Person-Centred Therapy is Not One Thing: An Introduction to the Tribes

Has anyone ever said to you, ‘That’s not person-centred’, or ‘Person-centred therapists would do…’? If so, you might want to point out to them that there’s no such thing as ‘person-centred’—it’s not one, homogeneous ‘thing’. Rather, it’s a wonderfully diverse family of approaches, each with something very special to offer to the wider therapeutic field.

It starts with the classical client-centred approach of Carl Rogers from the 1930s onwards. Rogers reacted against the behaviourism and expert-directed approaches of his time, and instead emphasised the client’s own ability to find their answers to their problems. So the hallmark of the classical approach is a non-directive stance: letting the client lead the way in an accepting and empathic environment. The classical approach is still very popular and you can read about it in Tony Merry’s chapter in the brilliant Tribes of the Person-Centred Nation. There’s some argument that Rogers, himself, moved away from a classical stance in the 1960s towards a more relational standpoint (see below), but others argue that Rogers style of practice never really varied throughout his career.

Out of Rogers’s work you get the emergence of non-directive therapies with children, particularly the work of Virginia Axline. Person-centred play therapies are still very popular today and have a very good evidence base, developed by world-class researchers like Dee Ray at the University of North Texas. Natalie Rogers, Carl Rogers’s daughter, also developed an approach called Creative Connections which offers clients a non-directive space to engage with a wide variety of creative media, such as dance, music, and drama.

Focusing, which emerged in the 1960s, was probably the most important development from Rogers’s work, and took it in new and creative directions. Gendlin, its founder, believed that some clients needed to get more in touch with their inner ‘felt senses’ before they could really use therapy to its fullest. So focusing encourages clients to ‘listen inwards’ to their bodies and allow their feelings and bodily experiences to emerge. It’s really popular today in ‘peer focusing partnerships’, as well as in focusing-oriented psychotherapy; and psychotherapists of all orientations may use focusing methods in their work.

One reason why Gendlin’s break from Rogers was so critical is because it introduced the idea that some clients, some times, do need therapist direction to make the most of the work. This stance was developed further by Laura Rice and subsequent founders of emotion-focused therapy (EFT; like Les Greenberg, Robert Elliott, and Jeanne Watson) who articulated a series of methods that could be used to help clients get deeper into their emotions: the key, as they saw it, to therapeutic progress. EFT, for instance, uses ‘empty chair work’ to help clients express, and process, their feelings towards others; and ‘clearing a space’ to help them deal with overwhelming feelings. EFT is very well supported by the empirical evidence and in the US is ranked as an evidence-based therapy for depression. There’s lots of CPD trainings available on it and an international society. Sue Johnson, who worked with Les Greenberg, developed an approach called emotionally focused therapy, which has many similarities to Greenberg et al.’s EFT but is particularly oriented to work with couples. However, there’s another EFT, ‘emotional freedom technique’ (the one with lots of tapping), which is something entirely differ.

Counselling for Depression (CfD, now termed person-centred experiential counselling for depression) combines a classical person-centred approach with some ideas and practices from EFT. It was specifically developed to fit within the NHS’s NICE guidelines for treatments for depression, and was based on core competences for humanistic therapies. This therapy is now delivered across the country, mainly within health settings, as an evidence-based interventions. Several CPD trainings in this approach are available, for instance at the Metanoia Institute in London.

Around the 1980s, motivational interviewing (MI) began to develop in the field of treatments for drug dependency, and is now one of the best evidence interventions across the psychotherapy field. Bill Miller, one of the founders of the approach, was strongly influenced by the writings of Carl Rogers, and there is an emphasis in the approach on being empathic and engaging with the client’s perspective. However, it is more directive than classical person-centred therapy. For instance, if a client is struggling between the part of them that wants to give up drugs and the part of them that doesn’t, an MI therapist would tend focus on their ‘change talk’ (that is, the part that does want to give up drugs), whereas a classical person-centred therapist might be more likely to reflect both positions.

Another important development around this time was pre-therapy. Developed by Garry Prouty in the US, this approach was specifically developed for clients who are ‘contact impaired.’ That is, who are less in touch with ‘reality’: for instance, people experiencing psychosis or depersonalisation. Pre-therapy uses very concrete reflections—for instance, ‘You are looking at the wall,’ ‘You are smiling’—to try and help the client back into contact with their world and with others.

Relational, or dialogical, approaches to person-centred therapy differ from EFT or MI in that they are not a specific set of therapeutic methods, but more of a description of a therapeutic style or stance. As with EFT or MI, though, they are something of a break from the more classical style, and emphasise a more interactive therapeutic approach in which the emphasis is on the therapist being particularly present and real to the client. So that might involve some more challenging, or more introduction of the therapist’s own perspective into the work. You can read about the philosophy underlying this approach in the work of Peter Schmid, or see my own work with Dave Mearns on relational depth.

Similarly, an existentially-informed approach to person-centred therapy, which you can also read about in the Tribes book, is not a specific therapeutic model but a form of classical/relational person-centred therapy informed by ideas from existentialism. So the therapist might be particularly attuned to a client’s sense of meaning in life, or their anxieties around freedom and choice.

Of course, in reality, a wide variety of therapeutic methods and theories can be (and have been) incorporated into a person-centred approach, and that leads us to integrative approaches to person-centred therapy. Sometimes these are just personal forms of integration: for instance, when a person-centred practitioner begins to bring in ideas and methods from narrative therapy, or from transactional analysis. But there are also more systematic forms of therapeutic integration, and David Cain writes about these in his chapter in the Handbook of Person-Centred Psychotherapy and Counselling (2nd ed). Pluralistic therapy, for instance, developed by John McLeod and myself, argues that being ‘person-centred’ means responding to the unique individual wants and needs of each client, and that means recognising that a strictly non-directive approach will not be the most appropriate way of working at all times. Rather, pluralistic therapy suggests that we should talk to clients about what they want from therapy, and be transparent about what we can offer; that we can either offer our clients the kind of therapy that may most help them, or else refer on as appropriate. You can read more about a pluralistic approach to person-centred therapy on my blog here.

For me, what makes person-centred therapy wonderful is this diversity of riches: so many different ways to think and practice. And, perhaps, we shouldn’t expect anything less from a therapy that focuses on the person and how they, uniquely, see and experience the world. Of course, when we first train, we often need to start with the basics—like the ‘core conditions’, or unlearning a natural tendency to give advice—but growing as a person-centred therapist means recognising that there are so many different ways we can flesh out this identity: spreading our wings, and finding our own unique person-centred stance.

To find out more about the different forms of person-centred therapy, Pete Sanders’s (ed.) Tribes of the Person-Centred Nation (2nd ed) provides a great account of the major developments. Pete’s chapter in the Handbook of Person-Centred Psychotherapy and Counselling (2nd ed) gives a very useful summary. The national organisation for person-centred therapists in the UK is The Person-Centred Approach (TPCA), and their website has lots of useful information and links to current developments.

Assessing Client Preferences in Counselling and Psychotherapy? Some Pointers

Research shows that accommodating clients’ preferences in therapy can lead to better therapeutic alliances, lower dropout, and improved outcomes. But how can you go about finding out what clients actually want?

‘Just ask’? It seems the obvious answer and often it is. Asking clients what they want from therapy can be the most relational, respectful, and nuanced way of finding out about their preferences. Therapists can ask clients about their preferences in lots of different areas:

  • The methods that they would like to use: for instance, would they find it helpful to do a short relaxation exercise at the start of each session?

  • The topics that they would like to talk about: for instance, do they want to focus on their past experiences, their current circumstances, or both?

  • The aims for the therapeutic work: for instance, do they want to change their behaviours, or come to a greater acceptance of their life?

  • The therapist’s style of engagement: for instance, do they want more or less challenge from the therapist?

  • Contracting and format issues: for instance, would they like sessions weekly or fortnightly?

Often, first sessions are the best time to start talking about these issues, and generally research show that clients do like to be involved in these kinds of decisions. However, for some clients—particularly those who have not had therapy before—it can feel overwhelming to be asked too many questions about what they want, so sensitivity and timing are essential in helping clients articulate how they would like therapy to be.

There are, however, also downsides to relying on verbal dialogue, alone, to assess clients’ preferences. First, face-to-face, clients may find it hard to be fully open about what they want from therapy, particularly if they think that the therapist may disapprove of their preferences. Second, therapists may neglect to ask questions about the preferences that are of most importance to clients.

One way of addressing this second problem is by using a relatively structured, and comprehensive, schedule for asking clients about their preferences. Barbara Vollmer and colleagues, for instance, have developed the ‘Treatment Preference Interview’, which is a semi-structure, discussion based tool that assesses clients’ preferences about the therapist, their activities, and the type of therapy to be offered (Vollmer, B. et al. [2009]. A therapy preferences interview: Empowering clients by offering choices. Psychotherapy Bulletin, 44[2], 33-37).

This kind of schedule is a great idea; but it can be pretty time consuming, and it still does not get around the problem that clients may find it difficult to say, on a face-to-face basis, what they want from therapy.

It’s for this reason that we developed a freely-available questionnaire to help stimulate discussion about what clients want from therapy: the Cooper-Norcross Inventory of Preferences (with validated translations available in German, Italian, and Serbian). The form consists of 18 items, which ask clients about the particular style of therapy that they want (see below). There are then a series of open questions asking clients about strong preferences in other areas of therapy, such as format and use of self-help materials. The 18 items are grouped into four over-arching dimensions:

  • Whether the client wants the therapy to be more therapist-led, or more client-led

  • Whether the client wants encouragement to go into strong emotions or not

  • Whether the client wants to focus on their past, or their present and future

  • Whether the client wants warm support or more focused challenge.

Clients’ responses for each dimension can be added together, so that it’s possible to see where they might have strong preferences. For instance, it may emerge that a client wants a more client-led therapy and to focus on their past, but does not have strong preferences on the other dimensions.


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If you’re interested in how we developed the C-NIP, and evidence of its reliability, our original paper is here. We also conducted a very interesting comparison of therapy preferences for therapists (as clients), and laypeople, which can be found here.

Of course, it’s not a case of just giving the form to the client and then doing whatever they want. The aim of the C-NIP is to act as the basis for a dialogue, so that therapist and client can discuss in more detail the ways of working that are most suited to that individual. And, of course, the client may have preferences that the therapist cannot accommodate. For instance, a person-centred therapist may not be trained, or willing, to practice in a highly goal-oriented, directive way. But, probably, it’s better that such strong preferences are brought to the fore at the start of therapy, rather than emerging several months down the line. That way, any incompatibilities between therapist and client can be talked about and, if necessary, onward referrals can be made.

Our research shows that clients, in general, like to complete the C-NIP. They find it refreshing to be asked what they want from therapy, and appreciate the offer of different ways of engaging. A few clients, though, do find it less helpful: particularly those that are new to therapy and have no idea what it is or what they want. So, again, sensitivity and timing are needed in the use of the questionnaire. For instance, it might make more sense to introduce the C-NIP a few sessions in to therapy and, in fact, we recommend that therapists use it at review points (for instance, Session 4 and Session 10) to check how the client is experiencing therapy and whether there is anything they would like to change.

A paper version of the C-NIP measure can be accessed here, and guidelines for its use are here. We also have a website where the questionnaire can be completed online, with automatic calculations of scores on the four different dimensions. We’re currently doing further research into the C-NIP, and our online site asks if we can, anonymously, hold on to data; so if you and your client were willing to complete the questionnaire online that would be really helpful for us.

In conclusion, research into assessing, and accommodating, client preferences shows that it is a complex and nuanced area. One thing that is clear is that it’s not as simple as just asking clients what they want and doing it. Often clients don’t know, and sometimes what they want at the start of therapy is not what’s ultimately most helpful to them. Nevertheless, that doesn’t mean that asking clients about their preferences is a waste of time: clients do sometimes have strong preferences, and not talking about—or adjusting to—these can sometimes lead to poor therapeutic outcomes and dropout. So developing skills in assessing client preferences is an important area for ongoing training and development: helping us to provide each client with the particular therapy that is best suited to them.

The Chronic Strategies of Disconnection Inventory: A Practice Example

Chronic strategies of disconnection (CSoDs) is a concept developed by the feminist psychotherapist Judith Jordan. It refers to patterns of behaviour that we may develop to protect ourselves from hurt or anxiety in close relationships, but which may now be redundant: i.e., we tend to do them automatically when, in fact, it may be more beneficial for us to stay in closer connection with another person. It is a concept I have written about in relation to relational depth: looking at the ways in which people may, consciously or unconsciously, undermine their own ability to relate at depth.

The Chronic Strategies of Disconnection Inventory was a self-reflective checklist of different CSoDs developed by Rosanne Knox and myself. We developed the inventory based on data from workshops with counsellors and psychotherapists, in which they were asked to identify their own CSoDs (see our paper here). The checklist presents various different CSoDs (e.g., ‘Pushing others away,’ ‘Not expressing your wants’) and invites respondents to indicate on a 0 (Not at all) to 3 (A lot) scale, the extent to which they tend to adopt these CSoDs.

Originally, the inventory was designed for counsellors and psychotherapists to use. The aim was to help us identify our own CSoDs, so that we could explore the extent to which these might ‘leak’ into our therapeutic work, attenuating our ability to relate deeply with clients.

However, the inventory can also be used with clients to help them identify their own CSoDs.

Recently, I received an email from Simon Hughes, a trainee on the first year of a person-centred diploma, who also works in a homeless charity and housing trust. He wrote about his experience of using the inventory in a community of seven people who have come from residential rehab or detox units. I found it so interesting how he had used it that, with his permission, I have reprinted his email (with details anonymised). Simon writes…


As part of the house, we run groups twice a week, and Wednesday's groups are about psycho-social education to build skills for relapse-prevention and help the guys in their recovery. The house are a community who challenge each other and support one another in their recovery—they have strong connections together and this is one of the best things about the project. I have been in this role since September, and decided to use the CSoDs Inventory for a house group on the fourth week I had been in the role. Relationships at this stage were still forming.

First, I spoke to the group for around five to ten minutes to explain what chronic strategies of disconnection were and gave a disclaimer about how they are not diagnostic, but just to raise awareness. I had read the Mearns and Cooper book on relational depth earlier that month, and explained how relationships can help us grow as people, but also how relationships can be risky and that we can develop strategies to protect ourselves from deep ways of relating. I then read out the blurb at the top of the CSoDs Inventory page and we had a discussion about relating deeply to people and how that is helpful (e.g. in the group talking about recovery) but can also be vulnerable and different to how we tend to relate to others outside of the group and places like Narcotics Anonymous. 

I was conscious that reading the CSoDs Inventory was not everyone’s style, so I read through the 40 strategies of disconnection aloud, giving examples of how each one might look. After that, we had the choice to either fill in the form with a pen and tick what seemed like a strategy we employed, or else to sit and think if any of them had resonated with us. We discussed what we had said and then had a cigarettes break.

After the break the group said they would like to look at the inventory again, and challenge each other on what strategies they believe the others used. I spoke briefly about how just being aware of them won't change things, but that these things tend to decrease in therapy because of an accepting relationship where people feel able to be themselves truly. I said for example, that my wife and I had been watching too much TV and not relating, and being aware of this helped us relate deeper by doing things like going for walks—but it needed to be followed by more than just being aware of it. We discussed framing how we would challenge each other and its usefulness, then the group decided they would like to proceed. People went round saying what CSoDs they felt others used, and I was surprised that the challenges were empathic and encouraging the others to become more part of the community—no one seemed upset, surprised, or offended.

At the end, the group said they felt that this had been the best ‘house group’ yet. I felt a real sense of depth in the group, which I haven't felt to that extent in a house meeting and the majority of the house seemed really able to use the inventory. I also felt a benefit in taking part in this exercise with them.

Feedback

I feel that the CSoDs Inventory was a hugely useful tool to promote conversation and deepen relationships in the context of a therapeutic group. It provided a space for residents to talk about each other’s behaviour (e.g. isolating in rooms) in a constructive way, in order to promote connection. The inventory worked for people from various educational backgrounds, literacy skills (originally said literally abilities), and at different stages of recovery. The group were able to use the inventory and engage with it, with only a small introduction, and I was able to facilitate the group whilst still being in counselling training. Honest discussion promoted relational depth in the group and the group liked this inventory more than any other Wednesday group I have since co-facilitated.

The CSoDs Inventory might be used by professionals and trainees as a therapeutic tool or outcome measure—it is reasonably accessible in how it is written and works well in a group setting, as well as for individual reflection. The inventory was applied to a group focused on recovery from substances, and provided a format to discuss tensions in the house in easy accessible language without members feeling accused or insulted.

I find the weakness in the inventory is that, while it is graded, there is no interpretation or use for the grading (e.g., no interpretation of what a total score might mean).

It may be that the inventory could be used like other outcome or process forms (e.g. CORE-OM, PHQ-9). For instance, a CSoDs Inventory could be completed at sessions 1 and 10, and the results compared. The assumption would be that people would let go of disconnection strategies within therapeutic relationships, and their score would likely decrease.


Simon’s experiences identify some very interesting possibilities for use of the CSoDs Inventory, and the concept more broadly. As with any therapeutic method, however, the inventory should only be used following consultation with supervisors/trainers, and in-depth discussion of its appropriateness to the particular therapeutic context. It is essential, too, that clients are invited to consider whether or not they would like to use the CSoDs form prior to its use.

Politics in Counselling and Psychotherapy

Is politics relevant to the work that counsellors and psychotherapists do?  Is it something, for instance, that we should be encouraged to reflect on and talk about in our training, or should we try and leave it outside of our professional field?

My personal view is that politics is—and should be—absolutely integral to the work that we do: that it is something that we, as counsellors and psychotherapists, should be talking much more about.

Of course, this is not to suggest that we should be badgering our clients to vote in a particular way, or directing them to read Marx’s Das Capital if they dare to utter politically incorrect views. Rather, it’s about counsellors and psychotherapists actively developing an understanding of political processes; and being able—and willing—to talk to each other about politics in the same way that we might talk about psychological, developmental, or practice-based issues.

Politics Impacts on Wellbeing

Why? First, because politics matter to the life of our clients. We know, from the evidence, that certain political, economic, and social factors have a profound impact on the wellbeing of the people we work with. Research shows, for instance, that socio-political factors such as financial hardship, unemployment, discrimination, war, and a lack of democratic freedom—as well as economic inequality—can all have a profound impact on people’s psychological health. That’s not to say that these are the only factors: early life experiences, biological factors, and levels of interpersonal relatedness, for instance, can have a powerful impact too.  But just as we wouldn’t say, ‘I don’t really want to think about—or learn about—the impact that adverse childhood experiences can have on my clients’; so, I believe, we shouldn’t be ignoring the impact that social and political factors can have.

