Multiple Choice
A common way in which clients' conflicts are reenacted in the therapeutic process is:
A) when therapists view their clients' problems and lives as being too similar to their own.
B) when therapists maintain their own objectivity and separateness while at the same time being available and responsive.
C) when therapists self-discloses their own experiences and feelings.
D) there is no common way in which clients' conflicts are reenacted.
Correct Answer:

Verified
Correct Answer:
Verified
Q2: Clients' conflicts are two-sided, and therapists will
Q3: Therapists' goals in working with clients' eliciting
Q4: Interpersonal strategies that ward off anxiety and
Q5: Clients' eliciting maneuvers tend to evoke certain
Q6: Describe how therapists can use client's transference
Q8: Understanding both sides of their conflicts empowers
Q9: Therapists can tell they have effectively "passed"
Q10: When clients successfully utilize eliciting maneuvers with
Q11: When therapists become inappropriately over-identified with certain
Q12: Recognizing the_ structure of conflicts will enable