Serious Science - serious-science.org Counselling Psychology Psychologist Terry Hanley on humanism, creativity of a therapist, and making ethical decisions serious-science.org/counsellin...
Пікірлер: 12
@YuriRadavchuk7 жыл бұрын
On a patient as a hero: it sounds in a spirit of Gestalt therapy.
@DeadwoodJawn7 жыл бұрын
WHY IS THERE SO MUCH BASS But good information
@live_eng55516 жыл бұрын
Heyyy that s really awesome, l m gonna translate it turkish! That s super, as a humaniterian psycological counselling student. Thanks a lot, nice to know you! Thank you sir☺😄😄
@mucellab82306 жыл бұрын
Are you turkish :) and are you planning to go into this field?
@live_eng55514 жыл бұрын
@@mucellab8230 yeah sir, l commented it last year l meant the end my pupil years. Hopefully l graduated and now l work as a counseling psychologists 🙂
@mucellab82304 жыл бұрын
So you graduated from the counseling masters program or PhD in counseling psychology program, currently I finished my first year in counseling psychology master program
@live_eng55514 жыл бұрын
@@mucellab8230 Nope sir, l was an undergraduate student. Seemly, It works a bit differently in Turkiye. In addition to them, we have a lisance program about counselling psychology as well 👍
@TheBanjoShowOfficial6 жыл бұрын
He sounds so boring He’s perfect for the job. I listened to every word he said. He speaks truth.
@YoalGkuoth6 жыл бұрын
Very interesting
@DonHavjuan4 жыл бұрын
Isn't quite so bedded in the medical model ... you mean it's pseudoscience. Thanks for clearing that up. What you seem to be saying is it's not science, not actually psychology, and really it's just long term cash extraction. Nice.
@callumscott5107 Жыл бұрын
Being treated under the medical model looks like regarding your feelings as symptomatic of a problem, but it inherently neglects to consider that maybe part of the problem is that you are wanting to reject these feelings in the first place. Being treated under a humanistic model looks being encouraged and assured that how you feel is a real part of your experience, as real as the things you're seeing and hearing. A true medical analogy would be like treating a broken arm through trying to get you to ignore the arms existence, or creating a lifestyle that means you don't have to acknowledge it any more. Acknowledging the existence of the broken arm, respecting it as a valid experience, observing how you can interact with it and treating it in a way that benefits you in the long term is I think a better analogue of the humanistic approach.
@robinwong8880Ай бұрын
No… it’s a different branch of applied psychology. There’s more to working with patients than approaching from a medical model perspective… humans are more complex that what diagnoses can box people within