Deck 5: Helping Clients With Their Feelings

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Question
The best way for a therapist to manage their own reactions to evocative material that clients present is to: ​

A)remain expressionless so as not to alert or distress the client.
B)ignore their own emotional reaction.
C)learn how to recognize and anticipate their own Countertransference propensities, and know what to do when they are evoked.
D)respond politely, but defensively.
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Question
One way in which therapist's countertransference reactions are revealed in therapy is by the therapist: ​

A)becomes personally invested in the way the client handles a certain issue.
B)approaches the central conflict or issue.
C)can successfully differentiate their own similar feelings from their clients'.
D)accurately identifies the client's feelings.
Question
The greatest opportunity to help clients change occurs: ​

A)at the moment clients are experiencing the full emotional impact of their problems.
B)when the client follows through with the therapist's concrete suggestions for change.
C)during the final session prior to termination of therapy.
D)there is no greatest opportunity to help clients change.
Question
To provide a "holding environment" for clients to explore their distress, therapists: ​

A)maintain a steady presence.
B)educate the client on the dynamics of therapy.
C)clarify what the therapist is thinking and feeling as clients share conflicted feelings.
D)Both maintain a steady presence and clarify what the therapist is thinking and feeling as clients share conflicted feelings are correct.
Question
When therapists minimize, reassure, explain, or simply move away from a client's painful feelings, it is often because: ​

A)they feel responsible for causing the client's painful expressions.
B)their reaction evokes a countertransference response.
C)they feel responsible for alleviating their pain, but don't quite know how.
D)both they feel responsible for causing the client's painful expressions and they feel responsible for alleviating their pain, but don't quite know how are correct.
Question
Discuss and compare effective and ineffective ways therapists can respond to defenses against or resistance toward painful feelings. ​
Question
Discuss characterological affects. How do they develop and how can therapists respond to them? ​
Question
According to Beck's "hot cognitions," it is when______that clients are most apt to distort or misperceive the therapist's response and slot it to fit old expectations. ​

A)a client has a significant lack of trust in the therapist
B)strong feelings have been triggered
C)a client perceives an inauthentic connection with the therapist
D)a client feels sequestered in their own experiences
Question
One of the most important ways to help clients achieve a greater sense of adequacy and mastery in their lives is to: ​

A)give them concrete suggestions for change.
B)summarize each session thoroughly.
C)allow them to take full responsibility for the therapeutic process.
D)help them make sense of their emotional reactions.
Question
Explain the roles that shame and guilt have in maintaining client conflicts. Discuss effective and ineffective responses to shame. ​
Question
​ Reasons clients do not like to explore difficult feelings include their:

A)belief that the work "it's too hard."
B)belief that "it won't do any good."
C)belief that exploring their feelings in depth "will be overwhelming."
D)belief that they will be ridiculed and judged.
Question
Clients who do not experience or express anger, avoid interpersonal conflict, and tend to respond to others' needs at the expense of their own is said to be experiencing the______ affective constellation. ​

A)Anger-Sadness-Shame
B)Guilt-Anger-Shame
C)Sadness-Anger-Guilt
D)Anger-Guilt-Sadness
Question
Discuss the concept of affective constellations. Illustrate one potential triad of interrelated feelings, and describe how they would play out in treatment. ​
Question
Clients frequently talk about their feelings without actually experiencing them. How can therapists help clients experience their feelings more fully and why could this be helpful? ​
Question
Describe a therapeutic "holding environment." How can therapists facilitate this and explain why it is important to the therapeutic process. ​
Question
Although different sequences occur for each client, the therapist can often identify a(n)     of interrelated feelings that cycle repeatedly when clients are distressed. ​

A)undifferentiated set
B)dyad
C)trigger
D)triad
Question
When a therapist makes a process comment by acknowledging a discrepancy between what a client has said and the feeling or affect that accompanied the statement, the therapist is: ​

A)addressing an incongruence.
B)attempting a "personalization" response.
C)being reflective.
D)providing a restorative experience.
Question
When clients risk exposing their pain, vulnerability, or shame and the therapist responds with kindness and understanding, clients . ​

A)are personally empowered
B)become too dependent on the therapist
C)experience their original shame again
D)generally terminate treatment
Question
To "resolve shame dynamics," therapists should: ​

