klein
Labelling/Mislabelling: attributing, either accurately or inaccurately, a diagnosis
Language: a system of words, signs or symbols to aid communication
Latent Dream Content: hidden content in the form of symbols
Law of Effect: behaviours are more readily completed if they have previously resulted in a satisfactory outcome
Lazarus: Arnold Lazarus, founder of the multimodal approach
Life Positions: from TA theory. Individuals see themselves and others as either OK or not OK. Therefore the four life positions are I’m OK, you’re OK; I’m OK, you’re not OK; I’m not OK, you’re OK; I’m not OK, you’re not OK.
Life Scripts: created in childhood and played out of awareness in adulthood; a life story, with a beginning, middle and end
Life-acceptance: a state of acceptance of self, others and the world
Listening: to pay attention to the client’s story
Logic: a method of reasoning
Logical Error: an argument or viewpoint based on an invalid inference
Logical Positivism: focus on logic and empiricism to understand thoughts, feelings and behaviours
Magical Number Seven: human short-term memory holds +/- 7 chunks of information
Magnification: overestimating or exaggerating problems and difficulties
Maintenance Behaviours: ways of keeping a problem going (CBT)
Manifest Dream Content: content of the dream as it appears to the dreamer
Manipulation: to control or influence
Medical Model: approaches in which clients are viewed as patients and are 'treated'
Meta Model: a set of questions designed to challenge and expand the client’s internal model of the world (NLP)
Mind-reading: claiming to know the thoughts of another person (NLP meta model)
Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy (MBCT): one of the 'third wave' approaches that combines mindfulness with CBT, particularly used in working with depression
Minimization: to reduce the significance of; playing down the positive
Mirroring: matching and reflecting non-verbal communication
Misinformation: not having the right information (including the beliefs we have about ourselves that we have internalised from parents). One of the four ways problems are created and maintained in multimodal therapy
Missing Information: not having enough information. One of the four ways problems are created and maintained in multimodal therapy
Modal Operators of Necessity: verb implying obligations (‘should’, ‘must’, ‘need to’, etc.); NLP meta model
Modal Operators of Possibility: verb implying prospects (‘can/can’t’, ‘will/won’t’, ‘possible/impossible’, etc.); NLP meta model
Modality Firing Order: the basis of tracking the sequence of the problem in multimodal therapy
Modality Profile: a chart drawn up to outline the presenting problem in the seven modalities (BASIC ID)
Modality Sequence: the order of modalities in which a problem occurs
Model: a framework for applying a therapy
Monocultural: perspective from one culture (e.g. in the development of a single therapeutic approach)
Multicultural: perspective drawn from a number of cultures
Multimodal Life Inventory: a detailed personal questionnaire given to clients starting multimodal therapy
Multimodal Therapy: a technical eclectic approach developed by Arnold Lazarus
Musturbation: REBT statement about irrational beliefs based on 'musts' (Ellis)
Necessary and Sufficient: the statement about offering the six conditions bringing about constructive personality change (Rogers)
Negative Automatic Thoughts: unhelpful thoughts without evaluation that affect feelings and behaviours
Negative Cognitive Triad: negative thoughts on self, others and the world causing depression
Negative Reinforcement/Punishment: a behavioural technique to reduce or eliminate negative behaviours
Neurolinguistic Programming: a method of psychotherapy designed to instil fast and effective change in those individuals experiencing psychological discomfort; developed by Bandler and Grinder
Neurologist: a doctor specialising in the study of the nervous system
Neuropsychoanalysis: new advances in neuroscience enabling empirical research of the core principles of psychoanalysis