An awareness of these factors can help us, and our clients, in three ways?  First, as with any theory (like conditions of worth, attachment theory, or the stages of grief), understanding how our clients have come to experience the problems they do can deepen our levels of empathic engagement.  Mei, for instance, is a client I’ve written about in my recent book Integrating counselling and psychotherapy (Sage, 2019), who had lasting scars from the racist teasing she experienced at school (details of the client have been disguised to protect anonymity).  ‘It wasn’t the worst when the kids had a go at me,’ said Mei, mid-way through our fourth session, ‘It was when the teacher joined in.’ Understanding that racism can have a devastating impact on people’s mental health allowed me to really sit with the painfulness and shame that Mei described, and to validate her in her experiencing. ‘Yes, racism is really awful’; ‘Yes, it can make you feel utterly worthless and humiliated and alone’; ‘Yes, Mei, I can really understand the rage you still feel now’. Of course, without knowing much about racism, I might have still empathised with Mei’s feelings of humiliation, isolation, or rage as she described them.  But this theoretical knowledge opened me up to—and deepened my appreciation of—what she had been going through; just as understanding the impact of early neglect, or of drug withdrawal, can help us appreciate clients’ experiences here.

Second, if we know what is causing a client’s psychological distress, we can help them think about how to address it most effectively.  Mei, for instance, felt really bad about herself a lot of the time.  If we know that that might be linked to the racism she experienced, and continues to experience, we can work with her to ask questions, like ‘Was it really my fault that I felt so shaky at school?’ and, ‘How might I challenge people who are still racist to me?’ By contrast, if we ignore social and political factors, we can end up attributing clients’ psychological distress to the wrong sources. ‘Mei, I wonder if your shakiness at school was about your difficult relationship to your mother?’ Maybe it was but, NO, maybe it wasn’t at all. And maybe working with Mei on issues about her mother will never help her address her low self-esteem because what it’s really about is the raw, brute, ugly racism that Mei experienced as a young child, and continues to experience in her world around her.

Third, if we know our clients’ psychological difficulties are linked to their socio-political contexts, then we can take steps, outside of the counselling room, to try and improve things for them—for all of us. So that means political action: for instance, campaigning against discrimination, poverty, or the looming environmental catastrophe. Surely, if we care about our clients, if we genuinely want to see the best for them, we should be involved here? Otherwise, we are a bit like a GP who stands silently by as a speeding truck comes careering towards their patient. Yes, it’s not the GP’s responsibility to shout anything out, they’re not obliged to do so, and certainly it would be directive. But, aren’t they going to do something? Are they really going to stand by and see someone they care for destroyed?

Counselling and Psychotherapy as a (Progressive) Politic

As counsellors and psychotherapists, I do not believe our role is as detached, indifferent professionals. I do not believe our work is just about ‘doing a job’, like selling cigarettes on a market stall or making profits on stocks and shares.

Let me put this a different way: for me, practising therapy is part of a wider, more encompassing ‘direction’. What is that direction? It is something about trying to help develop a more compassionate world: trying to create a society in which people are happier, more equitable, more able to get on with each other. I’ve described this as an ethos of ‘Welcoming the Other’: where we can be ourselves, but also open and responsive and caring to those around us. And, for me, counselling and psychotherapy are of value to the extent that they contribute to that. That, as a therapist, I’m extending care towards my clients; and I’m also working in a caring relatedness with them; and I’m helping my clients to develop more caring, compassionate relationships towards themselves (and, ideally, with others).

I guess, I know that my work is part of that wider direction because if you took all that away—if, for instance, I knew that my counselling work was going to make people more miserable, or contribute towards a more selfish and inequitable society—I wouldn’t want to do it. Because it wouldn’t give me what I’m really in it for. And, I suspect, the same would be true for many others in this field.

For me, there’s one political view that is very closely aligned to this wider direction—perhaps is the direction, per se—and that’s a progressive political outlook. Progressive means wanting to see society reorganised so that everyone has the chance to live better, ‘larger’ lives. It means trying to create more equality in what people have access to, challenging discrimination and oppression, celebrating diversity, and freeing people up to actualise their potential to its fullest extent. Carl Rogers’s work, for me, is a brilliant exposition of this progressive viewpoint, and that’s why I love it so much: because it’s exactly what I think can help create a more thriving, satisfying, equitable society.  And, again, I think that’s why many other people love Rogers too. Not just because of the clinical method, or the theory of change, but because it accords with their most deeply held values and directions: about supporting human freedom, relatedness, care.

The other side of this coin is to say that, for me, a conservative politic—particularly of the sort advocated by Boris Johnson or those to the right of him—is not compatible with what counselling and psychotherapy is about. Why is that? Because it is so strongly about individualism, about competition, about looking after ourselves and protecting what we have. I guess you might say that that is aligned with some forms of therapy—for instance, a very individualistic ‘me-first’ assertiveness—but that’s not the kind of therapy I’d want to be aligned with in any way. And when you move towards the xenophobia and outright racism of the further Right, I just can’t see that aligned, in any way, to the kind of caring, empathic compassion that underpins our work. Can you be avowedly racist, homophobic, or anti-Semitic and a therapist? No, I don’t think so, because non-judgemental acceptance to all clients is an essential competency for our work.

All this is a way of saying that, for me, counselling is a politic: it’s about how we can, and should, organise ourselves together as societies and as communities. And I see it as a profoundly progressive politic: aligned to a worldview that is deeply respectful of otherness, celebrates diversity, and tries to give everyone a fair chance.

Politics Determines Resources

The third reason, for me, why politics and therapy are so integrally related is one I won’t say too much about, as it’s already so widely discussed. And that’s the fact that the resourcing—and provision—of counselling and psychotherapy is so dependent on political decision-making. More money to the NHS, and more money to schools, means that more people can access more counselling and psychotherapy more of the time. Whatever party manifestos say, the bottom line for me is that progressive parties will always be more supportive of public resourcing for such services, and right wing parties more interested in relegating provision to the private sector alone.

What Therapists Offer

Finally, there’s the other side of the coin: what counsellors and psychotherapists can contribute to the political realm. We are experts in relating, in developing compassionate, empathic ways of being with others. We are trained in how to listen, how to understand people, and also how to help them bring out their best. And there is so much we could contribute to the political realm by helping others develop their practices in these areas.

Last night I watched the brilliant and heart-wrenching Ulysses’ Gaze, by the Greek filmmaker Theodoros Angelopoulos. It’s about the fragmentation of the Balkans, the wars and the killing, the devastation of communities and of people’s lives. And so, so much of it seems to come down to the inability of people to talk to each other, to listen and to understand. To see the suffering of others and to work together, across communities, for the betterment of all.

People need to be able to talk together. And, as counsellors and psychotherapists, we have learnt so much about how to do that. So are we just going to keep that locked away in our consulting rooms, or can we find ways of spreading that learning around? Joining a school’s governing board, for instance, or becoming a local councillor, are ways that we can take this learning we all so passionately love and believe in and contribute it to our wider worlds.

Vote to Keep the Tories Out

In a recent Facebook post, I appealed, ‘to all counsellors and psychotherapists at this election time to vote for progressive parties (Labour, Lib Dems, Greens, Scottish and Welsh nationalists), and to keep the Conservatives out of power.’ Maybe it’s directive to say that, but I just feel so incredibly passionate about the importance of making political choices at the present time. As counsellors and psychotherapists, we can’t just stand by the sidelines and pretend none of this matters to us: trying to be ‘neutral’ just means endorsing the status quo. It’s our clients’ lives, let alone our own, that will be massively impacted upon by what happens at this general election. Five more years of Tories will almost certainly mean cuts to the NHS; a more unequal society; and, worst of all, a failure to address the most critical issue of our time, the climate emergency. I believe we need to act and that, as counsellors and psychotherapists, we need to be involved: to work with other progressive forces to create a society that is fairer, safer, and better for all.


Resources

If you are interested in the links between politics and counselling and psychotherapy, you may be interested in joining the group Psychotherapists & Counsellors for Social Responsibility, which aims ‘to locate counselling and psychotherapy in a social, political, ecological, and economic context.’ For books, Nick Totton’s Psychotherapy and Politics provides a good overview of the involvement of therapists in the political field. My latest book, Integrating counselling and psychotherapy: Directionality, synergy, and social change strives to develop a framework for therapists that can integrate social and political factors as well as psychological ones.

The Introduction: Some Pointers

The following blog is for Master’s or doctoral level students writing research dissertations in the psychological therapies fields. The pointers are only recommendations—different trainers, supervisors, and examiners may see things very differently.

What does an Introduction do?

The aim of an introductory section is to help your reader understand what your dissertation is about and why it is important. It is also an opportunity to help them understand the context for your study so that they can understand where it is coming from and what it is trying to contribute to the wider field. 

An Introduction will typically include the following sections, though not necessarily in this order:

  • Aims/objectives of the research

  • Research question(s)

  • Personal rationale

  • Contextual rationale

  • Background literature

  • Definitions of key terms

  • Outline of the dissertation

For a dissertation, an Introduction is often separate from a Literature Review. The former is often the place where you set out why you are asking this question(s), whereas the latter sets out what you already know in answer to this question(s).

Aims/Questions

What is the purpose of your research? Your Introduction is the place to try and state, as explicitly as possible, what your research aims and/or questions are (see pointers here).

Personal Rationale

So why are you doing it? Why is it important to you? In most therapeutic fields, it is entirely legitimate (if not essential) to say something of why you are coming to this question, at this point in time. And the deeper you can go into your own personal rationale, the more insightful and authentic your personal account is likely to be. So some questions you might want to ask yourself are:

  • Why this research question/topic area?

  • Why does it matter to you?

  • What does it mean to you?

  • Why now?

  • What was your personal journey towards this research question?

  • How do you feel about this research question? What emotions are generated in you when you think about it?

  • How does this research question connect to your:

    • life

    • personal history

    • identity

    • values and meanings

    • aspirations for the future?

Something you might find really helpful is to do this as an exercise with a partner. Ask them to interview you, say for 20 minutes, using these questions. Record it and then listen back once the interview is over. That can really free you up to talk honestly and openly about some of the concerns and motives that underpin why you are doing this work. And, of course, you don’t need to share it all in your Introduction: but knowing where you want to go and why is a critical part of conducting an informed, in-depth, and self-reflexive study.

As part of this reflexive work, you might also want to ask yourself the question, ‘Are there some particular answers that I, consciously or unconsciously, would “like” to find?’ When it comes to writing about your personal biases in relation to the research question, however, that may be more likely to go in your Methods section. Here, in the Introduction, the focus is more on biases and assumptions that may have led you to ask this question in the first places.

Contextual Rationale

Of course, it’s not all about you. There’s also got to be good reasons, for the wider field, in you asking these questions at this point in time. For instance, maybe there’s a lot of research on how young people experience acceptance and congruence, but not empathy; or perhaps there’s evidence of particular increases in mental health problems in young people of Asian origin, so we really need to know what can help them.

So your Introduction is also a place where you can say about why your research is of importance in the grander scheme of things. Use evidence wherever you can, though it might be historical or socio-political as well as psychological.

Again, it can be really helpful to explore these questions in a pair. Get interviewed by a colleague, but this time invite them to probe you on why they should care about what you are doing. Some questions that they might want to ask/role-play are:

  • Why should I (as a counsellor/psychotherapist/counselling psychologist/researcher/commissioner/policy-maker) care about what you are doing?

  • What is it going to teach me, as a counsellor/psychotherapist/counselling psychologist/researcher/commissioner/policy-maker?

  • Don’t people already know the answer to your question? How is it going to add to the literature out there?

  • Why is it worth anyone spending time on this?

  • How will it make a contribution to:

    • Society?

    • Clients?

    • Other therapists?

    • The people who took part in the study?

Have you convinced them it is worthwhile (indeed, have you convinced yourself)? If not, it may be worth spending some time thinking through what it is that you really want to do, and whether it really is important. It may be that you sense it, it’s just difficult putting it into words. But try and find that sense so that you have a really clear basis to underpin your research work.

Background literature

Your Introduction is also a good place to explain anything that the reader needs to know about to understand the context and meaning of your study. For instance, how many young people enter person-centred therapy every year, or how did the concept of ‘alliance ruptures’ emerge and what are it’s theoretical underpinnings.

Of course, you’re also going to be reviewing the background literature in your Literature Review chapter, so how do you know what goes where? Maybe the best way to think about this, as above, is that content for the Literature Review chapter provides preliminary answers to your questions, whereas content for the Introductory chapter helps you understand what the question is and why it’s important. So, for instance, in our study of young people’s experiences of empathy, literature on how Rogers defined empathy might go in our Introduction, as might literature on mental health problems in adolescents. But findings of, for instance, a quantitative study on how young people rated the importance of empathy would go in our Literature Review, because it’s providing us with some important initial answers to the question we are asking.

Defining Key Terms

Closely related to this, what we can also do in our Introduction is to define key terms: anything that the reader is going to need to understand to be able to make sense of our thesis; and also so that they know how we, specifically, are choosing to use certain terms. For instance, do we mean ‘empathy’ as Rogers defined it, or as neuroscientists have understood it, or in the Kohutian sense? That’s very important information for the reader in terms of understanding our work.

What about if we want to leave the definition(s) open to our participants rather than imposing on them a particular understanding? Indeed, maybe our research is about exploring what young people understand by empathy, or what alliance ruptures mean to clients.

Research questions of this type (‘What do people understand by x?’) can be great, particularly if we’re coming to our research from a very inductive, ‘grounded’ epistemological position. However, I would say that it is a case of either/or: that is, either ask about what something means, or ask about how it is experienced/what it does—but don’t try asking both of these questions at the same time. Otherwise, you’re essentially asking your participants to describe the experience/effects of lots of different things, and you’re not likely to come up with a particular coherent answer. If Person A, for instance, defines empathy as Z, and experiences it as V; and Person B defines empathy as Y, and experiences it as U; then we may have learnt about different definitions of empathy, but our findings of V and U don’t really mean much because they refer to different things (Z and Y).

Outline Structure

Finally, your Introduction is a place where you can say what your thesis is going to look like: leading the reader through the different chapters of your work so that they know what is to come. You don’t need to do too much detail, maybe just a page or so, but something that gives them a clear and coherent sense of the route ahead.

Conclusion

By the end of your Introduction, your reader should have all they need to embark on the journey of your thesis; and, ideally, be motivated and excited to travel forward. So do make sure, as you describe your reasons for doing this work, or what the work is about, that you also draw the reader in: interest them, compel them, make them want to know more. Think of it like a tourist guide preparing your traveller for a trip ahead. Tell them what they need to know, but also not everything. After all, you want them to experience it first hand, and to learn what you have learnt as you travelled into the heart of your research.

DISCLAIMER

The information, materials, opinions or other content (collectively Content) contained in this blog have been prepared for general information purposes. Whilst I’ve endeavoured to ensure the Content is current and accurate, the Content in this blog is not intended to constitute professional advice and should not be relied on or treated as a substitute for specific advice relevant to particular circumstances. That means that I am not responsible for, nor will be liable for any losses incurred as a result of anyone relying on the Content contained in this blog, on this website, or any external internet sites referenced in or linked in this blog.

Evaluating and Auditing Counselling and Psychotherapy Services: Some Pointers

How do you go about setting up an evaluation or audit of your therapy service—whether it’s a large volunteer organisation or your own private practice?

Clarifying your Aims

There’s lots of reasons for setting up a service evaluation or audit, and being clear about what your’s are is a vital first step forward. Some possible aims might be:

  • Showing the external world (e.g., commissioners, policy makers, potential clients) that your therapy is effective.

  • Knowing for yourself, at the practitioner or service level, what’s working well and what isn’t.

  • Enhancing outcomes by providing therapists, and clients, with ‘systematic feedback’.

  • Developing evidence for particular forms of therapy (e.g., person-centred therapy) or therapeutic processes (e.g., the alliance).

And, of course, there’s also:

  • Because you have to!

Choosing an Evaluation Design

There’s lots of different designs you can adopt for your evaluation and audit study, and these can be combined in a range of ways.

Audit only

This is the most basic type of design, where you’re just focusing on who’s coming in to use your service and the type of service you are providing.

Pre-/Post-

This is probably the most common type of evaluation design, particularly if your main concern is to show outcomes. Here, clients’ levels of psychological problems are assessed at the beginning and end of therapy, so that you can assess the amount of change associated with what you’re doing.

Qualitative

You could also choose to do interviews with clients at the end of therapy about how they experienced the service. A simpler form of this would be to use a questionnaire at the end of treatment. John McLeod has produced a very useful review of qualitative tools for evaluation and routine outcome monitoring (see here).

Experimental

If you’ve got a lot of time and resources to hand—and/or if you need to provide the very highest level of evidence for your therapy—you could also choose to adopt an experimental design. Here, you’re comparing changes in people who have your therapy with those who don’t (a ‘control group’). These kinds of studies are much, much more complex and expensive than the other types, but they are the only one that can really show that the therapy, itself, is causing the changes you’ve identified (pre-/post- evaluations can only ever show that your therapy is associated with change).

Choosing Instruments

There’s thousands of tools and measures out there that can be used for evaluation purposes, so where do you start?

Tools for use in counselling and psychotherapy evaluation and audit studies can be divided into three types. These are described below and, for each type, I have suggested some tools for a ‘typical’ service evaluation in the UK. Unless otherwise stated, all these measures are free to use, well-validated (which means that they show what they’re meant to show), and fairly well-respected by people in the field. All the measures described below are also ‘self-rated’. This means that clients, themselves, fill them in. There are also many therapist- and observer-rated measures out there, but the trend is towards using self-rated measures and trusting that clients, themselves, know their own states of mind best.

Just to add: however tempting it might be, I’d almost always you not to develop your own instruments and measures. You’d be amazed how long it takes to create a validated measure (we once took about six years to develop one with six items!) and, if you create your own, you can never compare your findings with those of other services. Also, for the same reason, it is almost always unhelpful to modify measures that are out in the public domain—even minimally. Just changing the wording on an item from ‘often’ to ‘frequently’, for instance, may make a large difference in how people respond to it.

Outcome Tools

Outcome tools are instruments that can be used to assess how well clients are getting on in their lives, in terms of symptoms, problems, and/or wellbeing. These are the kinds of tools that can then be used in pre-/post-, or experimental, designs to see how clients change over the course of therapy. These tools primarily consist of forms with around 10 ‘items’ or so, like, ‘I’ve been worrying’ or ‘'I’ve been finding it hard to sleep’. The client indicates how frequently or how much they have been experiencing this, and then their responses can be totalled up to give an overall indication of their mental and emotional state.

Its generally good practice to integrate clients’ responses to the outcome tools into the session, rather than divorcing them from the therapeutic process. For instance, a therapist might say, ‘I can see on the form that this has been a difficult week for you,’ or, ‘Your levels of anxiety seem to be going down again.’ This is particularly important if the aim of the evaluation is to enhance outcomes through systematic feedback.