A)unambiguously provide kind and accepting responses to clients as they experience feelings of shame.
B)work (over time) to help the client internalize the therapist's compassion for their shame.
C)help their clients to break the identification with the attachment figure who was rejecting.
D)All of the answer choices are correct.
Question
Often, clients are unable to make sense out of their feelings or overreactions to a current situation. How can the therapist empower clients or help them with this? ​
Question
Discuss different ways in which family rules about emotional expression can affect how the therapist and client work together. ​
Question
Discuss personal factors that may stimulate countertransference reactions, and discuss effective and ineffective ways to manage these responses. ​
Question
Match between columns
Affective Constellations
approach the feeling that the client is currently experiencing
Affective Constellations
"Tell me more about that feeling."
Affective Constellations
aroused unresolved feelings from significant losses from a client's past.
Affective Constellations
a repeated theme which encapsulates a client's emotional responses to stressful events.
Affective Constellations
a recurrent feeling that pervades the client's life.
Affective Constellations
a secondary feeling that occurs in response to the primary feeling of sadness, hurt or pain.
Affective Constellations
responds in a new and safer way that resolves the client's original conflict.
An old wound
approach the feeling that the client is currently experiencing
An old wound
"Tell me more about that feeling."
An old wound
aroused unresolved feelings from significant losses from a client's past.
An old wound
a repeated theme which encapsulates a client's emotional responses to stressful events.
An old wound
a recurrent feeling that pervades the client's life.
An old wound
a secondary feeling that occurs in response to the primary feeling of sadness, hurt or pain.
An old wound
responds in a new and safer way that resolves the client's original conflict.
Compacted phrase
approach the feeling that the client is currently experiencing
Compacted phrase
"Tell me more about that feeling."
Compacted phrase
aroused unresolved feelings from significant losses from a client's past.
Compacted phrase
a repeated theme which encapsulates a client's emotional responses to stressful events.
Compacted phrase
a recurrent feeling that pervades the client's life.
Compacted phrase
a secondary feeling that occurs in response to the primary feeling of sadness, hurt or pain.
Compacted phrase
responds in a new and safer way that resolves the client's original conflict.
A corrective emotional occurs when the therapist experience
approach the feeling that the client is currently experiencing
A corrective emotional occurs when the therapist experience
"Tell me more about that feeling."
A corrective emotional occurs when the therapist experience
aroused unresolved feelings from significant losses from a client's past.
A corrective emotional occurs when the therapist experience
a repeated theme which encapsulates a client's emotional responses to stressful events.
A corrective emotional occurs when the therapist experience
a recurrent feeling that pervades the client's life.
A corrective emotional occurs when the therapist experience
a secondary feeling that occurs in response to the primary feeling of sadness, hurt or pain.
A corrective emotional occurs when the therapist experience
responds in a new and safer way that resolves the client's original conflict.
Characterological affect
approach the feeling that the client is currently experiencing
Characterological affect
"Tell me more about that feeling."
Characterological affect
aroused unresolved feelings from significant losses from a client's past.
Characterological affect
a repeated theme which encapsulates a client's emotional responses to stressful events.
Characterological affect
a recurrent feeling that pervades the client's life.
Characterological affect
a secondary feeling that occurs in response to the primary feeling of sadness, hurt or pain.
Characterological affect
responds in a new and safer way that resolves the client's original conflict.
Most productive response
approach the feeling that the client is currently experiencing
Most productive response
"Tell me more about that feeling."
Most productive response
aroused unresolved feelings from significant losses from a client's past.
Most productive response
a repeated theme which encapsulates a client's emotional responses to stressful events.
Most productive response
a recurrent feeling that pervades the client's life.
Most productive response
a secondary feeling that occurs in response to the primary feeling of sadness, hurt or pain.
Most productive response
responds in a new and safer way that resolves the client's original conflict.
An open-ended bid
approach the feeling that the client is currently experiencing
An open-ended bid
"Tell me more about that feeling."
An open-ended bid
aroused unresolved feelings from significant losses from a client's past.
An open-ended bid
a repeated theme which encapsulates a client's emotional responses to stressful events.
An open-ended bid
a recurrent feeling that pervades the client's life.
An open-ended bid
a secondary feeling that occurs in response to the primary feeling of sadness, hurt or pain.
An open-ended bid
responds in a new and safer way that resolves the client's original conflict.
Question
Explain what is meant by the phrase "change from the inside out," and suggest what therapists can do to assist or impede this process. ​
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Deck 5: Helping Clients With Their Feelings
1
The best way for a therapist to manage their own reactions to evocative material that clients present is to: ​

