- Admin
- #25
anthony
Founder
Yes, there is no hard and fast rule about this Ichbin, and therapists do do it IF really essentially required to get the client trusting them so they will openup, however; the huge negative by doing this, is that the client often becomes set that this is now a requirement, ie. you tell me something, I tell you. That is a real issue, because therapy is not about the therapists life or issues, its about your own, and this changes the dynamics and places negative consequences into the clients mind, which then the therapist has another issue to get past with them, now trying to shift them from this tit for tat type discussion method.
Its not a big no no... but its not optimal for the entire process of what therapy is. That type of logic is used in some types of therapy, children being one, teens another, etc.. where they must be led, but leading adults is a dangerous practice because then you are removing the control from them and wasting time and energy divulging things that are irrelevant to the clients problems.
If it wasn't trauma therapy... this could be gotten away with a little more, but trauma therapy? No...
Its not a big no no... but its not optimal for the entire process of what therapy is. That type of logic is used in some types of therapy, children being one, teens another, etc.. where they must be led, but leading adults is a dangerous practice because then you are removing the control from them and wasting time and energy divulging things that are irrelevant to the clients problems.
If it wasn't trauma therapy... this could be gotten away with a little more, but trauma therapy? No...