General

A popular measure of general psychological distress (both with therapists and clients), particularly in the UK, is:

This can be used in a wide range of services to look at how overall levels of distress, wellbeing, and functioning change over time. A shortened, and more easily usable version of this (particularly for weekly outcome monitoring, see below), is:

Another very popular, and particularly brief, general measure of how clients are doing is:

Two other very widely used measures of distress in the UK are:

The PHQ-9 is a depression-specific measure, and the GAD-7 is a generalised-anxiety specific measure, but because these problems are so common they are often used as general measures for assessing how clients are doing, irrespective of their specific diagnosis. They do also have the dual function of being able to show whether or not clients are in the ‘clinical range’ for these problems, and at what level of severity.

Problem-specific

There are also many measures that are specific to particular problems. For instance, for clients who have experienced trauma there is:

And for eating problems there is:

If you are working in a clinic with a particular population, it may well be appropriate to use both a general measure, and one that is more specific to that client group.

Wellbeing

For those of us from a more humanistic, or positive psychology, background, there may be a desire to assess ‘wellness’ and positive functioning instead of (or as well as) distress. Aside from the ORS, probably the most commonly used wellbeing measure is:

There’s both a 14-item version, and shortened 7-item version for more regular measurement.

Personalised measures

All the measures above are nomothetic, meaning that they have the same items for each individual. This is very helpful if you want to compare outcomes across individuals, or across services, and to use standardised benchmarks. However, some people feel that it is more appropriate to use measures that are tailored to the specific individual, with items that reflect their unique goals or problems. In the UK, probably the best known measure here is:

This can be used with children and young people as well as adults, and invites them to state their specific problem(s) and how intense they are. Another personalised, problem-based tool is:

If you are more interested in focusing on clients’ goals, rather than their problems, then you can use:

Service Satisfaction

At the end of therapy, clients can be asked about how satisfied they were with the service. There isn’t any one generic standard measure here, but the one that seems to be used throughout IAPT is:

Children and young people

The range of measures for young people is almost as good as it is for adults, although once you get below 11 years old or so the tools are primarily parent/carer- or teacher-report. Some of the most commonly used ones are:

  • YP-CORE: Generic, brief distress outcome measure

  • SDQ: Generic distress outcome measure, very well validated and in lots of languages

  • CORS: Generic, ultra-brief measure of wellbeing (available via license)

  • RCADS: Diagnosis-based outcome measure

  • GBO Tool: Personalised goal-based outcome measure

  • ESQ: Service satisfaction measure.

A brilliant resource for all things related to evaluating therapy with children and young people is corc.uk.net/

Process Tools

Process measures are tools that can help assess how clients are experiencing the therapeutic work, itself: so whether they like/don’t like it, how they feel about their therapist, and what they might want differently in the therapeutic work. These are less widely used than outcome measures, and are more suited to evaluations where the focus is on improving outcomes through systematic feedback, rather than on demonstrating what the outcomes are.

Probably the most widely used process measure in everyday counselling and psychotherapy is:

  • SRS (available via license)

This form, the Session Rating Scale, is part of the PCOMS family of measures (along with the ORS), and is an ultrabrief tool that clients can complete at the end of each session to rate such in-session experiences as whether they feel heard and understood.

For a more in-depth assessment of particular sessions, there is:

This has been widely used in a research context, and includes qualitative (word-based) as well as quantitative (number-based) items.

Several well-validated research measures also exist to assess various elements of the therapeutic relationship. These aren’t so widely used in everyday service evaluations, but may be helpful if there is a research component to the evaluation, or if there is an interest in a particular therapeutic process. The most common of these is:

This comes in various version, and assesses the clients’ (or therapists’) view of the level of collaboration between members of the therapeutic dyad. Another relational measure, specific to the amount of relational depth, is:

A process tool that we have been developing to help elicit, and stimulate dialogue on, clients’ preferences for therapy is:

This invites clients to indicate how they would like therapy to be on a range of dimensions, such that the practitioner can identify any strong preferences that the client has. This can either be used at assessment, or in the ongoing therapeutic work. An online tool for this measure can be accessed here.

Interviews

If you really want to find out how clients have experienced your service, there’s nothing better you can do than actually talk to them. Of course, you shouldn’t interview your own clients (there would be far too much pressure on them to present a positive appraisal) but an independent colleague or researcher can ask some key questions (for instance, ‘What did you find helpful? What did you find unhelpful? What would you have liked more/less of?) which can be shared with the therapist or the service more widely (with the client’s permission). There’s also an excellent, standardised protocol that can be used for this purposes:

Note, as an interviewing approach has the potential to feel quite invasive to clients (though also, potentially, very rewarding), it’s important to have appropriate ethical scrutiny here of procedures before carrying these out.

Children and young people

Process tools for children and young people are even more infrequent, but there is the child version of the Session Rating Scale:

Demographic/Service Audit Tools

As well as knowing how well clients are doing, in and out of therapy, it can also be important to know who they are—particularly for auditing purposes. Demographic forms gather data about basic characteristics, such as age and gender, and also the kinds of problems or complexity factors that clients are presenting with. These tools do tend to be less standardised than outcome or process measures, and it’s not so problematic here to develop your own forms.

For adults, a good basic assessment form is:

For children and young people, one of the most common, and thorough, forms is:

Choosing Measurement Points

So when are you actually going to ask clients, and/or therapist, to complete these measures? The demographic/audit measures can generally be done just once at the beginning of therapy, although you may want to update them as you go along. Service satisfaction measures and interviews tend to be done just at the end of the treatment.

For the other outcome and process measures, the current trend is to do them every session. Yup, every session. Therapists often worry about that—indeed, they often worry about using measures altogether—but generally the research shows that clients are OK with it, provided that they don’t take up too much of the session (say not more than 5-10 minutes in total). So, for session-by-session outcome monitoring, make sure you use just one or two of the briefer forms, like the CORE-10 or SRS, rather than longer and more complex measures.

Why every session? The reason is that clients, unfortunately, do sometimes drop out, and if you try and do measures just at the beginning and end you miss out on those clients who have terminated therapy prior to a planned ending. In fact, that can give you better results (because you’re only looking at the outcomes of those who finished properly, who tend to do better) but it’s biased and inaccurate. Session by session monitoring means that you’ve always got a last score for every client, and now most funders or commissioners would expect to see data gathered in that way. If you’ve only got results from 30% of your sample, it really can’t tell you much about the overall picture.

Generally, outcome measures are completed at the start of a session—or before the start of a session—so that clients’ responses are not too affected by the session content. Process measures are generally completed towards the end of a session as they are a reflection on the session itself (but with a bit of time to discuss any issues that might come up).

Analysing the Data

Before you start a service evaluation, you have to know what you are going to do with the data. After all, what you don’t want is to a big pile of CORE-OM forms in one corner of your storage room!

That means making sure you price in to any evaluation the costs, or resources, of inputting the data, analysing it, and writing it up. It simply not fair to ask clients, and therapists, to use hundreds of evaluation forms if nothing is ever going to happen to them.

The good news is that most of the forms, or the sites that the forms come from, tell you how to analyse the data from that form.

The simplest form of analysis, for pre-/post- evaluations, is to look at the average score of clients at the beginning of therapy on the measure, and then their average score at the end. Remember to only use clients who have completed both pre- and post- forms. That will show you whether clients are improving (hopefully) or getting worse.

With a bit more sophisticated statistics you can calculate what the ‘effect size’ is. This is a standardised measure of the magnitude of change (after all, different measures will change by different amounts). The effect size can be understood as the difference between pre- and post- scores divided by the ‘standard deviation’ of the pre- scores (this is the amount of variation in scores, which you can work out via Excel using the function ‘stdev’). Typically in counselling and psychotherapy services, the effect size is around 1, and you can compare your statistics with other services in your field, or with IAPT, to see how your service is doing (although, of course, any such comparisons are ultimately very approximate).

What you can also do is to find out the percentage of your clients that have shown ‘reliable change’ (which is change more than a particular amount, to compensate for the fact that measures will always be imprecise), and ‘clinical change’ (the amount of clients who have gone from clinical to non-clinical bands and vice versa). If you look around on the internet, you can normally find the clinical and reliable change ‘indexes’ for the measures that you are using (though some don’t have them). For the PHQ-9 and GAD-7, you can look here to see both calculations for reliable and clinical change, and the percentages for each of these statistics that were found in IAPT.

Online Services

One way around having to input and analyse masses of data yourselves is to use an online evaluation service. This can simplify the process massively, and is particularly appropriate if you want to combine service evaluation with regular systematic feedback for clinicians and clients. Most of these (though not all) can host a wide range of measures, so they can support the particular evaluation that you choose to develop. However, these services come at a price: a license, even for an individual practitioner, can be in the hundreds or thousands of pounds. Normally, you’d also need to cost in the price of digital tablets for clients to enter the data on.

My personal recommendation for one of these services is:

At the CREST Research Clinic we’ve been using this system for a few years now, and we’ve been consistently impressed with the support and help we’ve received from the site developers. Bill and Tony are themselves psychotherapists with an interest in—and understanding of—how to deliver the best therapy.

Other sites that I would recommend for consideration, but that I haven’t personally used, are:

Challenges

In terms of setting up and running a service evaluation, one of the biggest challenges is getting counsellors and psychotherapists ‘on board’. Therapists are often sceptical about evaluation, and feel that using measures goes against their basic values and ways of doing therapy. Here, it can be helpful for them to hear that clients, in fact, often find evaluation tools quite useful, and are often (though not always) much more positive about it than therapists may assume. It’s perhaps also important for therapists to see the value that these evaluations can have in securing future funding and support for services.

Another challenge, as suggested above, is simply finding the time and person-power to analyse the forms. So, just to repeat, do plan and cost that in at the beginning. And if it doesn’t feel like that is going to be possible, do consider using an online service that can process the data for you.

For the evaluation to be meaningful, it needs to be consistent and it needs to be comprehensive. That means it’s not enough to have a few forms from a few clients across a few sessions, or just forms from assessment but none at endpoint. Rather, whatever you choose to do, all therapists need to do it, all of the time. In that respect, it’s better just to do a few things well, rather than trying to overstretch yourself and ending up with a range of methods done patchily.

Some ‘Template’ Evaluations

Finally, I wanted to suggest some examples of what an evaluation design might look like for particular aims, populations, and budgets:

Aim: Showing evidence of effectiveness to the external world. Population: adults with range of difficulties. Budget: minimal

  • CORE-10: Assessment, and every session

  • CORE Assessment Form

  • Analysis: Service usage statistics; pre- to post- change, effect size, % reliable and clinical change

Aim: Showing evidence of effectiveness to the external world, enhancing outcomes. Population: young people with range of difficulties. Budget: minimal

  • YP-CORE: Assessment, and every session

  • Current View: Assessment

  • ESQ: End of therapy

  • Analysis: Service usage statistics; pre- to post- change, effect size, % reliable and clinical change; satisfaction (quantitative and qualitative analysis)

Aims: Showing evidence of effectiveness to the external world, enhancing outcomes. Population: adults with depression. Budget: medium

  • PHQ-9: Assessment and every session

  • CORE Assessment Form

  • Helpful Aspects of Therapy Questionnaire

  • Patient Experience Questionnaire: End of Therapy

  • Analysis: Service usage statistics; pre- to post- change, effect size, % reliable and clinical change; helpful and unhelpful aspects of therapy (qualitative analysis); satisfaction (quantitative and qualitative analysis)

And finally…

Please note, the information, materials, opinions or other content (collectively Content) contained in this blog have been prepared for general information purposes. Whilst I’ve endeavoured to ensure the Content is current and accurate, the Content in this blog is not intended to constitute professional advice and should not be relied on or treated as a substitute for specific advice relevant to particular circumstances. That means that I am not responsible for, nor will be liable for any losses incurred as a result of anyone relying on the Content contained in this blog, on this website or any external internet sites referenced in or linked in this blog. I also can’t offer advice on individual evaluations. Sorry… but hope the information here is useful.

Personal Therapy: A Reflexive Account

What have I, as a client, found helpful in therapy? What have I found unhelpful? And, What, for me, has been the process of change?

We're currently working on an analysis of young people's experiences of school-based counselling in our ETHOS trial and, as part of the preparation for that, we wanted to look at our own. This reflexivity is an essential part of good qualitative research: the more we can be aware of our own experiences, the more we can bracket it and ensure that we don't impose it on what our participants are telling us.

So below is my summary based on those episodes of therapy, with therapists from a variety of orientations: person-centred , existential, psychodynamic, and cognitive-behavioural. Of course, this is just my experiences and perceptions, and someone else may experience therapy in entirely different ways (indeed, that's the whole point of the exercise).


I have had 12 episodes of therapy over the last 38 years, from 12 different therapists. These have practiced from a variety of orientations: person-centred, existential, psychodynamic, and cognitive-behavioural.

Helpful

In terms of the person of the therapist, I’ve found it most helpful when they’ve been warm, friendly, and showing genuine care and interest.  It’s been important to me that I feel respected by them: on a human-to-human, adult-to-adult level.  At the same time, I have appreciated some professional ‘distance’ rather than over-familiarity.  So someone who achieves a balance of being open and ‘human’, but at the same time capable of—and focused on—doing their job.  Not too ‘sloppy’ or unstructured or laid back.  Along these lines, therapy has been most helpful to me when I’ve felt that the therapist is someone who I can learn from, who ‘knows’ more than me in some area.  Not necessarily ‘sorted’ or without their own problems, but someone who can help me discover things I didn’t already know.

It’s been helpful for me when therapists give me space to talk through, at my own pace, my problems.  Also, it’s been really important to me that the therapist understands, deeply and fairly easily, how I experience the world.  That they ‘get’ what life is like for me—as it actually is—and that they can help me (for instance, through reflections or questions) go more deeply into my experiences: talking about areas that I might only be dimly aware of.

Sometimes, insights from the therapist have been helpful to me (for instance, in relation to my past): particularly where put tentatively, and where I’m given space to work out their meaning for myself.

I have sometimes found psycho-education, or information from the therapist, very helpful.  However, although this has often taken the form of specific guidance or exercises, it is generally the overall message that has been most helpful to me.

Unhelpful

In terms of the person of the therapist, I’ve found it least helpful when they show coldness, indifference, and a lack of care; and worse when they relate in ways that are aloof, arrogant, condescending, dismissive, and critical.  I have also found it unhelpful when therapists engage in mechanistic and ‘by rote’ ways.  Another thing I find very unhelpful is when the therapist seems to be making assumptions about who I am or how I experience the world, or wants to ‘impose’ their perceptions over my actual lived-experiencing.  Along these lines, I really react when therapists, through interpretation or guidance, seem more interested in ‘proving’ the truth of their particular therapeutic model or dogma, rather than listening to how I experience my world, and helping me work out what’s best for me.

 The other side of this is that, if a therapist is too vague, woolly, and ramshackle, I can end up feeling a bit lost in therapy and losing confidence in them.  As above, for therapy to be helpful, I need to feel that the therapist is someone I can learn from—and develop in relation to.

Process of Change

Most of my change in therapy has come through developing insights about what I am doing, why I am doing it, and how I am really feeling; and then finding ‘better’ ways of doing things—ways that are more satisfying, fulfilling, and rewarding.  This has nearly always come about through a two-way dialogue between myself and the therapist: questions, reflections, and gentle insights and interpretations from the therapist; space for me to reflect, process their perceptions, and disclose further; more input and encouragement from the therapist.

Sometimes, particularly when things have felt very difficult, it has been helpful just to have lots of space to talk and put everything ‘out there’.  This has made things feel less overwhelming and tangled up. 

Knowing that there is someone there who I can turn to for help and support—someone ‘solid’, dependable, and knowledgeable—has been really important at times.

Learning, mainly through cognitive and behavioural therapies, that it is better to face fears than avoid them has been very helpful for me. This guidance has been a constant companion throughout my life, and has helped me to live ‘out in the world’ as fully as possible. 

Sometimes, just being given accurate information by a therapist has allayed fears.


Exploring your own therapeutic experiences: A reflexive exercise

If you're interested in exploring your own experiences of therapy then you might be interested in the steps I used to do this for myself. These are as listed below. (Please bear in mind, of course, that this is at your own risk—it can be painful or upsetting to think back on therapy—and do ensure you keep anything you write down stored safely) :

  1. List all the episodes of therapy that you have had (you can include group as well as individual, whatever is meaningful for you).

  2. For each one, write down (approximating where you don’t know for sure):

  • A title for it that’s meaningful for you (e.g., ‘Gestalt Therapist’, ‘College Counsellor’)

  • Who the therapist was

  • Dates

  • Location

  • Number of sessions

  • Presenting issue(s) (what you came to address)

  • ‘What I experienced as helpful in this therapy’

  • ‘What I experienced as unhelpful in this therapy’

  • ‘The process of change in this therapy, if any’

  • A rating of overall helpfulness from 1 (Not at all helpful) to 10 (Extremely helpful).

3. Now go through your answers for the three penultimate questions (i.e., helpful, unhelpful, and change process) and try to summarise in a few paragraphs for each. So what, across therapists, you have experienced as helpful and unhelpful in therapy for you, and any change processes you went through.

As with reflexivity in research, perhaps a final step is then to consider how much your own perceptions might get ‘projected’ onto clients. The more we know what it is that we want and don't want from therapy ourselves, the more we may be able to step back from that and allow the genuine 'otherness' of the client to come through. For instance, if what we found was helpful was lots of space to talk, do we assume that all of our clients want that too? Are we open to the possibility that some clients may want something very different, for instance practical guidance? That doesn’t mean we then have to offer that, but it may be important to talk through with our clients what they do actually want (and not want), and what we can actually offer them: a process of metatherapeutic communication.

The 'Actualising Tendency': A Directional Account

What is the ‘actualising tendency’? It’s something that is referred to throughout the person-centred and humanistic field. But what does it actually mean, does it make sense, and, perhaps most importantly, does it really ‘exist’?

Carl Rogers (1959, p. 196), in his classic monograph, defined it as the, ‘inherent tendency of the organism to develop all its capacities in ways which serve to maintain or enhance the organism.’ To be honest, I’ve studied and quoted that definition again and again over the last 30 years, but I’m still not entirely sure what it means. The problem for me is the term ‘capacities’—what actually are they? Similarly, when the Dictionary of person-centred psychology defines the actualising tendency as ‘the tendency in all forms of organic life to develop more complex organisation, the fulfilment of potential…’ (Merry & Tudor, 2002, p. 2), I’m left with the question, ‘What actually is this “potential”?’ Presumably it’s something we are born with. But was I born with the potential to become a professor, or a football player, or a sociopath? And, if so, why did I actualise some potentials and not others? I guess, for me, terms like ‘capacities’ and ‘potential’ just feel too vague and non-specific, and don’t seem to give us much concrete direction about how to engage most helpfully with our clients.

