- Dallas Whole Life Counseling's specially trained administrative staff is happy to fil...
- This is an extremely common client reaction to the therapy process. In many ways, the...
- Negative feelings toward the therapist are common at times during treatment, and may ...
- A common misconception regarding psychotherapy is the fear of losing one's independen...
- It is common for the therapy client to be concerned regarding significant differences...
- The earliest signs of progress in therapy often manifest as increasing awareness of t...
- Once again, there are no ready-made answers for this question, as individuals differ ...
- As psychological needs, wants and capacities vary among individuals, there is no easy...
- In 1995, Consumer Reports conducted a study examining the efficacy of therapy...
Family
The family is a system, much like the human body. Just as the entire body suffers when one of its parts dysfunctions or fails to work in harmony with the rest of the body, theentire family suffers when one of its members suffers or is "out of synch."
At the same time, the conflicts of an individual family memebr are most typically a reflection of some conflict within the family system as a whole. It is difficult to treat adolescent problems, for example, without also addressing problems that likely underlie the supporting family structure.
As is the case with couples psychotherapy, individual issues often play out within the family, and family therapy can help address these issues. As with couples dynamics, certain roles within the family may have become so habitual or ingrained that the surrounding conflicts may be obscured. For example, a domineering father may fail to notice that this way of relating interferes with having close relationships with his children. Similarly, children may have learned manipulative, aggressive or self-devaluing behaviors in an attempt to fit in with certain family dynamics. As is the case with group and couples treatment, the therapist does not criticize, blame, or take sides in working with a family. Rather, the therapist helps the family, both individually and as a unit, become more aware of subtle dynamics that may be the source of persistent tensions and power struggles. Of particular importance is learning how such patterns were put into place and examining what hidden "rewards" accompany certain problematic behaviors. The adolescent who drinks or uses drugs to get his or her parents' attention, the father who works excessively long hours to avoid tension at home—these are but two common examples of conflicted individual behavior motivated by deeper disharmony within the family unit.