Neutral Stimulus: becomes a conditioned stimulus when used with an unconditioned stimulus in classical conditioning
Nominalization: changing a verb into a noun; NLP meta model
Non-judgemental: acceptance of another without conditions
Non-maleficence: commitment to avoiding harm to the client (BACP ethical framework)
Non-scientific: lacking scientific rigour, without empirical evidence
Objective: goal or aim
Object Relations: theory that adult Relationships are based on interactions with significant others in infancy (Melanie Klein)
Oedipus Complex: part of the Freudian phallic stage where the boy sexually desires the mother before forming a relationship with the father
Openness to Experience: being available in the here and now to fully experience
Operant Conditioning: behaviours operating on the environment to generate consequences
Organismic Self: the actual, real or inner self (person-centred therapy)
Other-acceptance: unconditional regards for anther without judgement
Outcome: the result of action
Paradoxical Theory of Change: we cannot force change; if we become more aware and more accepting of ourselves in the present we will have already made a significant change, and other changes will follow naturally
Paraphrasing: reflecting the content of the client’s story
Parent: the TA ego state which expresses thoughts, feelings and behaviours learned from parents in childhood
Partial Reinforcement: provided only at certain times when the behaviour is exhibited
Participant Bias: tendency for participants in research to act as they think the researcher wants
Passive Psychoeducation: therapeutic intervention in which the therapist provides information and educational material
Payoff: familiar, but negative, feeling that results from playing games (TA)
Permissions: the antidotes to injunctions in TA. For example, the permission to the injunction of 'Don’t feel' would be 'It’s okay to feel'
Persecutor: one of the three positions on the drama triangle (Karpman, TA)
Person-Centred Therapy: humanistic approach developed by Carl Rogers
Personalisation: to apply a general statement to self
Perspectives: different ways of seeing situations
Phenomenological: the subjective nature of meaning and the importance of individual experience
Positive Reinforcement/Punishment: a behavioural technique to increase positive behaviours
Positive Self-talk: internal dialogue which is supportive and motivating
Pragmatic: practical; behaviour based on practical consequences
Pre-therapy: a development of person-centred therapy by Gary Prouty engaging clients who are not able to engage in a structured counselling relationship
Precipitating Factors: what was happening in the client’s life at the time that the problem started
Preconscious: not usually within our awareness, but can be accessed if prompted
Predisposing Factors: aspects of the client’s history which may influence the current problem
Presupposition: assuming to be true
Primary Empathy: responding to the feelings and behaviour expressed by the client
Primary Reinforcers/Punishers: naturally result in an automatic response; they have a direct effect on the recipient
Professional Body: a body set up to oversee a profession
Programmes: a set of procedures
Project Pigeon: World War II plan to use pigeons as guided missiles
Projection: ascribing one's own desires and emotions to other people
Propositions of Personality: the 19 propositions, Carl Rogers’ theory of personality
Pseudonym: a fictitious name to conceal a real name
Psychiatrist: a medical doctor with a specialism in mental health
Psychic Secretion: salivation at the distant sight of food, rather than the taste of food; concept explored by Pavlov
Psycho-educational: those approaches that 'teach' clients techniques and theory
Psychoanalytic Therapy: approach developed by Freud and his contemporaries; the basis for the development of the psychodynamic approach
Psychodynamic: second force in psychology; the umbrella term for the approach that developed from Freud and psychoanalysis
Psychological Behaviourism: a unified approach aiming to integrate multiple psychological perspectives (biology, learning, cognition, emotion, etc.)