A)remain expressionless so as not to alert or distress the client.
B)ignore their own emotional reaction.
C)learn how to recognize and anticipate their own Countertransference propensities, and know what to do when they are evoked.
D)respond politely, but defensively.
C
2
One way in which therapist's countertransference reactions are revealed in therapy is by the therapist: ​

A)becomes personally invested in the way the client handles a certain issue.
B)approaches the central conflict or issue.
C)can successfully differentiate their own similar feelings from their clients'.
D)accurately identifies the client's feelings.
A
3
The greatest opportunity to help clients change occurs: ​

A)at the moment clients are experiencing the full emotional impact of their problems.
B)when the client follows through with the therapist's concrete suggestions for change.
C)during the final session prior to termination of therapy.
D)there is no greatest opportunity to help clients change.
A
4
To provide a "holding environment" for clients to explore their distress, therapists: ​

A)maintain a steady presence.
B)educate the client on the dynamics of therapy.
C)clarify what the therapist is thinking and feeling as clients share conflicted feelings.
D)Both maintain a steady presence and clarify what the therapist is thinking and feeling as clients share conflicted feelings are correct.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 24 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
When therapists minimize, reassure, explain, or simply move away from a client's painful feelings, it is often because: ​

A)they feel responsible for causing the client's painful expressions.
B)their reaction evokes a countertransference response.
C)they feel responsible for alleviating their pain, but don't quite know how.
D)both they feel responsible for causing the client's painful expressions and they feel responsible for alleviating their pain, but don't quite know how are correct.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 24 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
Discuss and compare effective and ineffective ways therapists can respond to defenses against or resistance toward painful feelings. ​
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 24 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
Discuss characterological affects. How do they develop and how can therapists respond to them? ​
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Unlock for access to all 24 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
According to Beck's "hot cognitions," it is when______that clients are most apt to distort or misperceive the therapist's response and slot it to fit old expectations. ​

A)a client has a significant lack of trust in the therapist
B)strong feelings have been triggered
C)a client perceives an inauthentic connection with the therapist
D)a client feels sequestered in their own experiences
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 24 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
One of the most important ways to help clients achieve a greater sense of adequacy and mastery in their lives is to: ​

A)give them concrete suggestions for change.
B)summarize each session thoroughly.
C)allow them to take full responsibility for the therapeutic process.
D)help them make sense of their emotional reactions.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 24 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
Explain the roles that shame and guilt have in maintaining client conflicts. Discuss effective and ineffective responses to shame. ​
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 24 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
​ Reasons clients do not like to explore difficult feelings include their:

A)belief that the work "it's too hard."
B)belief that "it won't do any good."
C)belief that exploring their feelings in depth "will be overwhelming."
D)belief that they will be ridiculed and judged.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 24 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
Clients who do not experience or express anger, avoid interpersonal conflict, and tend to respond to others' needs at the expense of their own is said to be experiencing the______ affective constellation. ​

A)Anger-Sadness-Shame
B)Guilt-Anger-Shame
C)Sadness-Anger-Guilt
D)Anger-Guilt-Sadness
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 24 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
Discuss the concept of affective constellations. Illustrate one potential triad of interrelated feelings, and describe how they would play out in treatment. ​
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 24 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
Clients frequently talk about their feelings without actually experiencing them. How can therapists help clients experience their feelings more fully and why could this be helpful? ​
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 24 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
Describe a therapeutic "holding environment." How can therapists facilitate this and explain why it is important to the therapeutic process. ​
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 24 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
Although different sequences occur for each client, the therapist can often identify a(n)     of interrelated feelings that cycle repeatedly when clients are distressed. ​

A)undifferentiated set
B)dyad
C)trigger
D)triad
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 24 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
When a therapist makes a process comment by acknowledging a discrepancy between what a client has said and the feeling or affect that accompanied the statement, the therapist is: ​

A)addressing an incongruence.
B)attempting a "personalization" response.
C)being reflective.
D)providing a restorative experience.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 24 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
When clients risk exposing their pain, vulnerability, or shame and the therapist responds with kindness and understanding, clients . ​

A)are personally empowered
B)become too dependent on the therapist
C)experience their original shame again
D)generally terminate treatment
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 24 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
To "resolve shame dynamics," therapists should: ​