So does the ‘actualising tendency’ mean something about an inherent capacity to self-heal, or ‘self-right,’ as Bohart and Tallman (1999) put it? I think that is how it is most commonly understood. That is, we each, within us, have the capacity to sort ourselves out—to find the answers to our problems. If we get cut, our bodies form scabs to heal us; or send out antibodies to help us overcome an infection. In the same way, then, deep inside of us is a tendency towards psychological healing, maintenance, and growth. We know what is right for us: an amazing, organismic wisdom that can help us overcome even the most challenging of circumstances. Viewed in this way, the concept of the actualising tendency becomes a revolutionary and deeply democratising challenge to those approaches—like traditional psychoanalysis and behaviour therapy—that see expert knowledge and intervention as the source of psychological healing. Here, from this humanistic standpoint, we don’t need to depend on others, or look to our ‘betters’, to sort ourselves out. Rather, it’s we, ‘the people’, who are our own authorities in our own lives.

Progressive though it is, this understanding of the actualising tendency begs an obvious question: if we’ve got such a deep tendency towards healing and growth, how is it that people can get so f*%£ed up in their lives? Why, for instance, do people end up addicted to drugs, or battering themselves psychologically or physically, or chasing after money in a way that drives them to an early grave? Fortunately, from a self-righting perspective, there’s a pretty good answer to this: because, instead of trusting our own inner wisdom, we end up being guided by the outside world. So, for instance, we come to believe that the most important thing in life is to have a Rolex watch, or thousands of Facebook ‘friends’; and we come to ignore that own inner voice that is just wanting to have fun, or be creative, or lie in bed with our partners watching the rain against the window pane. In Rogerian terms, we develop an ‘external locus of evaluation’, instead of an ‘internal’ one.

There’s evidence in support of this position. For instance, we know that people feel happier and more satisfied when they achieve ‘intrinsic’ goals, as opposed to ‘extrinsic’ ones (Sheldon & Kasser, 1998). However, the idea that our actualising tendency gets scuppered by the outside world is problematic in several ways (Cooper, 2013). First, it tends to position the person as a ‘victim’ of their external circumstances, which isn’t consistent with the person-centred idea that we are all inherently agentic. Rollo May, the founder of existential therapy in the US, criticised Rogers for this, saying it was the ‘most devastating of all judgements’: that we are all essentially ‘sheep’ following whoever is ‘the shepherd’. Second, it’s based on a very individualistic view of human being: that we come into the world as a separate entity, divorced from those around us, and with an ability to return to an independent, individual self. For a lot of contemporary ‘postmodern’ thinkers, these individualistic assumptions are more a product of western, patriarchal culture than an ‘objective’ reality; and they would argue that human beings are always, inevitably, inter-mixed with others. So, from this standpoint, it really doesn’t make sense to pitch ‘the individual’ against ‘society’. Third, and perhaps most basically, is it really true that we always know what is right—social forces or not? If I get lost, for instance, sometimes I have a deep, intuitive feeling about where I need to go, and it’s absolutely spot on. But sometimes I don’t. And sometimes my deep intuitive feeling takes me in totally and utterly the wrong direction, while Google Maps is perfect at getting me there. So surely we do learn, sometimes, some very helpful and healing things from the outside world? As the developmental psychologist Piaget argued, growth and learning comes from both ‘assimilation’ (fitting the external world to what we already know) but also ‘accommodation’ (adapting our ways of seeing the world to what we learn from outside). So to only focus on ‘inner wisdom’, and not the wisdom of others or the outside world, would seem somewhat myopic.

Given these issues, I want to propose another way of thinking about the actualising tendency which, for me, helps to make sense of some of these problems. It’s based on some thinking and research that I did for my latest book, Integrating counselling and psychotherapy: Directionality, synergy, and social change (Sage, 2019).

The book starts with the assumption, derived from existential philosophy, that human being is essentially directional. This is not entirely dissimilar from the idea of an actualising tendency—indeed, the actualising tendency has been described as directional. However, directionality isn’t defined, per se, in terms of pointing in a healing or necessarily growthful direction. Rather, it refers to the way that, as human beings, we are always ‘on-the-way-to-somewhere’: agentic and acting intelligibility (i.e., in the best ways we know how) towards different possibilities, rather than being sponge- or machine-like ‘things’. Of course, we can have many different directions; and what the framework goes on to suggest is that these directions fit together in a ‘hierarchical structure’: with our strongest, most fundamental directions at the top (for instance, for relatedness, self-worth, or meaning), and lower-order directions as the means by which we try and fulfil these higher-order desires. So, for instance, we might have a desire to find a good TV box set on Netflix (lower-order direction), so that we can spend time with our partner (higher-order direction), so that we can experience relatedness in our lives (highest-order direction).

This distinction between higher- and lower-order directions may be helpful in trying to make sense of the actualising tendency, because what I want to suggest is that, whilst our higher-order directions may be an expression of some inner, self-righting wisdom, our lower-order directions may not necessarily be. So the first part of this is that only we can know what we most fundamentally want and need in our lives: no one, for instance, can tell me that I need faith, or that the most important thing for me in my life is to be powerful and dominant. I know, deep inside, that what matters for me most is intimacy and love and social contribution. And even if I didn’t know it, it’s my right to set those highest-order directions for myself. But when it comes to lower-order directions, the means to get to where we want to be, there is maybe a lot more that we can learn from the world; and a lot more that we might get, intuitively, wrong. So, for instance, my desire to experience relatedness in my life: yup, definitely actualising. My desire to do that by watching TV with my partner: yup, probably so, although there might be better ways towards intimacy. My desire to sit through sit through six seasons of Gossip Girl … Hmm… ‘anti-actualising’ for sure, and this is where I could definitely do with some external guidance and advice.

This directional understanding of the actualising process has clear implications for how we might work with our clients. If all the wisdom is within the client, then the best thing we can do to help them is to really step back from any guidance, advice, or directions; and just allow their own self-righting force to come to the fore. In other words, classical non-directive client-centred therapy. But if we say that, at lower orders, people can get things wrong, then guidance, and directions, and specific therapeutic methods can also have a legitimate place. So, for instance, we might teach a client social skills, so that he or she can get the intimacy that they are yearning for. Or we help them to discover that the best way to overcome a phobia is by facing up to it, through exposure techniques. Here, we’re not telling the person what their highest-order directions are; but we’re helping them learn about the best ways to get there—on the assumption that that wisdom is not always inside. Of course, we can’t all offer these different methods, and the suggestion here is not that we should all become polymaths (or even integrative or eclectic) in how we think and practice. But it points towards the ‘pluralistic’ principle that we should all be as aware as possible of what we can, and cannot, offer clients; and have the knowledge and skills to refer on, as and where appropriate (Cooper & McLeod, 2011).

In summary, an understanding of human beings as self-healing is a great reminder of the incredible creativity and wisdom that clients can have in finding their own answers. But, as a complete model in itself, it can also be limited and lacking in nuance. Most importantly, perhaps, it can mean we overlook times in which clients could really, genuinely, do with some external guidance, to help them towards the things that they most deeply want. From a directional perspective, human beings are still conceptualised as agentic, intelligible beings. But there’s an acknowledgement that, while we may always be striving to do our best, that’s not always the best thing we can be doing. Sometimes, with the best will and reasons in the world, we end up doing things that really mess us up. Hence, while therapists need to really, deeply listen to what it is that clients want—and how it is that they think they can get there—it may also be important to recognise that, at least for some clients, the pathways towards getting there are not always ‘inside’: there’s a place for wisdom without, as well as wisdom within.

References

Bohart, A. C., & Tallman, K. (1999). How Clients Make Therapy Work: The Process of Active Self-Healing. Washington: American Psychological Association.

Cooper, M. (2013). The intrinsic foundations of extrinsic motivations and goals: Towards a unified humanistic theory of wellbeing. Journal of Humanistic Psychology, 53(2), 153-171. doi: 10.1177/0022167812453768

Cooper, M., & McLeod, J. (2011). Pluralistic Counselling and Psychotherapy. London: Sage.

Merry, T., & Tudor, K. (2002). Dictionary of Person-Centred Psychology. London: Whurr Publishers.

Rogers, C. R. (1959). A theory of therapy, personality and interpersonal relationships as developed in the client-centered framework. In S. Koch (Ed.), Psychology: A Study of Science (Vol. 3, pp. 184-256). New York: McGraw-Hill.

Sheldon, K. M., & Kasser, T. (1998). Pursuing Personal Goals: Skills Enable Progress, but Not all Progress is Beneficial. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 24(12), 1319-1331. doi: 10.1177/01461672982412006

 

[An edited version of this blog post was published as ‘Cooper, M. (2019). What does the 'actualising tendency' actually mean? Therapy Today, 30(7), 42-43’.]

 

What Does it Mean to Say that Life is Meaningless? A Directional Account

Imagine there’s a chandelier above your head. One of those long, dangly ones with branches of glass hanging down. It’s throwing light all around the room. Now imagine that you look at the base of the chandelier and realise that it’s not, actually, attached to the ceiling. It’s just hanging there, suspended in space. Right above your head.

Hold that image.

So this blog is about something I’ve struggled with for years and years and years and have found a way of conceptualising it that makes sense for me. It’s not a particularly upbeat or reassuring blog, so if you’re struggling with things and feeling low at the moment you may want to stop reading now.

The blog is about the notion that life is meaningless, and what that actually means. It’s a key tenet of a lot existential thought (though by no means all of it). Camus, for instance, writes about the ‘absurdity’ of existence; and Yalom, in his classic text on existential therapy, describes various therapeutic strategies that can be used to help clients address profound feelings of meaninglessness in life. But what does that ‘meaninglessness’ actually mean?

Here’s one way of describing it. The term ‘meaning’ can mean many different things. But when we speak about the ‘meaning’—or ‘meaninglessness’—of life, what we are asking about is its significance: the reason why it is there. It’s like, ‘What’s the meaning of work?’ or ‘What’s the meaning of going out every Friday night?’ We’re asking what those things are trying to achieve. Why we’re doing them: for instance, ‘to make money’, or ‘to make friends’.

From a ‘directional’ standpoint, this is about going up to a ‘higher order of direction’. That sounds horribly jargonistic but let me explain. It’s based on the directional framework that I’ve recently outlined in my book, ‘Integrating counselling and psychotherapy: Directionality, synergy, and social justice’ (Sage, 2019), which draws on the work of highly-respected theorists like Powers and Grawe.

So the directional framework says that we do things for reasons (i.e., we have directions in life), and we can trace those reasons up and up and up to higher and higher orders of directions. So, for instance, we go to work to make money, and we make money because we want to have leisure time, and we want to have leisure time because we want to have pleasure. And we can also trace those directions downwards, and we do that by asking ‘how’? So, for instance, How do we get to work? We did training, and we got trained by turning up at college every day, etc. And then we could go back up the hierarchy from turning up at college to training to working to money to leisure to pleasure. From this standpoint, everything has a reason for it, and everything has a way that it’s done (right down to the very micro motor movements that help us make things happen in our lives). And we can think of the whole thing like that dangly chandelier, with a few highest-order directions (like pleasure, or love, or actualisation of potential) right at the top, and then branching down to an increasing number of lower-order directions as the means to achieve them.

You can probably see where I’m going with this. The thing is, we can go up and up and up to highest-order directions like pleasure but then, when we ask, ‘What is the meaning of pleasure?’ we’re stuck really. There just isn’t any answer. Or ‘Why actualisation of potential?’ or ‘Why spirituality?’ They’re there, but there’s no real way of going above them to something higher order. One option might be to say that these directions contribute to a wider social direction, like global harmony or planetary healing but still, then, so what? What does that lead up to. Essentially, there’s nothing ‘fixed’ up there. Nothing solid that we can hang the whole chandelier on. Nothing that can help us make sense of our lives and our worlds. And that’s why, sometimes, standing underneath it, we can feel that sense of dread that everything is about to come crashing down. That everything that shines light on everything is just an illusion and there no real meaning or purpose to any of it at all. For Heidegger, these were moments of genuine insight and authenticity. When we see the world for exactly what it is. Baseless. Unattached. Dangling.

Of course, most of the time we’re not that focused on that chandelier. We’ve got things to do, getting on with our lives. And anyway, like Yalom’s Staring at the sun, there’s limits to how much we can look into that direct light. Indeed, some people have probably never looked up at all. Or looked up and never seen that that base is unattached. But for others of us, even if we’re not looking up, there’s some constant awareness—sometimes better, sometimes worse—that something isn’t quite right. A sense of uncanniness. Unease. And for others of us, it’s like we’ve been born staring up and just can’t pull our eyes away. Once you’ve seen how unattached things are, it’s something you can never forget.

Camus talks about building castles in the desert. We can create, and commit to, local meanings, even if there’s nothing ultimate solid that they lead up to. Similarly, Yalom writes about re-engagement with the world. But, personally, I think there’s just no way out of recognising that life is, ultimately, unattached to any fundamental meaning, and that’s just a really painful, dreadful ‘truth’ that many of have to live with. Indeed, I think it blasts a fairly sizeable hole into all of our therapeutic practices, including existentialism and pluralism, because it means that a lot of our anxiety and sadness just can’t be ‘therapised’ away. However much CBT someone has, or psychoanalytic psychotherapy, the reality is that many of us live in the deeply unsettling, deeply ‘rational’ knowledge that there is no real, fundamental reason for anything we do.

At best, perhaps, talking about these things can help us feel that, at least, we are not alone with it—that’s there’s others there standing, staring up and feeling unsettled too. So if you’ve ever wondered what it’s all about and felt despair at the apparent purposelessness of existence, at least know that I’m there as well, and so is Albert Camus, and perhaps many others: great and not-so-great minds alike. And as Viktor Frankl put it, the great meaning-centred therapist, it can ‘never be taken as a manifestation of morbidity or abnormality’ to challenge the meaning of life. Rather, ‘it is the truest expression of the state of being human, the mark of the most human nature in man.’

Why I Love Qualitative Research

I’ve just come off an hour’s Skype on a qualitative research project. We’re looking at clients’ experiences of preference accommodation. Do clients want therapists to ask them about their preferences? Do they find it helpful having them accommodated? Do clients preferences change over the course of therapy? We’re engaging in a research process called Consensual Qualitative Research (CQR), and have the privilege of having one of the developers, Sarah Knox, on our research team. It was an hour, also with Gina di Malta and Hanne Oddli, going over the first part of an interview transcript and trying to put into ‘domains’ what the participant was saying about preference accommodation. Were they saying that their preferences had come from their previous therapy, or were they saying that the therapist just intuitively knew what they wanted? Back and forward: dialoguing and disagreeing and trying to make sense of things. CQR is a fascinating qualitative method where you work together on the analysis as a team. It really gets to the heart of qualitative research: working to make sense of what people are saying and experiencing in their lives.

Working on this project has really reminded me of the extraordinary things that can be achieved through qualitative research. Of course, being a pluralist, I love quantitative research too, but there’s something about the qualitative process that gets to the depth of things in a way that numbers never really can. When you’re interviewing someone, when you’re asking them about their lives and perceptions, you’re getting straight into the process by which someone comes to do the things that they do. And what things mean for them. You can look at numbers, and you can say that, for instance, ‘School counselling leads to reductions in distress’ but you don’t really know why. It’s like looking at the world through a mesh. But with qualitative research, you can really ask people about things, and then ask them again. And ask them in different ways that mean that you can build up such a rich picture of what’s going on.

Interviewer: What was it like seeing the school counsellor?

Young person: Well I- I really liked how she talked to me about things.

Interviewer: So you liked talking about things. Can you say more?

Young person: It was, I felt that the more I talked about things the more I kind of felt relieved. Less stressed.

Interviewer: So the stress came off as you talked. Is that right?

Young person: Yes, I felt a weight coming off. I talked about things and, as she listened, I felt at least someone else knew what was going on. I wasn’t alone. And I got some ideas about how to talk to my mum…

Of course, qualitative research doesn’t do everything. It’s not great if you want to compare between groups, and it’s hard to generalise too widely from it. But generalisation is based on the assumption that everyone acts according to the same laws and, actually, what qualitative research helps you to see is just how different everyone is. One participant says that they really loved going to see the school counsellor. Another says that they hated it. Taken quantitatively, you can end up averaging these two things out so that, on average, people feel fairly neutral about seeing a school counsellor; but actually that’s not the reality at all. The reality is that some loved it and some hated it. And qualitative research can really help us to hold on to, and prize, those differences.

It’s for reasons like these that so many counsellors, psychotherapists, and counselling psychologists would rather be doing qualitative research than quantitative. It’s not a million miles from being with a client: listening, understanding, deepening an empathic attunement with another’s world. A key difference though is that we’re also taking that out of the therapy room and telling others about it: so that, for instance, clinicians can use that knowledge to inform and develop their practice. That’s why one thing I am really passionate about is trying, wherever possible and ethical, to do qualitative research with clients rather than therapists. I know, I know… it’s more difficult often to find clients to do research with, and there’s additional ethical considerations. But when you’re talking to clients about what they feel about therapy, when you’re asking them what was helpful and not helpful and then bringing it all together into a coherent whole, there’s something amazing you’re learning about what we do. It’s ‘straight from the horses mouth’: deeply, profoundly affecting how we can think about the people sitting opposite us.

Just today we published a study on clients’ experiences of working with goals. Again, in many ways, it was a really simple study: we talked to clients about how they felt about working with goals in therapy. Yet I feel like I learnt so, so much to help me in my clinical work. For instance, I’m a real advocate of goal-oriented practices, but clients were also saying that, in some instances, goal setting could feel premature. They really didn’t know what they wanted. And there was some clients who felt it was mechanistic, and demotivating at times. Sure, you can say, ‘Well, I could have told you that without interviewing 22 clients,’ but then there were also some very positive things clients said about working with goals, like they could bring focus and help them progress forward step-by-step. So qualitative research, particularly with clients, can help us out of rigid positions of ‘clients want this’ or ‘clients want that’ towards an appreciation of the complex, heterogeneous, and multifacted world of clients’ experiences of therapy. A few years back, John McLeod and I published a protocol on conducting qualitative research into clients’ experiences of what is helpful in therapy, and I think it’s still a very useful framework for conducting research that can really contribute to the development of our knowledge and practice (see here).

I wish qualitative research played more of a role in informing clinical guidelines and policy. But I think it’s up to us involved in it to try and sketch out what that might be. The great thing about randomised clinical trials is that they give very clear results, and you can bring them together to produce specific and definitive guidelines for policy and practice. How do you do that with qualitative research? I am sure you can, but we need to work out how. In the meantime, though, I hope that more of us can get more time really talking to clients about what therapy is like, and learning more and more about what’s working and what’s not. It’ll never give us definitive answers, but it’ll help us build up a richer and richer picture of how, where, and why we can be most helpful in our work.

Person-Centred Therapy: Myths and Realities

Myth: Person-centred therapy is ‘just the basics’—everyone does it, it’s just that some therapists go on to do more advanced things, like psychodynamic therapy or cognitive-behavioural therapy.

