Re: Re: Re: Psychotherapy
Jeff Wagg said:
Freud - I like psychoanalysis in practice, but the theroy part is, in the words of a shink I know, "psychotic."
Yeah - Freudian psychoanalysis in practice has its merits - one being that its extremely prescriptive nature (the therapist has all the answers, and simply explains them to the patient) feels a bit safer and more concrete to the clinician. However, in terms of regaining reponsibility both for whatever has come before, and for 'getting better', (an integral part of reality therapy, which you also like), this prescriptive approach may be less helpful.
To me though, the major problem with Freudian psychology, whether as a developmental model (the life stages, etc.), a cognitive model ('the mind is like
this'), or a therapeutic approach, is that there is no reason to think that the mind or the self are actually at all like Freud claims. Webster does quite a good job not only of showing it all up as pseudoscience, but also of showing where the odd notions came from, in his
Why Freud Was Wrong.
Behavioral Therapy - Nice and testable, but only applicable to overt behaviors. How would you use this with a grief-stricken patient?
Yes, to deal with feelings of grief, this might not be the most helpful approach; some of the principles can still be applied to the grief situation (e.g. an activity hierarchy to deal with specific resulting anxieties), but they are better used in such cases in conjunction with cognitive techniques as per CBT.
CBT - I understand its effectiveness in the short term, but I'm concerned about things like "thought stopping." Where do those thoughts go when you stop them? Do they just disappear? Freud would say not. I'm not sure.
Well, Freud would base that idea on his unevidenced model of mind, including repression and related ideas. CBT should include future strategies for relapse or recurrences anyway, but the CBT conception of cognition simply sees problematic thoughts decreasing, not 'going' anywhere. Seems rather more accurate to me, and I think it's also more congruent with academic cognitive psychology.
Narrative Therapy - I don't mind the technique, but the postmodernist anti-reality stuff really bothers me. There's a thread in the philosophy forum about this.
I haven't read the philosophy forum thread about this, but I also have felt a bit uncomfortable with these notions. Part of being a trainee is that you have to become 'temporarily' comfortable with things because they make you do them anyway; only qualified people have the luxury of putting opinions into practice.
But I do think, now, that it's not actually making a statement about
reality, but socially agreed
meanings of problems. The same thing crops up, you'll probably find, with family/systemic therapy and solution-focused therapy. It's more of a kind of polar opposite to Freudian authoritarianism - in this case, the therapist has
none of the answers, but simply hypothesises and tests out guesses with the patient(s), who does/do have the answers. Some problems, I think, can be quite well described as a product of people's understanding of and reactions to a situation and each other, rather than by the situation itself.
What does annoy me, though, about these postmodern approaches, is that most practitioners seem to think it gets them off the hook as regards evidence-based practice. Why this should be is beyond me.