Psychological Contact: the counsellor and client need to be aware of the presence and affect of the other; in person-centred therapy, the first of the six conditions, a prerequisite for the other five conditions to flourish
Psychological/Emotional Wellbeing: being emotionally strong and healthy
Psychosexual Stages: Freudian theory of development from birth to adulthood
Psychosocial Stages: Erikson’s theory of development from birth to death
Psychotherapy: another term for counselling
Punishment: anything that will weaken the preceding behaviour
Pure Conditioning: direct pairing between unconditioned and neutral stimulus
Purist: a counsellor/therapist working with a single therapeutic approach
Radical Behaviourism: study of behaviour with no focus on cognition, emotion, etc.; all human processes are described as ‘behaviour’
Rational Emotive Behaviour Therapy: approach developed by Albert Ellis, influential in the development of CBT
Rationalisation: formulating a logical and sensible, but false, reason to explain behaviour
Rational Therapy: the original term used by Ellis for what later became REBT
Reaction Formation: adopting a belief that is completely opposite to true feelings
Reconditioning: exposure therapy exercise designed to give clients an opportunity to experience and survive risky and embarrassing situations
Referential Index Deletion: failing to specify the relevant person or thing
Referral: contacting a counsellor to arrange therapy; can be self or other
Reflecting: counsellor response rewording client’s thoughts and feelings
Regression: reverting to a prior stage of development (usually in childhood)
Reinforcement: anything that will strengthen the preceding behaviour
Relational Depth: a development of PCT exploring the quality of the relationship between counsellor and client
Relaxation Training: behavioural technique to help clients overcome anxiety
Religion/Philosophy: a system of belief
Repeated Pairings: putting together two stimuli over and over to form a connection (behavioural)
Repetition Exercise: a Gestalt experiment where the client is encouraged to repeat a statement
Representation Systems: the five senses that connect the individual to the world; also called sensory modalities (NLP)
Repressed Memory: a memory, likely to be traumatic, that is put into the unconscious and is not available to the individual (Freud)
Repression: pushing traumatic memories into the unconscious
Rescuer: one of the three positions on the drama triangle (Karpman, TA)
Resilience: the ability to recover (e.g. from illness, shock)
Resistance Analysis: exploring the client’s defences in the process of (Freudian) analysis; can reveal repressed trauma
Respect: another term for unconditional positive regard (PCT)
Responsibility: owning one’s own thoughts, feelings and behaviours
Retroflection: behaviour is internalised so that the individual behaves towards the self in the way that he or she would like to behave towards another; a boundary disturbance (Gestalt)
Reversal Exercise: a Gestalt exercise where the client and counsellor swap roles
Right to Terminate: the right of either person to end the counselling relationship; this should be included in the contract
Rules: principles, or a code, of regulation
Scaffolding for Learning: specific support tailored to the individual during the learning process
Schemas: thoughts, attitudes and beliefs about specific stimuli, such as other people, objects, events, situations, etc.
Second-Order Conditioning: subsequent pairing between conditioned and neutral stimulus
Second-Order Profile: may be drawn up specifically for a modality from the original modality profile that a client may be stuck in
Secondary Reinforcers/Punishers: need to be paired with a primary reinforcer to create a response
Selective Abstraction: focusing on one specific detail to the exclusion of all other information
Self-acceptance: being more tolerant of self; accepting all thoughts, feelings and behaviours
Self-actualisation: the achievement of potential, the ideal self; the highest point on Maslow’s hierarchy
Self-awareness: understanding and awareness of thoughts, feelings and behaviours
Self-concept: the way the individual views self
Self-disclosure: the counsellor sharing information about self with the client; a challenging skill
Self-reflection: reviewing and understanding thoughts, feelings and behaviours
Self-respect: fostering the practitioner’s self-knowledge and care for self (BACP ethical framework)
Sensation: internal feelings; in Gestalt therapy something that emerges from the background and draws our attention
Sensory Modalities: the five senses that connect the individual to the world; also called representation systems (NLP)
Shame-attacking Exercises: exercises designed to give the client an opportunity to experience and survive risky and embarrassing situations (REBT)
Sincerity: personal commitment to consistency between what is professed and what is done
Skilled Helper: the title of Egan’s three-stage model
Skinner Box: operant conditioning chamber for training animals using schedules of reinforcement
Sociocultural Awareness (Cross-cultural Empathy): an awareness of the different cultural world of the client
Socratic Questioning: guiding clients to discover new perspectives by asking questions which they have the answers to, but may currently be outside of their awareness
Spontaneity: the ability to respond freely in terms of thoughts, feelings and behaviours (TA)
Stages of Client Process: Rogers’ seven-stage theory identifying the process of therapeutic change