Reality: Developing one’s capacity to engage with another human being at a level of interpersonal depth is a life-time’s achievement. Few ‘purely’ person-centred therapists, even after many years, would claim that they have reached the end of that road, so the chances of getting there after a few years’ study are pretty remote. Moreover, skills and ideas from other therapeutic approaches—like psychodynamic therapy or cognitive-behavioural therapy—can’t just be ‘dumped’ on top of a person-centred foundation: they need careful integration. Finally, whilst it’s true that the skills and ideas associated with person-centred therapy can be taught at a fairly basic and accessible level, the roots of the approach dig down into some far more complex ideas. Understanding the person-centred approach, then, can involve engaging with the ideas of such philosophers as Martin Buber and Edmund Husserl, as well as the complex psychological processes that Carl Rogers, the founder of the approach, outlined in his theory of therapy, personality and interpersonal relationships (see here).

 

Myth: There’s no evidence that person-centred therapy works.

Reality: Rogers was one of the first people to systematically study the therapeutic process, and his hypotheses about the necessary and sufficient conditions for therapeutic personality change were firmly grounded in the empirical data. Today, more than ever, there is compelling evidence that person-centred therapy is effective with a whole host of psychological difficulties (see Elliott et al, here); and that relational factors—such as empathy, unconditional positive regard and congruence—are central to the process of therapeutic change (see here). (For more discussion of the evidence base, see my previous blog here).

 

Myth: Person-Centred therapy doesn’t have a model of psychopathology.

Reality: It’s certainly true that person-centred therapists try to see their clients, first and foremost, as unique individuals, and not as representatives of a particular label; and it’s also true to say that person-centred therapists are as interested in their clients’ potentialities as they are in their problems. But, in recent years, numerous therapists within the person-centred field have attempted to understand severe psychological distress from a humanistic perspective (see here). For instance, there is the work of Margaret Warner on ‘difficult’ and ‘fragile’ psychological processes; Elke Lambers’ accounts of psychosis, neurosis, and personality disorders; and Gary Prouty’s work on ‘pre-therapy’ with schizophrenic and other ‘contact-impaired’ clients.

 

Myth: Person-centred therapy is one, particular approach to therapy.

Reality: Both within and outside of the person-centred field, many people do not realise the sheer scope of, and diversity within, this approach. At one end of the spectrum, for instance, are those ‘classical client-centred therapists’ who put great emphasis on not directing the client in any way; whilst there are others who put much more emphasis on entering into a dialogue with the client, and acknowledging that the client may be influenced by the therapist (and vice versa) in numerous ways. Then there are those in the closely related field of the ‘process-experiential therapies’, who will actively invite their clients to process their experiences in particular ways (whilst not attempting to direct the content of those experiences). There are also arts-based approaches to person-centred therapy, the aforementioned person-centred approaches to working with ‘contact-impaired’ clients, and approaches which are fundamentally integrative/pluralistic in nature. In fact, these days, many people talk about the ‘family’ of person-centred and experiential therapies, or of the different ‘tribes’ of person-centred therapy, to highlight the diversity of ideas and practices within this field (for a great introduction to the many different tribes, see here).

 

Myth: Person-centred therapists mustn’t ask questions.

Reality: Most person-centred therapists are keen for their clients to take a lead in the therapeutic work, and, for this reason, they will avoid bombarding them with questions. But there are no ‘mustn’t’s, ‘must’s, ‘don’t’s or ‘should’s about person-centred practice, because person-centred therapy is not about behaving in a particular way with clients, but about being a particular type of person with another human being. So, for instance, in attempting to establish an empathic understanding of a client, a person-centred therapist may ask them a question; or they may ask them a question as an expression of their interest in that client’s experiences.

 

Myth: It’s not person-centred to challenge clients.

Reality: Person-centred therapists are careful to avoid criticising clients and undermining their sense of self-worth, but it can also be one of the most challenging and direct forms of therapy. In being congruent with a client, for instance, a person-centred therapist may really let that client know how hurt or angry he or she feels towards him or her; or, in being unconditionally accepting of a client, a person-centred therapist may really challenge a client’s feelings of low self worth.

 

Myth: Being a person-centred therapist means having to like your clients and everything that they do.

Reality: At the heart of a person-centred approach to therapy is the distinction between what a person experiences and the way in which they behave. So, whilst a person-centred therapist would want to unconditionally value everything that their client experiences—whether it’s love, jealousy or rage—this doesn’t mean that they would unconditionally value every way in which their clients behave. If a client physically threatened another person, for instance, a person-centred therapist might experience feelings of annoyance or anger, and might well communicate to their client that they were doing so. What they would also try and do, though, is to communicate to that client that they also valued the feelings and experiences that underlay those behaviours, and their belief that the client had the potentiality to find more constructive ways of expressing these feelings.

[image, Kendl123, Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license]

Is Person-Centred Therapy Effective? The Facts

Are you sick and tired of people telling you that ‘person-centred therapy doesn’t work’? Does your manager try and convince you that there’s no evidence for the approach? Would you like to scream at the next person who tells you person centred therapy is ‘just the basics’ and that ‘everyone does it all anyway’? If so, here’s ten facts about the evidence base for person-centred therapy that might just keep you sane… and everyone else that better bit informed.

  1. Humanistic and experiential therapies, of which person-centred approaches form a substantial part, bring about large and significant reductions in psychological distress (see Elliott et al.’s 2021 comprehensive meta-analysis for the definitive review).

  2. The effects of humanistic and experiential therapies, overall, tend to be similar to other therapies, including CBT. This is particular true when the allegiance of the researchers is taken into account (see Elliott et al., 2021). However, a major recent study did find that, 12 months after assessment, person-centred experiential counselling for depression had slightly poorer outcomes than CBT (see here). There is also some evidence that non-directive therapy may be a little less effective than other therapies for depression (see here). Overall, what the research shows is that the more active, process-guiding forms of person-centred therapy are as effective as other therapies, but a strictly non-directive approach may be marginally less effective than most.

  3. Studies which compare the outcomes of person-centred therapy in real world settings (e.g., IAPT) show that these are very similar to CBT and, indeed, may be achieved in a shorter period of time (see Pybis et al., 2017).

  4. There’s no consistent evidence that CBT or psychodynamic therapies have longer lasting effects than person-centred therapy, or that they ‘work’ more quickly. Indeed, in the recent major study (see #1), person-centred therapy actually seemed to act more quickly.

  5. It’s the dodo bird, stupid (though maybe don’t say the ‘stupid’ bit to your manager!). Again and again, what the research tends to show is that ‘everyone has won and all must have prizes’—all therapies, overall, do about as well as each other.

  6. There is an overwhelming body of data to show that Rogers’s three ‘core conditions’—empathy, unconditional positive regard, and congruence—are all associated with positive outcomes (see Norcross and Lambert, 2019).

  7. Studies which ask clients what they found helpful in therapy (whether CBT, psychodynamic, or humanistic) show, again and again, that much of what they most value is relational qualities closely associated with a person-centred approach: e.g., therapist warmth, caring, and trustworthiness (see here for one very recent example).

  8. Consistent with person-centred theory, research shows that, by far, the largest contribution to therapeutic outcomes comes from clients: their levels of motivation, involvement, engagement. It’s clients that make therapy work, not therapists (see Bohart and Wade, 2013).

  9. Person-centred counselling with children, and with young people, also shows good outcomes, at a level generally consistent with other therapeutic orientations.

  10. Even if there are small differences in the overall effectiveness of different orientations, this doesn’t take into account the fact that different clients do better or worse in different therapies (and at different points in time). Research shows, for instance, that clients who are more independent, who deal with issues in a more ‘internal’ way, and who particularly want space to talk are likely to do very well in a person-centred approach (see my Facts are Friendly).

The bottom line… be proud of being a person-centred practitioner and all the evidence behind our approach. But be informed as well (see here for an overview of all the evidence). There’s every reason to challenge someone who belittles the evidence base for person-centred therapy, but you need to know your research and what it all means.

The Inventory of Preferences (C-NIP): A User's Guide

John Norcross and I developed the Cooper-Norcross Inventory of Preferences (C-NIP) back in 2015 as a means of helping clients to articulate their preferences in therapy. The aim was to develop a tool that could help shape the therapy as close as possible to the client’s individual wants and needs. Since we developed it, it’s been used in services in the UK and translated into over 10 different languages.

For the first time now, John, Gina Di Malta, and I have put together some instructions for use. These are downloadable in PDF format, along with the C-NIP form, and reprinted below. A free-to-use digital tool for completing the C-NIP with clients has now also been made available here. This is a great new site (if I say so myself) in which clients are asked about their therapy preferences, and then the site produces a report indicating where any strong preferences lay.

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Background

Research suggests that eliciting—and accommodating—clients’ psychotherapy preferences make valuable contribution to outcomes. It is associated with large reductions in drop- out rates and medium improvements in clinical change (1,2).

The Inventory of Psychotherapy Preferences (C-NIP) was developed by Drs. Mick Cooper (University of Roehampton) and John Norcross (University of Scranton) in 2015 (3). The 4 scales were based on factor analysis and normed on both United Kingdom and United States samples. The measure was designed for use in clinical practice as a means of facilitating discussion with clients about their desired style of therapeutic engagement. It can also be used in supervision, research, and training.

About the C-NIP

The C-NIP can be used in an initial assessment or early session of psychotherapy or counselling to facilitate an initial dialogue with clients about their therapy preferences. It can also be used in farther sessions at regular intervals (for instance, session 5 and session 10) and is particularly useful during a review session or routine outcome monitoring.

The C-NIP consists of two parts. The first part invites clients to indicate their preferences for how they would like a psychotherapist or counsellor to work with them on 18 items. The items are grouped into 4 bipolar scales: Therapist Directiveness vs. Client Directiveness, Emotional Intensity vs. Emotional Reserve, Past Orientation vs Present Orientation, and Warm Support vs. Focused Challenge. At the end of each scale is a scoring key, which calculates strong preferences in either direction.

The second part asks multiple open-ended questions about client preferences. For instance, clients are asked if they have strong preferences for the number of therapy sessions, therapy format/modality, or anything they would particularly dislike.

Completion and scoring of the C-NIP typically takes 5 minutes. The length of the subsequent discussion and treatment planning varies considerably.

The C-NIP is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0). This means that you can use the measure freely in your own practice, research, or supervision without further permission, provided that the measure is not adapted in any way. However, if you wish to use the measure as part of a commercial operation (e.g., a therapy referral service), in which the C-NIP forms an integral part of the service delivery, please contact the authors to discuss licensing arrangements. The C-NIP developers are pleased to hear about your experiences using it; both good and bad.

Several studies provide evidence of the instrument’s reliability and clinical validity (3,4). For more information, see (3).  

Completing the C-NIP

Administration formats.

The C-NIP can be completed online or as a paper copy. Clients can complete the measure on a desktop, laptop, handheld device, or on their own phone. The site will take the client through a series of questions, automatically scores their responses, and produce a brief report of the client’s scores. This report serves the basis for the subsequent dialogue with the therapist (see below).

The C-NIP can also be administered as a paper copy and scored by hand. Clients are handed the form and asked to circle one response for the 18 items. They are told to ignore, for now, the coloured scoring boxes.  Clients are asked to check or circle any of the open-ended additional preferences at the end of the measure. When completed, the clinician scores the 4 scales and reviews the checked or circled open-ended preferences.

The initial invitation.

Clients can be verbally invited to complete the C-NIP in a variety of ways. For 4 examples:

  • I have been conducting and researching psychotherapy for XX years, and we have learned the importance of tailoring or personalizing psychotherapy specifically to you. Here is a brief instrument that can help us do just that. 

  • We really want counselling to be as suited as possible to what you want. So we’d be grateful if you could spend a few minutes completing this questionnaire to tell us what that is.

  • Let’s determine your strong  preferences for this therapy. Would you kindly take a few minutes to complete this form?

  • Research attests that psychotherapy works best when it matches clients’ preferences. Here’s a brief, efficient way that we can begin that discussion.

Consistent with the C-NIP’s emphasis on honouring client preferences, we do not require clients to complete the C-NIP. If a client indicates that they are not willing, interested, or ready to complete the form, then we respect that decision. The form can either be completed later in the psychotherapy/ counselling or not at all.

Scoring.

Scoring the C-NIP is straightforward. Sum/total the 5 items constituting each scale (3 items for the past/present orientation scale). Then determine whether that scale score indicates a strong preference in either direction, or no strong preference. Scores which are marked with a minus should be subtracted from the total. For instance, if a client scores 3, 0, and -2, the total would be 1; if they score -2, -3 and 2, the total would be -3. For each scale, circle in the coloured scoring box whether they have indicated a strong preference (in either direction) or no strong preference.

The C-NIP was normed so that approximately a quarter of client scores will fall into a strong preference on one side, another quarter into a strong preference on the other side of the scale, and the remaining one-half of scores into the average or no strong preference range.

Discussing the Scores

The subsequent dialogue with clients about any identified strong preferences is generally the most important part of the C-NIP process. Remember that the C-NIP scores are the starting point for a genuine exchange about how clients can get the most out of their psychotherapy.

  • When strong preferences are identified, the clinician can reflect this back to the client and inquire further into its meaning. For instance: I can see here that you desire quite an emotionally intense therapy. Can you say more about that?

  • Your responses suggest that you want me to challenge you. Is that right? What sort of challenge do you think might be helpful?

  • You’re keen to meet every two weeks. Do you have a sense of how that would be helpful to you?

It may also prove helpful to inquire into the origins of clients’ preferences. This typically generates more context and meaning to their treatment desires. For instance:

 Clinician: You indicated here that you want quite a directive approach, with lots of guidance and structure. Do you have a sense of why that is?

Client:      Yes. The last counsellor I had was really nice but she didn’t say too much, and I found it all a bit… aimless and meandering. So I think this time I’d like someone who focused me more.

Clinician: So it’s about, maybe, having someone to focus you. Is that right? [Client: Mm]. For instance, would it be helpful if I asked you at the start of each session what you’d like to work on?

 Of course, there may be times when it is appropriate for clinicians to bring in their own knowledge and experience to the exchange. For example, if a client has been saying she frequently defers responsibility to others, and then on the C-NIP indicates that she has a strong preference for therapist directiveness, the therapist may inquire about potential parallels here. For instance:

 Clinican: I can see here that you are asking for a directive approach.

Client: Yes, I feel like I just don’t know my own mind.

Clinician: OK. I’m aware that you were saying earlier about being really deferential to others and that’s a real problem for you. I’m OK about being quite directive here; at the same time, I’m wondering if that’s necessarily the best thing for you. Do you know what I mean? I wonder if it’s going to end up being like the thing you say is really unhelpful.

Client: Uh… I– I get so lost. Particularly when I feel under pressure.

Clinician: I totally get that. Maybe there’ll be something here about feeling out your own authority. Making, taking more decisions by yourself. And that might include here in therapy too.

 On occasion, the clinician may also bring in research evidence. For instance, when clients indicate a strong preference for emotional intensity, then the psychotherapist may note that, indeed, emotional processing tends to be associated with improved outcomes (5, 6).

 This discussion presents a valuable opportunity, particularly during an assessment session, for clinicians to indicate if they believe, or do not believe, that they can accommodate the client’s strong preferences. When a client expresses a strong preference for therapist directiveness, for example, and the counsellor is committed to classical person-centred therapy, the clinician might say something like:  

I can see you strongly desire a psychotherapist who is going to structure and lead. That’s not what I offer in my practice. My approach tends to be much more about allowing the client to take the lead. Is this something you would like to try, or should we talk about other options that better suit you?

 It is essential that the therapist does not convey judgement to the client’s therapeutic preferences. The client should feel that their preferences are valued, whatever they indicate.

Using the C-NIP in Supervision

The client’s C-NIP scores can be brought in to supervision to inform a discussion about treatment planning and selection—the best way of working with that particular client. Although patients’ preferences represent a single consideration, an awareness of what the client wants can provide valuable insights into the best way forward. For instance:

Clinician: I think, with Jasmine, she’s finding it hard to connect with her emotions and a lot of what we do feels very ‘heady.’

Supervisor: Mm. Any sense of what might help her connect more emotionally?

Clinician: I did think about two chair work. Just– I’m not sure whether she’d go for that or not.

Supervisor: What did she put on her C-NIP about emotional intensity?

Clinician: [Checks C-NIP]. Yes, she did say she wanted something emotionally intense.

Supervisor: So she’s flagging up that that is something she might be up for.

 

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I have to do whatever a client asks on the C-NIP?

Definitely not. As indicated above, the C-NIP serves as the basis for a dialogue, not as a set of commands. So if a client asks for things you can’t do, don’t want to do, or don’t believe would be helpful, that all needs discussing.

 What if a client has no strong preferences?

That may often be the case, particularly if the client has not had counselling/psychotherapy before. It is something that can be fed back to the client and discussed (without conveying that they should or must have strong preferences). For instance, a psychotherapist might say, “I noticed that you didn’t have any strong preferences for therapy at this time, is that about right?”

The absence of strong initial preferences can denote many impressions, from clinical inexperience, to an unassertive interpersonal style, to cultural proscriptions, and the like. In many cases, it may reflect the fact that the client is intent on ‘getting on’ with psychotherapy and doesn’t feel too strongly about how that’s done (provided it works). In that case, prolonging a discussion about patient preferences may prove unhelpful and, paradoxically, against what the client wants!

What if a client doesn’t know what he or she prefers in psychotherapy?

That’s fine, particularly among those new to psychotherapy. Again, clients should not be pressured into stating preferences if they are not ready or real. After a few sessions, many clients will determine what works and what does not work for them. Thus, we recommend periodically returning to assessing preferences.  

My client says that they want both of the things at the different ends of the dimensions.

As the C-NIP instructions specify, when clients hold equal or both preferences, they should circle 0. That indicates that there is not a strong preference in one direction or the other.  

Why do I need to ask explicitly? Isn’t it better to trust my intuitive sense of what a client’s want?

Probably not. Clinicians no doubt pick up a lot from clients, but research consistently demonstrates that psychotherapists who intuit or assume their clients’ treatment preferences, experiences, and outcomes are frequently incorrect (7, 8). There may be a particular danger that we project or generalize onto our clients our own preferences for therapy; and research shows that what mental health professionals desire, as clients, can be very different from what lay clients prefer (4). 

But surely I can just talk about it with my clients? Why use a form?

Talking in session about preferences is fine; indeed, the overarching purpose of the C-NIP is to stimulate such discussions. Like many forms of clinical assessment, using a more comprehensive, standardized instrument with norms probably proves superior to talk alone. Clinical experience and research studies also attest that some clients also find it easier to write than to tell it directly. 

How do clients respond to taking the C-NIP?

In a study of clients’ experiences of using the C-NIP, 10 of 15 clients (67%) described helpful aspects of using the measure. They said that it helped to focus the therapy, facilitated communication with their clinician supported the personalising of treatment, and that allowed them to express themselves. Three of the 15 clients (20%) gave more mixed responses; for instance, ‘I found it OK.’ Five clients (33%) also highlighted unhelpful elements; in particular, that it was difficulty to record preferences because they didn’t know what their preferences were.  

