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WHAT CAN A THERAPIST DO FOR YOU?
Psychotherapy is designed to help people enhance their sense of
well-being. This improvement in the quality of life is
achieved through resolving emotional, behavioral, or interpersonal
problems and/or expanding existing positive attributes. An
effective therapist can help you in a number of ways.
- Social Support
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Many experiencers feel very much alone; they feel that they are
unable to share what has happened to them because they fear
ridicule, or they fear what they might evoke in people who might
believe them. At the same time, it is very difficult for some
experiencers to feel mentally and emotionally alone with their
experiences. In general, it is useful to have someone to talk
to. For many people, having a caring, supportive listener
available on a regular basis is calming and stabilizing.
- Problem Solving
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A therapist can help you work through difficulties you are
having in every aspect of your daily life. Sometimes
experiencers are so overwhelmed by extraordinary material that they
may feel they do not have the energy to deal with more mundane
problems. This is common and natural, under the
circumstances. However, thinking through everyday problems
with someone who understands the greater context of your life can
greatly reduce your overall stress level and leave you with a
better sense of control. This will make your more
extraordinary experiences easier to handle.
- Coping Skills
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Most therapists can help by teaching you specific coping skills
to deal with upsetting thoughts and feelings that can intrude in
your daily life. Relaxation techniques, recognition of
self-defeating thinking and behavior patterns, mindfulness and
meditation exercises, and even forms of self-hypnosis are taught to
help people develop a variety of valuable coping skills.
These are the means by which people calm the body and put intrusive
thoughts aside until the time is right for dealing with them.
- Hypnosis and "memory recovery"
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Some individuals feel that many aspects of their lives are
stable, but that they carry unconscious material that needs
attention. They may feel some anxiety and urgency in relation
to this material. They often believe that this material is
memory of past experience held out of consciousness due to its
traumatic or unusual nature, and that knowing the "truth" will
alleviate their distress. Hypnosis and similar relaxation
methods are simple tools that people use to enter a relaxed,
nonordinary psychological state where they can have access to
internal information that is not usually available to them.
Hypnosis is the subject of a great deal of research and debate,
and, in scientific circles, information recovered under hypnosis is
generally judged to be less reliable than conscious memories.
For example, information retrieved under hypnosis is not admissible
in many courts of law. People who obtain images under
hypnosis that seem to be memories often have doubts about the
objective reality of these memories afterwards. Most health
professionals believe that some of the images recovered under
hypnosis are memories of past experience, while others are symbolic
representations of important personal matters, and that it may be
quite difficult to distinguish between the two. Thus,
hypnosis as a means to recover the "real truth" may prove to be
quite disappointing.
However, hypnosis or another relaxation method can be effective
in helping individuals come to terms with traumatic or
extraordinary experiences. Hypnosis can help people gain
control over their pain and their anxiety because, in hypnosis,
people can gain insight through imagining and practicing new
behaviors. Many people who remain unsure as to the "reality"
of their experiences can use hypnosis to feel more resolved in
their day-to-day living.
When it comes to changing long-term, problematic patterns of
behavior in your personal or professional life, a therapist can
help you examine and change various deep-seated assumptions you
have about yourself, your intimate relationships, and your life by
looking at the formative relationships and events that you have
experienced. It is thought that by understanding the past,
people can make more conscious choices about the present.
Unwanted, unconscious patterns of behavior often show up in the
therapeutic relationship itself, and these patterns may be
recognized and become part of a therapeutic discussion, especially
in "depth" approaches to psychotherapy, which are further discussed
below.
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