A)unambiguously provide kind and accepting responses to clients as they experience feelings of shame.
B)work (over time) to help the client internalize the therapist's compassion for their shame.
C)help their clients to break the identification with the attachment figure who was rejecting.
D)All of the answer choices are correct.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 24 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
Often, clients are unable to make sense out of their feelings or overreactions to a current situation. How can the therapist empower clients or help them with this? ​
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 24 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
Discuss different ways in which family rules about emotional expression can affect how the therapist and client work together. ​
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 24 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
Discuss personal factors that may stimulate countertransference reactions, and discuss effective and ineffective ways to manage these responses. ​
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 24 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
Match between columns
Affective Constellations
approach the feeling that the client is currently experiencing
Affective Constellations
"Tell me more about that feeling."
Affective Constellations
aroused unresolved feelings from significant losses from a client's past.
Affective Constellations
a repeated theme which encapsulates a client's emotional responses to stressful events.
Affective Constellations
a recurrent feeling that pervades the client's life.
Affective Constellations
a secondary feeling that occurs in response to the primary feeling of sadness, hurt or pain.
Affective Constellations
responds in a new and safer way that resolves the client's original conflict.
An old wound
approach the feeling that the client is currently experiencing
An old wound
"Tell me more about that feeling."
An old wound
aroused unresolved feelings from significant losses from a client's past.
An old wound
a repeated theme which encapsulates a client's emotional responses to stressful events.
An old wound
a recurrent feeling that pervades the client's life.
An old wound
a secondary feeling that occurs in response to the primary feeling of sadness, hurt or pain.
An old wound
responds in a new and safer way that resolves the client's original conflict.
Compacted phrase
approach the feeling that the client is currently experiencing
Compacted phrase
"Tell me more about that feeling."
Compacted phrase
aroused unresolved feelings from significant losses from a client's past.
Compacted phrase
a repeated theme which encapsulates a client's emotional responses to stressful events.
Compacted phrase
a recurrent feeling that pervades the client's life.
Compacted phrase
a secondary feeling that occurs in response to the primary feeling of sadness, hurt or pain.
Compacted phrase
responds in a new and safer way that resolves the client's original conflict.
A corrective emotional occurs when the therapist experience
approach the feeling that the client is currently experiencing
A corrective emotional occurs when the therapist experience
"Tell me more about that feeling."
A corrective emotional occurs when the therapist experience
aroused unresolved feelings from significant losses from a client's past.
A corrective emotional occurs when the therapist experience
a repeated theme which encapsulates a client's emotional responses to stressful events.
A corrective emotional occurs when the therapist experience
a recurrent feeling that pervades the client's life.
A corrective emotional occurs when the therapist experience
a secondary feeling that occurs in response to the primary feeling of sadness, hurt or pain.
A corrective emotional occurs when the therapist experience
responds in a new and safer way that resolves the client's original conflict.
Characterological affect
approach the feeling that the client is currently experiencing
Characterological affect
"Tell me more about that feeling."
Characterological affect
aroused unresolved feelings from significant losses from a client's past.
Characterological affect
a repeated theme which encapsulates a client's emotional responses to stressful events.
Characterological affect
a recurrent feeling that pervades the client's life.
Characterological affect
a secondary feeling that occurs in response to the primary feeling of sadness, hurt or pain.
Characterological affect
responds in a new and safer way that resolves the client's original conflict.
Most productive response
approach the feeling that the client is currently experiencing
Most productive response
"Tell me more about that feeling."
Most productive response
aroused unresolved feelings from significant losses from a client's past.
Most productive response
a repeated theme which encapsulates a client's emotional responses to stressful events.
Most productive response
a recurrent feeling that pervades the client's life.
Most productive response
a secondary feeling that occurs in response to the primary feeling of sadness, hurt or pain.
Most productive response
responds in a new and safer way that resolves the client's original conflict.
An open-ended bid
approach the feeling that the client is currently experiencing
An open-ended bid
"Tell me more about that feeling."
An open-ended bid
aroused unresolved feelings from significant losses from a client's past.
An open-ended bid
a repeated theme which encapsulates a client's emotional responses to stressful events.
An open-ended bid
a recurrent feeling that pervades the client's life.
An open-ended bid
a secondary feeling that occurs in response to the primary feeling of sadness, hurt or pain.
An open-ended bid
responds in a new and safer way that resolves the client's original conflict.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 24 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
Explain what is meant by the phrase "change from the inside out," and suggest what therapists can do to assist or impede this process. ​
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 24 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
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Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 24 flashcards in this deck.