On a 1 (very unhelpful) to 5 (very helpful) scale, the clients gave the C-NIP an average score of 3.8. This suggests that typically clients find the C-NIP helpful, but there are some clients who do not. As indicated above, therefore, clients should be invited to use the measure, rather than instructed to. Care is particularly needed with clients who are new to psychotherapy.  

And what about therapists?

In an interview study on an earlier version of this measure, the Therapy Personalisation Form (9), we found that clinicians were generally positive about its clinical utility. They thought that it was a helpful means of assessing what clients wanted from therapy such that it could be tailored accordingly, and could also serve as valuable sources of reflection and learning about their own practices. In addition, therapist believed that the measure was empowering for clients and helped to move the therapeutic relationship forward. In terms of limitations, they thought that the form could lead to increased therapist self-criticism and over-moulding to the clients’ wishes. 

Is the measure valid and reliable in psychometric terms?

In our original study, we showed adequate levels of internal reliability for the 4 C-NIP scales (3). Subsequent research has suggested that the internal reliability may be weaker than we originally found (4). We are currently examining means to enhance the reliability of the scales while preserving the small number of items.

 In future research, we will also assess the patient utility and predictive validity of the measure. At the same time, remember that the C-NIP has primarily been developed as a means of supporting dialogue on patient preferences, rather than as a definitive measure of wants. As such, we accord primary importance to the clinical utility of the inventory.  

Why doesn’t the C-NIP ask about things that a lot of my clients want, like empathy and acceptance?

Exactly. We know that nearly all clients want to be understood, valued, and not judged. Hence, we did not believe it would prove particularly informative to ask those questions.

 Instead, we developed the scales by reviewing the responsiveness research and by asking therapists about practices that they would be willing to vary (9, 10): that is, when knowing patient preferences could make a genuine difference in clinician practices and psychotherapy success.

References

1.     Swift JK, Callahan JL, Cooper M, Parkin SR. The impact of accommodation client preferences in psychotherapy: A meta-analysis. Journal of Clinical Psychology. 2018;74(11):1924-37.

2.     Lindhiem, O., Bennett, C. B., Trentacosta, C. J., & McLear, C. (2014). Client preferences affect treatment satisfaction, completion, and clinical outcome: A meta-analysis. Clinical Psychology Review, 34(6), 506-517. doi: 10.1016/j.cpr.2014.06.0023.

3.     Cooper M., Norcross J. C. A Brief, Multidimensional Measure of Clients' Therapy Preferences: The Cooper-Norcross Inventory of Preferences (C-NIP). International Journal of Clinical and Health Psychology. 2016;16(1):87-98.

4.     Cooper M., Norcross J. C., Raymond-Barker B., Hogan T. P. Psychotherapy preferences of laypersons and mental health professionals: Whose therapy is it? Psychotherapy. 2019.

5.     Pascual-Leone A., Paivio S., Harrington S. Emotion in psychotherapy: An experiential-humanistic perspective. In: Cain D, Keenan K, Rubin S, editors. Humanistic psychotherapies. 2nd ed. Washington: APA; 2016. p. 147-81.

6.     Peluso, P. R., & Freund, R. R. (2018). Therapist and client emotional expression and psychotherapy outcomes: A meta-analysis. Psychotherapy, 55(4), 461.

7.     Cooper M. Essential Research Findings in Counselling and Psychotherapy: The Facts are Friendly. London: Sage; 2008.

8.     Walfish, S., McAlister, B., O’Donnell, P., & Lambert, M. J. (2012). An investigation of self-assessment bias in mental health providers. Psychological Reports, 110, (2), 639-644..    

9.     Bowens M., & Cooper M. Development of a client feedback tool: a qualitative study of therapists’ experiences of using the Therapy Personalisation Forms. European Journal of Psychotherapy and Counselling. 2012;14:47-62.

10. Norcross, J. C., & Wampold, B. E. (2019). (Eds.). Psychotherapy relationships that work. Volume 2: Evidence-based responsiveness (3rd ed.). New York: Oxford University Press.

All the things I hate about watching myself do counselling practice (and a few I can just about bear)

Some years ago, I posted a video of myself demonstrating some counselling skills (the original video has now been taken down, but other videos are available here and here). I always think there’s a dearth of videos out there demonstrating real counselling practice, so I wanted to post something of what it can really look like (even if it was with an actor). Problem is, reviewing it, I had to watch myself a few times, and like most of us it was a pretty unbearable experience:

  1. I’m wearing a winter jacket when I open the door inside the house. Doh!

  2. Why do I always look so serious? I look like I’m frowning, or sitting on spike. Jeez, lighten up!

  3. ‘It sounds like…’ ‘It sounds like…’ It sounds like I’ve got about four phrases I repeat over and over again.

  4. Profile view definitely not my best angle.

  5. ‘So…’ Is it possible for me to start a sentence without ‘so’?

  6. So can I ever actually finish a sentence without changing tack half way through.

  7. It’s a bit cognitive, isn’t it. I wish I could have given more space for feelings to emerge, or find ways of helping the client go deeper into his emotions.

  8. Stomach. I was pretty chubby as a kid, and still get shudders at the sight of it.

  9. I can’t even get my pronouns right on the captions: ‘Rob’… ‘they’re…’ ???

  10. ‘It feels like…’ another stock phrase I just seem to repeat incessantly.

  11. Is it too meandering? Or perhaps not meandering enough?

  12. I’ve got so many cables behind me. Looks like I’m sitting in an electric chair.

And a few things I do quite like:

  1. Black polo shirt.

  2. I smile sometimes.

  3. I think I’m listening, pretty intensely, and conveying that understanding back.

  4. I guess a few of the summaries draw together things pretty well.

  5. Nice watch. I never wear a watch, just for this video.

  6. Bringing it into the ‘here and now’ [26.02]

  7. My silver chain. Bought that for myself a few years ago and stopped wearing it. Shiny.

  8. We get somewhere in the sessions. I think. It’s only a demonstration, but does illustrate a few things that seem to be helpful in therapy.

Having said that, if there’s one thing more depressing than seeing myself on video, it’s seeing how narcissistic and superficial my comments on seeing myself on video are!

Anyhow, if you’re on a training counselling or psychotherapy course, and cringing as you listen to—or watch—yourself for practice recordings, it may be reassuring to know you are definitely not alone.

What do clients want from therapy (and is it what person-centred therapists might want them to want)?

In a research paper published today (see here for journal version, and here for author final version), we found that a majority of clients wanted a more directive approach to therapy. Our data shows, for instance, that over 70% of clients wanted their therapist to focus on specific goals in therapy, to give structure to the therapy, and to take the lead. Clients expressed a particularly strong preference for therapists to teach them skills to deal with their problems. By contrast, only around 15% of clients wanted a more non-directive approach.

What we also did in our paper was to compare these preferences against therapists’ preferences, themselves. Not surprisingly, perhaps, we found that counsellors and psychotherapists—mainly of a person-centred orientation—wanted a lot less direction. So if we’ve used our own preferences as a guide to what clients are likely to want, it may come as something of a shock to see that, in fact, clients tend to want a lot more structure and leading. But that’s what we found, in two pretty rigorous surveys, and it’s matched by previous findings in the field (see, for instance, here).

These findings may be pretty challenging to those of us, from person-centred, humanistic, and relational orientations, that tend to work in more non-directive and unstructured ways. It suggests that what clients want is sometimes (perhaps often) different from what we tend to offer.

We could try and dismiss these findings by arguing that what clients want is not necessarily what they need. And, indeed, there’s good evidence that people don’t always know what is best for themselves (see, for instance, here). Two problems though. First, the evidence shows that there is quite a good association between what clients say they want from therapy, and how well they end up doing in it (see, for instance, here). So clients’ explicitly-stated preferences do indicate, on average, what works better for them, and also the kind of therapy that they are more likely to stick with. Second, if we start saying that clients don’t really know what they need (and we do), then we’re moving dangerously close to an ‘expert-driven’ perspective which holds that, as therapists, we know what’s best for clients. Not a good place for person-centred therapists to find themselves at!

Maybe it’s a case that clients’ preferences change over time. That is, they start off wanting more therapist direction but, once they get into therapy, they get more used to taking control for themselves. That may also be true in certain instances; but our data suggests that, across therapy, clients’ preferences don’t change too much. Certainly, in my own experience of using a preference inventory, I’ve found that what clients want stay pretty consistent. That is, at the start of therapy, clients are often saying things like, ‘Mick, I’d like this therapy to be fairly task-oriented,’ and after a few sessions they are saying, ‘So come on, when are we going to start on tasks!’

Perhaps clients’ desires for goals, tasks, and CBT is a consequence of neoliberalism, with the promise of an easy fix around every corner: someone who can always sort you out. Maybe. But, in my experience, when clients are asked why they want direction they come out with pretty cogent rationales: for instance, ‘Goals give me a sense of what I can focus on,’ or ‘I’d like to see things from a different perspective.’ And it’s a bit patronising, too, to assume that, because clients may want things different from us, it’s because they’ve been socialised into ‘faulty’ ways of thinking. Again, if we’re coming from a person-centred perspective, and trusting in the client’s own wisdom, surely we should be valuing how they see things from the start.

Does this mean that clients don’t want empathy, or acceptance, or an intense relational encounter as well? Not at all. In fact, we didn’t even ask about those relational qualities because we figured that, for most clients, the choice between an ‘empathic’ or a ‘non-empathic’ relationship would just be a no brainer.

And does this research suggest we should all re-train as CBT therapists? No, of course not. For a start, there are clearly some clients who do want a less directive approach, or who have tried CBT and are now wanting something different.

More importantly, perhaps, I think that the kinds of qualities that clients are asking for are all things that can be incorporated into a person-centred, humanistic, or relational practice. What, I think, a lot of clients are saying is something like this, ‘I want a therapist who is going to be active, who is going to do things, who is going to “sit forward” rather than “sit back”’. It’s like what I’ve wanted when I’ve been for a massage. It may feel less painful if the masseur is soft and gentle, but what I really want is someone who is going to be digging their knuckles in, making things happen. Clients invest a lot in therapy—time, emotionally, and financially often—and I think what many of them are saying is, ‘I want you, as a therapist, to be really involved here. To do things. Not just to sit back and let me do all the work.’

So I do think these findings challenge some ways of being a person-centred, humanistic, or relational therapist (or psychoanalytic, for that matter). I think they challenge a fairly ‘passive’, non-involved, ‘neutral’ style—or one where the therapist sticks mainly just to reflecting the client, and doesn’t add too much beyond that. The limitations of such a style are also very evident from research we’ve done with young people, as well as findings from adult clients: that a passive, non-involved stance can really ‘freak’ some clients out. They want to feel that the therapist is a ‘real person’, with real thoughts and ideas. And if everything is just focused on them, it can feel very unnatural.

More than that, from a pluralistic person-centred stance, goals, structure, and skills training can all be part of our therapeutic work—if that’s what clients are wanting, we’re appropriately trained in it, and we’re happy to work in that way. So while we can’t ever be everything to every client, a pluralistic PCA always tries to put the needs and wants of the individual client before any rigidity or dogma of method. If a client wants it, and we can do it, and we can both see how it might be helpful, then why not!

One of the nice things about a pluralistic person-centred stance is also that we can be really open to whatever the research says, and not having to reinterpret it to fit our own needs and agendas. As Carl Rogers so beautifully puts it (and there’s a great book of this title :-) ):

…[T]he facts are always friendly. Every bit of evidence one can acquire, in any area, leads one that much closer to what is true. And being closer to the truth can never be a harmful or dangerous or unsatisfying thing. So while I still hate to readjust my thinking, still hate to give up old ways of perceiving and conceptualizing, yet at some deeper level I have, to a considerable degree, come to realize that these painful reorganizations are what is known as learning, and that though painful they always lead to a more satisfying because somewhat more accurate way of seeing life.

Finally, just to say, the whole point of this blog isn’t to argue that we should all, now, work in more active and directive ways with every client. From a pluralistic standpoint, different clients need different things at different points in time; so there’s undoubtedly some clients out there who really want—and need—us to be quieter and more sitting back. Rather, the point of this blog is to say that we should always try and stay open to each individual client, and not prefigure what they want or need. In fact, if I think about myself, I tend to prefer a therapeutic style that gives me lots and lots and lots of space. But then, I’m a therapist.

Person-centered therapy: A pluralistic perspective

Updated author final version of:

Cooper, M., & McLeod, J. (2011). Person-centered therapy: A pluralistic perspective. Person-Centered and Experiential Psychotherapies, 10(3), 210-223.

INTRODUCTION

Since the 1970s, the field of person-centered therapy has witnessed increasing differentiation (Lietaer, 1990), with the emergence of several distinctive “tribes” (Sanders, 2004; Warner, 2000). Some have questioned the legitimacy of certain members of this family (e.g., Brodley, 1990), but with an increasing emphasis on “inclusivity and the embracing of difference” within the PCE world (Sanders, 2007, p. 108), many now see this diversity as a positive quality to be prized (e.g., Cooper, O’Hara, Schmid, & Wyatt, 2007). From this standpoint, each of the members of the PCE family can be seen as drawing on, and developing, different elements of Rogers’ work. While those who identify with a “classical client-centered” standpoint, for instance, can be seen as orientating primarily around Rogers’ (1942) concept of nondirectivity (e.g., Bozarth, 1998; Brodley, 1990); emotion-focused/process-experiential therapists (e.g., Greenberg, Rice, & Elliott, 1993) can be understood as placing more stress on the affective experiences and processes that Rogers placed at the heart of the therapeutic enterprise (e.g., Rogers, 1959).

The aim of this paper is to introduce, and critically discuss, an alternative reading of what it means to be person-centered. This is one that is primarily rooted in the idiographic assumptions underlying the person-centered worldview: that each individual is distinct, and that the role of the therapist should be to facilitate the actualization of the client’s unique potential in the way that best suits the individual client.

PERSON-CENTERED VALUES: PRIZING THE UNIQUENESS OF HUMAN BEING AND BECOMING

Person-centered therapy, as with other humanistic and existential approaches, can be understood as a form of counseling and psychotherapy which puts particular emphasis on “conceptualizing, and engaging with people in a deeply valuing and respectful way” (Cooper, 2007, p. 11). As a consequence of this, a key element of person-centered thought is a rejection of psychological and psychotherapeutic systems which strive to reduce individual human experiences down to nomothetic, universal laws and mechanisms. Rather, there is an emphasis on viewing each human being “as a unique entity, unlike any other person who has existed or will exist” (Cain, 2002, p. 5). In other words, while person-centered theorists have argued that certain psychological features, such as the need for positive regard or conditions of worth (Rogers, 1959), are universal, there is a particular emphasis on the fact that each human being is distinctive, irreplaceable and inexchangeable. Levitt and Brodley (2005, p. 109), for instance, stated that client-centered therapy “is not centered on what a general client would or should be. It is not centered on a theory external to the client…. The focus of the therapist is entirely on understanding the client as an individual, in all his uniqueness, from moment to moment.”

In Rogers’s work, this idiographic emphasis is particularly evident in his assertion of the “fundamental predominance of the subjective” (Rogers, 1959, p. 191). Each individual, for Rogers (1951, p. 483), “exists in a continually changing world of experience of which he is the center”; and, given that this ever-changing phenomenological experiencing will be unique to the individual, the very essence of each human reality is distinct. Rogers’s (1942) idiographic emphasis is also evident in his critical stance toward diagnosis, preferring to view human beings as unique, individual organisms rather than as manifestations of trans-individual dysfunctional states.

This emphasis on the psychological irreducibility of each client, however, is not merely a theoretical assumption, but is rooted in a deep ethical commitment within the person-centered field to engaging with an Other in a profoundly honoring way. Here, the work of the French philosopher Emmanuel Levinas (1969, 2003) has been particularly influential (e.g., Cooper, 2009; Schmid, 2007; Worsley, 2006), with his emphasis on the “absolute difference” of the Other (Schmid, 2007, p. 39): that they are “infinitely transcendent,” “infinitely foreign,” “infinitely distant,” “irreducibly strange.” For Levinas, the Other always overflows and transcends a person’s idea of him or her, is impossible to reconcile to the Same, is always more than – and outstrips – the finite form that they may be afforded. From this standpoint, then, it is not just that each human being is unique, but that each human being is so unique that they can never be fully understood by an other: Their difference, at least to some extent, is transcendent. This is similar to Rogers’ (1951, p. 483) statement that the private world of the individual “can only be known, in any genuine or complete sense, to the individual himself.”

This idiographic emphasis within the person-centered approach is associated with a theory of psychotherapeutic change in which there is a particular emphasis on helping clients to actualize their distinctive potential and become their “own unique individual self” (Rogers, 1964, p. 130). Person-centered therapy (Rogers, 1957, 1959) aims to provide clients with a set of therapeutic conditions in which they can reconnect with their actual, individual experiences and valuing processes, moving away from a reliance on more external, “leveled down” (Heidegger, 1962) judgments and introjects.

An emphasis on the distinctiveness of each human being and their change processes also means that each individual’s needs and wants can be considered, at least to some extent, unique and unknowable. Bozarth (1998) wrote that the process of actualization – the motivational tendency underpinning all growth and development – “is always unique to the individual” (Bozarth, 1998, p. 29); and he described it as an “idiosyncratic” (Bozarth, 1998, p. 24) process that cannot be predicted (or determined) by another.

A commitment to supporting the actualization of the Other in their own, unique way also reflects a fundamental person-centered ethic of respect for the client’s autonomy (Keys & Proctor, 2007). Grant (2004) has argued that the basis for person-centered therapy lies in the ethic of “respecting the right of self determination of others” (Grant, 2004, pp. 158). Similarly, Cain (2002, p. 5) stated that “A fundamental value of humanistic therapists is their belief that people have the right, desire, and ability to determine what is best for them and how they will achieve it.” In Levinas’s (1969, p. 47) terms, this could be described as a fundamental ethical commitment to letting the Other be in all their Otherness: a “non-allergic reaction with alterity.”

TOWARD A PLURALISTIC PERSPECTIVE

At the heart of a person-centered approach, then, is an understanding that human beings may want and need different things, and that an individual’s distinctive wants and needs should be given precedence over any generalized theories that another holds about them. Extrapolated to the therapeutic process, this suggests that a basic person-centered assumption should be that clients are likely to want and need many different things from therapy – both things traditionally associated with PCE practice (such as empathic understanding responses) and things not (such as Socratic questioning) – and that any generic theories of change that we, as therapists, may hold, should be subordinate to the client’s specific needs and wants.

The hypothesis that different clients want different things from therapy is supported by empirical research (see Cooper & McLeod, 2011 for a review of the research). In a major trial (King, et al., 2000), for instance, primary care patients for whom a brief therapeutic intervention was indicated were given the option of choosing between nondirective counseling or cognitive-behavior therapy (CBT). Of those patients who specifically opted to choose one of these two therapies, around 40% chose the nondirective option, while 60% chose the CBT.

