Monday, September 12, 2011

The Intimate Hour (Part II)

What is a patient looking for when he or she comes to therapy? My experience is that, in general, he has tried everything he knows to do in dealing with an issue. He has exhausted his own personal resources. But making that initial call can be fraught with anxiety. The patient has delayed it and delayed it, while he struggles along with the situation. Admitting that you're unable to resolve a life problem on your own, that you'll have to address it with a stranger, can be a daunting prospect.

A patient is seeking first and foremost understanding. Whether in therapy or not, each of us ultimately wants our life narrative to be heard. Whether it's someone wanting to share her rage at her husband's infidelity; a person isolated and in the throes of hopelessness who writes a suicide note; or a serial killer who eventually feels compelled to describe his horrific crimes; we all desire for at least one other fellow human being to hear our story and understand our motivations.

A patient is seeking acceptance. The slightest whiff of judgment will taint a therapeutic relationship. The therapist must have a very high tolerance for dealing with attitudes, behaviors, even lifestyles that he does not personally endorse. If he struggles with this, it behooves him--and is in his patient's best interest--to either do some work in therapy himself regarding his discomfort, or to make a referral to another therapist.

Most patients are seeking some specific means for effecting change in their lives. For all but a few, gone are the days when an individual can spend an hour a day, four to five days a week, on a therapist's couch. The vast majority of today's patients come in with a specific problem or problems. Pursuing self-actualization in therapy is a luxury that few can afford. To that end, as a new patient and I wrap up our intake session, I help them formulate and prioritize their goals for therapy. The question might be something like, "What would you like to be different in your life as a result of coming here?"

Finally, patients frequently need what I call a "takeaway". This can be something as specific as an "assignment" to journal, to chart behavior (e.g., eating, exercise), to take turns planning special events with a spouse, to read certain portions of a book or listen to a podcast, to contact an estranged family member, to think about their goals at work. You get the point. A small task or bit of information at the end of a session can reinforce the work done in the session and enhance the patient's sense that she has gained something positive and concrete from her work in therapy.

The Intimate Hour (Part I)

The process of psychotherapy is as different as each therapist-patient combination. The chemistry between patient and therapist is undeniable and plays a key role in the process. My approach has been to address each patient as an unfolding life story, with its own unique narrative, and not as a diagnostic exemplar. As we work together, I listen for and identify recurrent themes, with their moments of triumph, as well as depths of despair; with their areas of strength and resilience, and their places of weakness and flagging hope.

As a therapist, my job is to assist the patient in writing a new chapter in his narrative. Perhaps his past has been marked by repeated failures at valued tasks. Perhaps her undertakings in life have been tinged by fear and self-doubt. The therapist is a companion on the patient's journey of self-discovery and healing.

As the companion on the patient's journey, I look at the elements of the patient's life as the pieces of glass in a kaleidoscope. When the kaleidoscope is held in one way, one picture emerges. However, when the patient rotates the kaleidoscope, a different picture comes into view. And with that different picture come new possibilities. New ways of understanding what has gone before in one's life and what could lie ahead. And this is where the therapist brings her experience and psychotherapeutic tools to bear.