Stimulus–Response Model: the basis of classical conditioning and the behavioural approach
Strokes: a unit of recognition (TA)
Structural Profile: self-rating for each of the seven modalities in multimodal therapy
Structural Theory: the basic ego state (PAC) model in TA
Structure: a framework or outline for process
Subculture: a subsection of culture
Sublimation: expressing unacceptable impulses in an acceptable manner
Submodalities: subdivisions of our modalities, of how our senses represent experience; the building blocks of how we remember or imagine
Summarising: reflecting content, feelings and emerging themes from a number of client statements
Superego: moral and ethical aspects; one of the three parts of the personality (Freud)
Supervision: a specific relationship designed to support therapists; professional bodies recommend 1.5 hours per month
Swishing: one of the change techniques used in NLP (the 'swish pattern') used to redirect thoughts and behaviours from negative patterns to positive patterns
Symptoms: reported thoughts, feelings, behaviours and physical sensations
Syncretistic: non-systematic eclecticism; ad hoc and lacking structure
Synthesise: to form by combining parts
Systematic: having a clear structure or process, as in systematic eclecticism
Systematic Desensitisation: exposure to successively more anxiety-inducing stimuli whilst maintaining a stable level of relaxation
Tabula Rasa: the blank slate on which experience writes the patterns of future behaviour (behavioural approach)
Talking Cure: the term given to the therapeutic process (Freud)
Teaching Machine: randomly presented questions followed by immediate feedback, followed the same principles as the operant conditioning chamber where the child was instantly rewarded for desirable behaviour; developed by Skinner (Behavioural)
Technical Eclecticism: using an eclectic approach in a structured way (see multimodal therapy)
Thanatos: the death, or aggressive, instinctual drive (Freud)
Theoretical Integration: a type of integration where two (or more) theories are integrated to form a new theoretical approach
Theory of Neurosis: unresolved tension between the ego and the unconscious (Jung)
Therapeutic Contract: reasons for attending therapy, process of therapy, responsibilities and expectations, limits of confidentiality, etc.
Therapeutic Notes: a clear record of the relationship for improving recall in later sessions and reflecting on development over time
Therapeutic Process: how the counselling relationship works in order to achieve desired outcomes
Therapeutic Psycho-education: teaching the client techniques and theory
Therapeutic Relationship: the counsellor/client relationship which underpins the therapeutic process
Therapist: another term for counsellor
Therapy: facilitative two-way collaborative and supportive relationship that allows clients to explore their problem, understand their problem and resolve or come to terms with their problem
Third Wave CBT: the latest developments in CBT (ACT, DBT, mindfulness)
Time Out: being isolated from activities or people to some extent for a short time (for example, to calm down if getting aggressive)
Token Economy: reward system to encourage and reinforce positive behaviour
Topdog/Underdog: Gestalt theory; intrapersonal conflicts similar to the Freudian concept of superego and ego
Topographical Theory: Freudian theory of the mind, comprising the conscious, preconscious and unconscious
Tracking: noting the modality firing order of the problem (multimodal)
Transactional Analysis: a humanistic approach to counselling founded by Eric Berne
Transactions: communications between two people (TA)
Transference: the redirection of feelings about one individual to another individual
Transference Analysis: exploring connections between past and present Relationships
Transitional Objects: objects used to transfer feelings of security from the mother, e.g. a security or comfort blanket (Winnicott)
Transitional Phenomena: serve the same purpose as transitional objects, but these are thoughts or behaviours instead of objects
Transparency: congruence, genuineness (PCT)
Triggers: stimuli that start a process
Trust: integrity; confidence
UKCP: United Kingdom Council for Psychotherapy
Unacceptable Urges: part of the content of the unconscious (Freud)
Unconditional Positive Regard: to value people without conditions, also known as respect; one of the Rogerian core conditions
Unconditioned Stimulus: produces an automatic reflexive unconditioned response
Unconscious: not usually within our awareness, but can be accessed if prompted
Universal Quantifier: global terms such as ‘all’, ‘every’, ‘never’, etc.; NLP meta model
Unspecified Verb: using a verb without specifying the details of the action
Validity Testing Cognitions: checking the accuracy of thoughts
Values: principles, beliefs and accepted standards of an individual
Victim: one of the three positions on the drama triangle (Karpman, TA)
Visual: one of the representation systems in NLP
Western-centric Therapy: all the main counselling approaches were developed by white, western, educated, middle-class, middle-aged men; these approaches will have been influenced by the values and assumptions of the society in which the founder was living
WHO: World Health Organisation
Wisdom: knowledge and understanding of what is true
Worried Well: clients who need counselling for specific life events who are usually able to function well
Zones of Awareness: Gestalt therapy identifies three zones of awareness: inner, middle and outer
©Routledge/Taylor & Francis 2015