Of course, what clients believe they want is not, necessarily, what they need, nor what will necessarily be of greatest benefit to them. However, an emerging body of evidence indicates that different clients do, indeed, benefit from different types of therapeutic practices. While there is clear evidence, for instance, that most clients do best when levels of empathy are high (Bohart, Elliott, Greenberg, & Watson, 2002), there are some clients – individuals “who are highly sensitive, suspicious, poorly motivated” – who seem to do less well with highly empathic relationships (Bohart, et al., 2002, p. 100). There is also evidence that clients with high levels of resistance and with an internalizing coping style tend to do better in nondirective therapies, while those who are judged to be nondefensive and who have a predominantly externalizing coping style tend to benefit from more technique-orientated approaches (Beutler, Blatt, Alimohamed, Levy, & Angtuaco, 2006; Beutler, Engle, et al., 1991; Beutler, Machado, Engle, & Mohr, 1993; Beutler, Mohr, Grawe, Engle, & MacDonald, 1991).

Within the PCE field, this assumption – that different clients may benefit from different therapeutic practices (at different points in time) – has been articulated particularly well by Bohart and Tallman (1999). Process-experiential/emotion-focused therapists (e.g., Greenberg, et al., 1993) have also argued, and demonstrated, that particular therapeutic methods may be more or less helpful at particular moments in the therapy. In addition, from texts such as Keys’s (2003) Idiosyncratic Person-Centred Therapy and Worsley’s (2004) “Integrating with integrity,” it is evident that many person-centered therapists already incorporate a wide range of therapeutic methods into their work. Cain (2002, p. 44) wrote that one of the primary ways in which humanistic therapies have evolved is in their diversity and individualization in practice, and he went on to state that, ideally, humanistic therapists:

Constantly monitor whether what they are doing “fits,” especially whether their approach is compatible with their clients’ manner of framing their problems and their belief about how constructive change will occur. Although the focus of humanistic therapies is primarily on the relationship and processing of experience, they may use a variety of responses and methods to assist the client as long as they fit with the client’s needs and personal preferences.

In recent years, Cooper, McLeod, and colleagues have come to describe this standpoint, which prioritizes the therapist’s responsiveness to the client’s individual wants and needs, as a “pluralistic” one (Cooper & Dryden, 2016; Cooper & McLeod, 2007, 2011; McLeod, 2018). This is a stance which holds that “there is no, one best set of therapeutic methods,” and has been defined as the assumption that “different clients are likely to benefit from different therapeutic methods at different points in time, and that therapists should work collaboratively with clients to help them identify what they want from therapy and how they might achieve it” (2011, pp. 7–8). Cooper and McLeod’s pluralistic approach emerges from the person-centered values and practices discussed above, but it has been presented as a way of thinking about, and practicing, therapy which extends these values to the whole psychological therapies domain.

In terms of translating this general pluralistic stance into concrete therapeutic practice, Cooper and McLeod (2007, 2011) have emphasized two particular strategies. The first is to specifically orientate the therapeutic work around the client’s goals (or ‘directions’, Cooper, 2019), and the second is to develop the degree of negotiation, metacommunication, and collaboration in the therapeutic relationship.

CLIENTS’ GOALS AS AN ORIENTATING POINT FOR THERAPY

Cooper and McLeod (2007, 2011) have suggested that the goals that clients have for therapy can – and should – serve as an orientating point for thinking about, practicing, and evaluating therapeutic work. A client, for example, may want “to feel a sense of self-worth,” “to not experience anger and distrust toward my husband,” or “to be able to think about work without feeling stressed or panicky.” From a more classical person-centered standpoint, there is a risk that such a goal focus can lead to an overly mechanistic and ends-oriented approach to therapy, but there are several reasons why it is also highly consistent with a person-centered approach. First, it fits strongly with the concept of the client as active, meaning-orientated agent (Bohart & Tallman, 1999), who is engaged in constructing his or her life and relationships. Second, it privileges the client’s perspective – regarding what he or she want both in life and from therapy – over the therapist’s. Third, it moves away from a diagnostic, or even problem-centered, understanding of the client and the therapeutic process toward a potentiality-centered one – based around where the client wants to “go” in their lives. Finally, an orientation around the client’s goals may be the most explicit way of meeting, and responding to, the client as a self-determined, agentic subjectivity, who has the right to choose for him- or herself how he or she would like to pursue their own process of actualization. However, given that the term ‘goals’ can imply a more ends-oriented, cognitive emphasis, Cooper (2019) has suggested that the term ‘directions’ may be a more appropriate one: embracing embodied and unconscious, as well as cognitive and conscious, hopes, aspirations, and desires.

In order to help clients reach their goals, Cooper and McLeod (2007, 2011) have suggested that it may also be useful to think about the particular pathways by which these can be attained. Cooper and McLeod (2011, p. 12) refer to such possibilities as “tasks”: “The macro-level strategies by which clients can achieve their goals.” Examples of common tasks within therapy might include: “making sense of a specific problematic experience,” “changing behavior,” “negotiating a life transition or developmental crisis,” “dealing with difficult feelings and emotions,” and “undoing self-criticism and enhancing self-care.” Note, while process-experiential/emotion-focused therapists also refer to therapeutic “tasks” (e.g., Elliott, Watson, Goldman, & Greenberg, 2004), Cooper and McLeod use the term in a somewhat higher order sense: to refer to more general pathways or strategies. By contrast, the specific, micro-level concrete activities that clients and therapists undertake to complete these tasks are referred to as “methods,” such as “listening,” “participating in two-chair dialogue,” and “undertaking a guided visualization.” Cooper and McLeod also distinguish between the “therapist activities” that form one part of a therapeutic method and the “client activities.” Such a distinction may be useful when thinking about the kinds of therapeutic “methods” that clients may undertake outside of the immediate therapeutic relationship: for instance, reading self-help literature, exercising, or talking to friends and partners.

COLLABORATIVE ACTIVITY

This goal–task–method framework provides a means for therapists to think about what kind of therapeutic practices may be most helpful to a particular client. Of much more importance, however, is that it highlights three key domains in which collaborative activity can take place within the therapeutic relationship. For Cooper and McLeod (2007, 2011), such collaborative activity needs to be a key element of a pluralistically informed approach to therapy: maximizing the extent to which clients’ perspectives, wants and agencies can inform the therapeutic work. This activity has been described as metatherapeutic communication (Papayianni & Cooper, 2018), and it may be particularly appropriate in a first or early session of therapy: talking to clients about what they would like to get out of the therapeutic work, and how they feel that they might be able to get there. For example, a therapist might ask:

  • “Do you have a sense of what you want from our work together?”

  • “What do you hope to get out of therapy?”

  • “If you were to say just one word about what you wanted from this therapy, what would it be?”

  • “Do you have a sense of how I can help you get what you want?”

  • “What have you found helpful in previous episodes of therapy?”

  • “How would you like me to be in this therapeutic relationship: more challenging, more reflective?”

Although metatherapeutic communication is primarily orientated toward clarifying the client’s perspective, it by no means requires the therapist to ignore his or her own views and experience. Rather, the emphasis is on a dialogue between both members of the therapeutic dyad (Cooper & Spinelli, in press), in which therapist and client draw on their particular bodies of knowledge and expertise. Hence, the goals, tasks and methods of therapy emerge through a collaborative, negotiated dialogue; and may continue to be changed as the therapy unfolds.

An example of dialogue and metatherapeutic communication around a client’s goals for therapy comes from Mick’s work with a young man, Alex (details of clients have been changed to preserve anonymity). Alex was from a working class background, and had recently chosen to leave college feeling that he could no longer cope with his feelings of anxiety and depression. Alex began the session talking about his current difficulties, and the physical abuse he had experienced from his mother as a child.

Alex:    Obviously the fact that it was my mum that I got the abuse from makes it a lot harder. Because I kind of feel that people look at me a little bit – There’s always this sense of attack.

Mick:   There’s an underlying sense of attack from people.

Alex:    It’s kind of paranoid in a way. It kind of annoys me that I’m still doing it, but it doesn’t make any difference. It doesn’t stop. It’s not even getting gradually better now that I’ve realized – everything’s just exactly the same, but … more frustrating because I know that it’s going to take time, but I feel that I’m kind of at a standstill, and don’t know really where to go ….

At this point, Mick invited Alex to try and specify more clearly where he would like therapy to take him to with this difficulty.  

Mick:   So, if we were to, kind of, think about specific things that you’d want from the counseling, it sounds like one of the things would be around – what would it be? Would it be about not wanting to experience people as so critical or … How would you phrase some of the things that you’d want? So – where – like in 15 or 20 sessions, where would you like to be at the end of it, in contrast to now?

Alex:    I suppose I’d like to improve my personal relationships, in the sense that I have more self-worth. Because … mm … in arguments and upsets … I value myself a lot less than I should. I just let people get their own way, just because it makes things easier …. I take a lot of hits from other people.

Mick:   So there is something about wanting to feel more of a sense of self-worth?

Alex:    Yeah, in that I can make these objections and that my feelings are equal to the other persons.

Mick:   So something about being able to feel that my opinions and what I want is valid, and not put other people’s first.

Alex:    Yeah.

These goals, as identified by Alex, then served as an orientating point to the ongoing therapeutic work.

A second example of this dialogical process, with respect to collaboration around therapeutic methods, comes from McLeod’s work with a young male client, Haruki.

During one of the early sessions that focused on the task of dealing with his panic feelings, John and Haruki talked together about the various ways that Haruki thought that it might be possible for them to address this issue. John wrote down the ideas that emerged, on a flipchart. Haruki began by saying that the only thing that came to mind for him was that he believed that he needed to learn to relax. John then asked him if there were any other situations that were similar to performing in seminars, but which he was able to handle more easily. He could not immediately identify any scenario of this type, but later in the session he returned to this question, and told John that he remembered that he always took the penalties for his school soccer team, and dealt with his anxieties by running through in his mind some advice that he had received from his grandfather, about following a fixed routine. John then asked him if he would like to hear some of John’s suggestions about dealing with panic. John emphasized that these were only suggestions, and that it was fine for him to reject them if they did not seem useful. John mentioned three possibilities. One was to look at a model of panic, as a way of understanding the process of losing emotional control. The second was to use a two-chair method to explore what was going on in his mind, in terms of what he was internally saying to himself at panic moments. The third was to read a self-help booklet on overcoming panic. (Cooper & McLeod, 2011, p. 93)

From a person-centered standpoint, one counterargument to this call for greater metahtherapeutic communication (as mentioned above) might be that what clients want in therapy – or what they believe themselves to want – is not necessarily what they need. Clients may have introjected, for instance, certain beliefs about what will be most helpful to them (such as external advice or suppression of emotions), and this may run counter to their actual organismic valuing (Rogers, 1959). As indicated above, however, metatherapeutic communication does not simply involve doing whatever the client wants; if the therapist has a different view of what might be helpful, this is something that can be brought into the dialogue. Having said that, any therapeutic approach which claims to be client-centered needs to be very careful not to dismiss, minimize, or override a client’s own views of what it is they want. Moreover, research suggests that clients who get the therapeutic interventions that they want do tend to experience more benefit, and are much less likely to drop out, than those who do not (Swift, Callahan, Cooper, & Parkin, 2018).

A second counterargument to this call for greater metacommunication may be that it overemphasizes verbal and conscious communication processes in the therapeutic relationship, and overlooks the value of more subtle, nonconscious, and intuitive understandings: such as the therapist’s felt-sense of what the client needs, or their embodied empathic understanding (Cooper, 2001). However, research tends to suggest that therapists, in fact, are generally not that good at accurately intuiting what their clients really want or are experiencing (see Cooper, 2008, p. 2). Moreover, a substantial body of research on “client deference” indicates that clients are often very wary of communicating to their therapists what it is that they really want or need (Rennie, 1994) – including to person-centered therapists – and will often hide things from their counselors or psychotherapists (Hill, Thompson, Cogar, & Denman, 1993). Hence, although overt, explicit communication may not be the only channel through which therapists can develop a greater understanding of their clients’ actual wants and needs, empirical research suggests that this is one mode of communication that many therapists could utilize more fully.

Indeed, given the difficulties that clients may have directly expressing their goals, wants, and preferences to their therapists, pluralistic therapists have suggested a range of tools and measures that therapists may want to incorporate into the therapeutic process. For instance, the Cooper-Norcross Inventory of Preferences (Cooper & Norcross, 2016) invites clients to indicate on a range of dimension how they might like their therapist to be: such as, “Be more challenging – Be more gentle,” and “Focus more on my feelings – Focus more on my thoughts and cognitions,” (download from here). Another tool that has been developed is the Goals Form (download from here) where clients’ goals for therapy can be jotted down in an early session (and revised if necessary), and then rated every week on a 1 (Not at all achieved) to 7 (Completely achieved) scale. For Alex (discussed above), for instance, three of his identified goals were to “Feel a sense of self-worth,” “Feel that my opinions and wants are valid in relationships,” and “Not interpreting what others say and do in critical way.” At assessment, the average rating across these three items was 1.33 (i.e., very close to “Not at all achieved”) and, by session five, had increased to 3.

IMPLICATIONS FOR ESTABLISHED PERSON-CENTERED AND EXPERIENTIAL THERAPIES

A pluralistic reading of person-centered therapy does not, in any way, challenge the value or legitimacy of other perspectives and practices within the PCE field. Nor does it call on all PCE therapists to be more integrative in their work. Cooper and McLeod (2011) make a clear distinction between pluralism as a perspective on psychotherapy and counseling, and pluralism as a particular form of therapeutic practice. Hence, a therapist who offers classically orientated client-centered therapy could still subscribe to a pluralistic viewpoint: believing that there are many different ways of helping clients, even though they choose to specialize in just one. More specifically, it may be useful to think about a pluralistic approach as residing on a spectrum: from a simple acknowledgment of the value of different therapeutic methods; to an enhanced use of goal orientation, metacommunication and negotiation in the therapeutic work; to a therapeutic practice that draws on methods from a wide range of orientations.

Even at a most minimal level, however, what a pluralistic perspective does offer is a challenge to the assumption that any one person-centered perspective, method or set of hypotheses holds some kind of “metanarrative” status (Lyotard, 1984): that it is true, or superior, for all people at all times. More than that, it challenges “dogmatic person-centeredness” (Worsley, 2001, p. 25): the belief that person-centered and experiential theories or methods are in some, generic way superior to other therapeutic practices and understandings. Rather, it invites members of the person-centered community to hold our person-centered theories and practices “lightly,” and to be open to challenges and different viewpoints from both within, and outside of, the person-centered field. At this level, it invites us to be “person-centered” about person-centered therapy: nondefensive, open to a range of experiences, and willing to be “in process” rather than holding a fixed and rigid concept of self (Rogers, 1961).

A pluralistic perspective also invites PCE therapists to be more explicit about the particular ways in which our therapies may be able to help people; and the kinds of clients and contexts for which they may be most likely to be helpful. Person-centered and experiential therapists, for instance, might find it useful to undertake a “personal audit,” looking at the kinds of goals they feel most able to help clients to achieve, and the particular methods they would have for getting them there. This is something that might then be made clearer to clients prior to starting therapy, such that clients are more enabled to decide whether or not a PCE therapy is right for them. Further empirical research would be particularly helpful in this regard. For instance, we already know that clients with high levels of reactivity tend to be more likely to benefit from nondirective methods than clients with low levels of reactivity, but are there other groups of clients, or problems, or goals for which PCE methods or a PCE attitudinal stance may often be of greatest help?

Finally, for those interested in moving toward a more pluralistic practice, the pluralistic strategies outlined by Cooper and McLeod (2011) may help PCE practitioners to enhance their work through greater dialogue around the goals, tasks, and methods of therapy. And for PCE practitioners who are interested in incorporating other methods into their work, it provides a framework in which this can be achieved in a coherent and client-centered way.

DISCUSSION

Our hope is that the articulation of a pluralistic understanding of what it means to be person-centered will bring something fresh and vibrant to the person-centered field, even if it primarily involves the explication of something that has always been implicit. First, a pluralistic perspective offers PCE therapists a means of resolving the tension between commitment and antidogmatism (Hutterer, 1993). It provides a conceptual framework in which PCE therapists can feel proud of the work that they do and can develop and deepen this specialism, while at the same time avoiding a judgmental attitude toward other therapeutic orientations. More than this, it has the opportunity to give PCE therapists a unique identity in the therapeutic field: as champions of inclusivity and mutual respect across therapies. Second, closely related to this, it facilitates the building of bridges with other progressive, client-orientated approaches, such as the “client-directed” practices of Duncan, Hubble, Sparks and colleagues (2004) and the work of many postmodern-informed family therapists (see Sundet, 2011). Third, a pluralistic perspective on therapy provides a means of conceptualizing, not just processes within the counseling and psychotherapeutic domain, but the whole range of personal development activities. In this way, a pluralistic perspective can help the person-centered and humanistic field move away from an exclusive focus on how professional therapists “bring about” change in clients, and toward a more client-orientated and client-agentic stance (Bohart & Tallman, 1999). Fourth, a pluralistic viewpoint provides a means by which person-centered practices can be more fully opened up to new and emerging research – as well as new theories and ideas – such that it can remain a growing and actualizing field. Closely linked to that, it provides a framework for researching and thinking about the complex question of how therapists can most constructively engage with our clients’ individual wants and needs. Finally, for some person-centered practitioners, the development of a pluralistic practice may allow them to grown more fully as therapists. It provides a highly flexible model of practice in which therapists can incorporate, and advance, whatever potentialities, strengths and resources they have. If, as Rogers’ (1961, p. 158) suggested, the fully functioning person is not rigid in their constructs, but an “integrated process of changingness,” then a pluralistic form of practice may offer some PCE practitioners a means of moving to a more fluid and creative actualization of their full potentialities.

In summary, from a pluralistic perspective, to be person-centered means to be someone who acknowledges the vast diversity and unknowability of human being, and who prizes the unique needs and wants of each individual client. It means to be someone who puts their clients wants for therapy before their own assumptions about what those wants might be, and who strives to be responsive within the limits of their own training, expertise and interest. For some person-centered therapists, it may also mean drawing on a variety of therapeutic methods from both PCE and non-PCE sources. Whether or not a therapist practices pluralistically, however, a pluralistic person-centered standpoint means an acknowledgment and prizing of the many different ways in which non-PCE therapies can be of value to clients; while also a recognition of the power and depth of the established PCE approaches.

FAQs (2019)

Isn’t pluralism just what a lot of people do anyway? Yes, absolutely, and so we’re not suggesting a new model of practice. But putting words and terms to what we do may help us develop, research, and more deeply understand that way of working.

What’s the difference between ‘pluralism’ and ‘integration’? Two main things. First, from a pluralistic standpoint we put a particularly strong emphasis on the collaborative relationship between therapist and client—metatherapeutic communication—which is there in many integrative forms of therapy but is not implicit to integration per se. For instance, you could have an integrative approach that is very strongly therapist-led. Second, pluralism is proposed as a framework and set of values, as well as a particular form of practice, whereas integration does refer to a particular practice. So you could say, for instance, ‘I practice person-centred therapy from within a pluralistic standpoint,’ but it wouldn’t make sense to say ‘I practice person-centred therapy from within an integrative standpoint.’

But Rogers talks about being flexible with, and responsive to, clients. So how is pluralistic therapy any different? If person-centred therapy is practiced in a genuinely flexible way, where we’re responding to what clients want and need with all of our skills and expertise, then the differences may well be very limited. But pluralism means respecting the wide diversity of methods that may be very helpful to clients—above and beyond empathy, acceptance, and congruence—such as psychoeducation, skills training, and interpretations. Some person-centred therapists, no doubt, do incorporate such methods into their work (with appropriate training and experience) and if that’s in response to client need, then that’s absolutely pluralistic.

Surely a therapist can’t know every different method going. Absolutely, and pluralism is not about being able to give everything to everyone. It’s about recognising what we can and cannot do and being flexible within that.

Isn’t there a danger that the pluralistic therapist ends up just being a chameleon and inauthentic: a different person to each client? That’s certainly a risk, and one of the challenges of pluralism is to try and meet, as well as possible, the client’s wants and needs, while staying true to one’s own self, knowledge, and expertise. So the first step in pluralism is for the therapist to be really aware of what they can, and cannot, offer to a client—where their boundaries are—so they know what they’re able, and willing, to offer. Remember that shared decision-making is not simply a ‘patient choice’ model, whereby the therapist hands over all responsibility to the client. Rather, it’s a dialogical approach that sits midway between paternalistic and ‘patient choice’ approaches to healthcare.

How can you just combine therapies with fundamentally different theoretical assumptions about the person: like person-centred therapy and CBT? Research shows that the differences here are often much more ‘real’ to therapists than clients. If you look at the research on what clients find unhelpful, they rarely say things like, ‘The therapist combined too many approaches,’ or, ‘Their epistemological assumptions just didn’t match their ontologies.’ Clients, in general, are much more interested in real, practical solutions to their problems, and often appreciate a therapist who is willing to draw on whatever skills and knowledge they have to help that as much as possible.

So does pluralism actually have any consistent, underlying philosophy? Yes. Pluralism, itself, is an underlying philosophical framework, see for instance the work of Isaiah Berlin or Nicholas Rescher. Importantly, we can distinguish between a ‘foundational pluralism’, which is akin to relativism, and a more moderate ‘normative pluralism’, which is underpinned by a unified set of values. What are those? More than anything else, pluralism means an ethics of ‘welcoming otherness’: a commitment to being open, appreciative, and respectful of difference. In that sense, as with Levinas, it puts ethics as ‘first philosophy’: that how we treat others is the most fundamental issue, and a starting point for philosophical questioning that precedes ontology, epistemology, or other philosophical concerns.

What about clients who don’t know what they want from therapy, or what they’d prefer? Something that’s increasingly clear from our research is that clients do, indeed, differ very much in how much they know about therapy, and how clear they are about their own goals or preferences. So a pluralistic approach to therapy doesn’t just mean ‘handing the ball’ to the client and expecting them to do all the work. It’s a dialogical approach, where both therapist and client bring together their understanding and respective expertises to work out what is best for the client.

From a person-centred perspective, the person has the answers within them—their inner growth tendency—so why should they need more from the therapist than contact, empathy, UPR, and congruence? Theoretically, that’s where a pluralistic approach would differ from a purely person-centred approach. Pluralistically, the sources of potential healing are plural. So they definitely might come from ‘within’ the person, but also from ‘without’: books, learning, other people, pets… Rogers developed his ideas as a much needed counterbalance to the behaviourism of his time, which focused solely on external learning. But, taken in isolation, person-centred theory may veer too far the other way, and forget that external learning can be a crucial source of growth too.

Can’t pluralistic therapy end up being a ‘school’ of therapy in itself, with its own dogma, certainty, and closed-mindedness? Yes, that’s absolutely a risk, and one that we’ve tried to be mindful of from the start. So we’ve always advocated holding pluralism lightly, and in a self-critical and reflexive way. And if you look at our literature and research, you can, hopefully, see how the approach has grown and evolved as we’ve seen that some things work better than others. For instance, my latest work on directionality emerged in response to criticisms about ‘goals’ and the somewhat mechanistic, ends-oriented nature of that concept.

Where can I find out more information about pluralism in therapy? A good starting point is the Pluralistic Practice Network website. You can also find some resources and papers on the pluralistic therapy training page on this site.

REFERENCES

Beutler, L. E., Blatt, S. J., Alimohamed, S., Levy, K. N., & Angtuaco, L. (2006). Participant factors in treating dysphoric disorders. In L. G. Castonguay & L. E. Beutler (Eds.), Principles of therapeutic change that work (pp. 13–63). Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Beutler, L. E., Engle, D., Mohr, D., Daldrup, R. J., Bergan, J., Meredith, K., et al. (1991). Predictors of differential response to cognitive, experiential, and self-directed psychotherapeutic procedures. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 59, 333–340.

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Cooper, M. (2019). Integrating counselling and psychotherapy: Directionality, synergy, and social change. London: Sage.

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What is Pluralism?

Pluralism is a spirit of welcoming, warmth, and care to the other. It is a willingness to engage in dialogue. It is an openness to being wrong and to learning. Pluralism says, ‘How I see things is one way of seeing the world and I want to value—and learn from—others.’

Pluralism isn’t easy. It’s a constant willingness to self-challenge and to look at where we might be wrong, or limited; even with regard to pluralism itself. It requires a capacity to detach ourselves from our agendas, our beliefs, our commitments, and to recognise that there may be other ways. And it also requires us to recognise that we can never wholly achieve that: that we will always have things that we want and that there’s always the possibility of taking a step further back.

Pluralism isn’t just a stance of ‘anything goes’. Of course, there’s a plurality of pluralistic perspectives, but the kind of pluralism that appeals to me most is a ‘foundational pluralism’, in which pluralistic ideas and practices are embedded in a more singular set of values. What are those values? Most fundamentally, for me, it’s an ethic of ‘holding open a space for otherness’: supporting difference and diversity to thrive.

So pluralism is not just a passive, wishy-washy, relativistic acceptance of everything. At times it needs to be militant. A willingness to really fight to hold that space open if others are threatening to close it down. Pluralism challenges, vigorously, ideologies that claim to be single and superior truths—and even more so those that impose their ‘truths’ on others. It doesn’t challenge the possibility of their ideas; but, like postmodernism, it challenges any single claim to metanarrative status. In foundational pluralism, care for the other is not a relative value but a fundamental ethic: the grounds from which a pluralistic prizing of difference and diversity grows.

Pluralism is there in a wide diversity of domains. In therapy, in religion, in politics. It’s there in the writings of Isaiah Berlin, William James, Carl Rogers, and many others. And, most of the time, a pluralistic standpoint is implicit rather than explicit: in appeals for tolerance, or social justice, or dialogue. And it’s hallmark is that critical, non-dogmatic self-reflexivity which strives to hold open spaces for us all, while also recognising our tendencies to try and shut them down. It is characterised by humility, by a quest for a learning, and by a deep love for others and a prizing of the unique contribution that each of us can make.

(Image By ESA/Hubble, CC BY 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=8788068)

Carl Rogers's 'core conditions': Are they necessary and sufficient?

It’s the essay title just about every person-centred student has to address at some point in their training: Was Rogers right to claim, as he does in his classic 1957 paper, that the therapist’s (a) congruence, (b) unconditional positive regard, and (c) empathic understanding are necessary and sufficient conditions for therapeutic personality change to occur (along with (d) therapist—client contact, (e) client vulnerability, and (f) the therapist’s communication of these conditions)? Rogers’s hypotheses were based on the available research of his time, and were an amazingly insightful and succinct reading of it. But over 60 years have elapsed since Rogers put forward his position: Does it still stand up to the evidence?

Let’s start with 'necessary’. That means that those first three ‘therapist-provided’ conditions (along with the three ‘relationship’ and ‘client’ conditions) needs to be there for therapeutic personality change to occur. Here, the research suggests a resounding ‘no’. The problem is, it’s evident that therapeutic personality change can happen through a variety of mechanisms where there really isn’t much of a relationship at all. For instance, James Pennebaker has shown that writing about emotional experiences (as with keeping a diary) can be a profoundly therapeutic experience; and there is good evidence that online therapies can be as helpful as face-to-face therapies, often with minimal interpersonal contact. Have you ever watched a film that has had a profound effect on you, or read a book that has moved you to see life in a really different way? If so, it’s really not possible to claim that any kind of relationship factors are necessary conditions for therapeutic personality change.

What about ‘sufficient’? Well, yes, the very latest research does show that each of Rogers’s core conditions are associated with positive therapeutic change. But it’s not necessarily the case from that that they are causing the change. It may be, for instance, that clients who improve then start to feel that their therapists are more accepting and empathic. I know, for instance, that if my doctor gives me some good news, I tend to like them more. And what the evidence also shows is that Rogers’s core conditions are just three of many different relationship factors that are associated with positive outcomes. For instance, alignment on the goals of therapy also seems to be important, and then there’s the therapist’s capacity to deal with ruptures in the alliance, and the use of systematic client feedback. All of these factors are closely related to Rogers’s conditions, but it suggests that the ones Rogers identified don’t have some kind of ‘magical significance’: they’re three factors amongst a sea of inter-related relational variables that all, together, are associated with positive outcomes. Add to that is the problem that, for different clients, Rogers’s therapist-provided conditions may be more or less helpful. For instance, research into empathy shows that, for some clients—highly sensitive, suspicious, and poorly motivated—very high levels of empathy may be counter-productive. Certainly, some clients can feel that a therapist is just too positive, or too in their shoes, or too present and full on. And, finally, there’s some very good evidence, both quantitative and qualitative, that clients can really value, and benefit from, ‘non-relational’ interventions, like normalisation through therapist’s expert knowledge, or ‘behavioural activation’. Maybe the relational elements of these therapeutic encounters are sufficient to bring about some degree of change, but to just focus on that would be to ignore what some clients, themselves, are saying matters most.

The problem with Rogers’s hypothesis is that, in many ways, they’re not very ‘Rogerian’: in the sense that they assume everyone responds in the same way, without taking into account individual differences. When you say things are ‘necessary and sufficient’, the inference is that this is going to be true for us all, and that doesn’t allow for people to respond to therapies in different ways. That’s why John McLeod and I have been arguing that one way of really embodying person-centred principles is through a pluralistic approach to therapy: acknowledging the many different ways in which clients can be helped and the individual differences in what works for each of us (see blog on Person-centred therapy: A pluralistic perspective). I’m sure that Rogers, like most of us in the person-centred field, would have wanted to respect those differences; and no doubt his ‘conditions’ were an attempt to speak the language of his times: scientistic, nomothetic (i.e., universal), and absolute. In fact, I remember reading somewhere that he does acknowledge that it probably wasn’t the best way of phrasing things. If he’d said something like ‘congruence, empathy, and unconditional positive regard are incredibly important elements of therapy for many people, much of the time’, he’d have been absolutely spot on. It’s a bit less snappy, but 60 years later he would have still been absolutely spot on with what the evidence is telling us, and that’s an amazing thing.

So what would Rogers say now. Reading the evidence, very closely as he did, I’d like to think he’d say something like the following:

What we know is that the quality of the therapeutic relationship is one of the best predictors of outcomes; and a growing body of research is beginning to show that it does, indeed, have the capacity to bring about positive change. For lots of clients, having a good quality therapeutic relationship—empathic, trustworthy, and caring, for instance—can have an enormous impact, just in itself; and for others, it can be an essential vehicle through which other change processes can happen. However, different clients need different things: and it may be that some clients need more: more psychoeducation, or more challenge, or more interpretation. Different people are different. So nothing is necessary and sufficient for everyone. But if you want to practice therapy in a safe and effective way, then establishing an empathic, honest, and unconditionally accepting relationship is, for most clients, one of the best things that you can do.

Synergies are Good: Why ‘Win-Win’ Configurations Matter More than you Might Think

How can you help people make positive changes in their lives?  

If you’re starting from the position that people are getting things wrong—maladjusted, dysfunctional, misinformed, etc.—then it’s pretty straightforward: teach them the ‘right’ way to do things.  But if your starting point is that people are already doing their best—for instance, that they have an ‘actualising’ tendency, as the humanistic and person-centred therapies hold—then it gets more complicated.  Because how do you help someone who is already actualising to actualise more?

One way of tackling this might be to say that, ‘Ok, the person does have a potential to actualise, but the problem is that the environment they’re in gets in their way.’  So it’s not that the person isn’t capable of actualising, it’s that their world isn’t letting them.  Problem is, that then makes the person little more than a pawn to their world.  Are we really so powerless?  And, if so, what does that say about the human being’s natural capacity to actualise?

For people who believe in an innate human ability to ‘grow’ and act in prosocial ways, there’s a similar paradox at the socio-political level.  It’s easy enough to explain social ills if we start from the premise that people can be intrinsically selfish and competitive; but if people are inherently prosocial, how do you explain gun crime, or homophobia, or Nazism?  How can something so bad come out of something so potentially good?

This is where the concept of ‘synergies’—and its opposite, dysergies—comes in.  Synergies are win–win relationships: where two things go together to make something more than either alone.  Let’s take a really simple example.  Narek wants to be in a relationship and so does Paul.  Narek and Paul get into a relationship together.  Now they’ve both got more together than either had alone.  So we can say here that there’s a synergetic relationship between Narek’s desire for a partner and Paul’s desire for a partner: because the more that one of these things happens the more the other thing does too.

Synergies have been described by Peter Corning as ‘nature’s magic’ and, in a way, they are magical, because they make something out of nothing.  They’re where 1 + 1 = 3.  Here’s Narek, and here’s Paul, and without either bringing in more than what they’ve had, they’ve managed to create something more than what they were.  That’s amazing, isn’t it—something out of nothing?

Synergies don’t just operate between people, they operate within people as well.  Say Narek, like most of us, wants to feel good about himself, and he also wants to have a relationship with another man.  So if he can feel good about himself as a gay man, he’s got a win–win relationship on the inside too. 

Contrast that with a dysergetic internal relationship, where Narek doesn’t feel good about being gay.  Now his choice is to either (a) express his gay side and feel bad about himself, or (b) try and feel good about himself by suppressing his gay side. But either way he loses out: 1 + 1 = 1.

What this example should also begin to show is how the concept of synergies and dysergies can answer the opening question in our blog. Because it’s totally fair enough that Narek wants to feel good about himself, and it’s totally fair enough that he wants to express his gay side.  Both of those are parts of his actualising being.  But because they are pulling against each other, he ends up getting less out of life than he could otherwise.  He’s an actualising being that’s not actualising to his full potential.  And it’s not because he’s maladjusted, dysfunctional, or misinformed; it’s because the things he’s trying to do, with the best will in the world, are dysergetically-related rather than synergetically-related.

Ok, so here’s where I want to make a really bold claim.  I think that nearly everything we do in therapy, whatever orientation, and whether we consciously call it as such or not, is about helping clients reconfigure their ways of doing things so that they are more synergetic.  What we do is we help them think about their lives and how they’re acting, reflect on what’s working and what isn’t, and then think about ‘better’ ways of moving forward (better, of course, for the client, not for us).  So that might mean, for instance, reflecting on ‘defensive’ strategies that have emerged in their childhood, and thinking about whether they want to continue with that; or looking at black-and-white patterns of thinking and seeing if it’s better to see shades of grey.  And it may also be about helping clients to process things at more embodied levels: for instance, to really feel their anger and hurt towards their parents, and to recognise that those feelings are really legitimate.  But, in all of this work, what we don’t do is to pathologise their ‘unhelpful’ ways of doing things.  We don’t intimate to clients, for instance, that their defense mechanisms are really dumb, or that black-and-white ways of thinking are just pointless.  And the reason we don’t is because we can see the intelligibility of these ways of doing things: of course, it makes absolute sense that we want to protect ourselves, or that we want to see the world in more simple ways.  It’s just that those ways of doing things act against us in other ways and are ultimately unproductive. So the question is not about right or wrong, but about how we can get all our needs met in ways that support each other: i.e., how we can be more synergetic.

So I’m suggesting that positive change at the individual level works through the development of synergies; and I think positive change at the social and political level can be conceptualised in a similar way too.  Two communities talk across their differences and start to value each other, nations move from the ultimate dysergetic state—war—to peaceful co-existence, people learn to live in synergetic harmony with their environment.  Groups, striving to do their best, strive to do their best in ways that other groups can also do their best. 

This is a humanistic perspective: not a radically socialist or a radically libertarian one. It’s a politics of understanding rather than a politics of blame. It’s saying that people, even when they act in oppressive or highly damaging ways, aren’t generally setting out to do so. Rather, even the most oppressive people are essentially like us: trying to get their needs met. Only they’re doing it in ways that are incredibly dysergetic to the rest of us, and not always willing to recognise that they’re doing so.

What does any of this mean in terms of what we can do—at the personal or socio-political level—if we want to try and make things better?  In my just published book, Integrating counselling and psychotherapy: Directionality, synergy, and social change (Sage, 2019), I try and outline some of the principles by which synergies can be developed, whatever the level.  There’s establishing trust, and communicating more clearly, being assertive, and embracing creativity and difference and diversity. 

I guess my hope is that, by seeing positive change in this light, we can begin to try and understand the common principles that make things synergetic or not.  As things stand, the development of synergies is always implicit: an underlying process that we try and make happen, without much conscious thought.  Perhaps we can move to a place where we more consciously think, ‘How can we create synergies here?’  And we can also look at the limits and challenges of synergetic processes (for instance, over-compromise), and perhaps develop even deeper and more integrative principles of positive change.

Perhaps, most importantly, what the concept of synergies does is allow us to understand people, and societies, as doing best but could also do better. It means that we can engage with people in deeply respectful ways, while also holding on to the potential for improvement and change. That’s something that, albeit implicitly, is right at the heart of our therapeutic work. And if we can also put that ethos at the heart of social and political change activities, I really believe it maximises our abilities to bring good things about.

Publishing your research: Some pointers

Why bother?

Let’s say this, up front: it’s hard work getting your research published. It’s rarely just a case of cutting and pasting a few bits of your thesis, or reformatting an SPSS table or two, and then sending it off to the BMJ for their feature article. So before you do anything, you really need to think, ‘Have I got the energy to do it?’ ‘Do I really want to see this in print?’ And being clear about your reasons may give you the motivation to keep going when every part of you would rather give up. So here’s five reasons why you might want to publish your research.

  1.  If you want to get into academia, it’s pretty much essential. It’s often, now, the first thing that an appointment panel will look at: how many publications you have, and in what journals. 

  2. Even if your focus is primarily on practice, a publication can be great in terms of supporting your career development. It can look very impressive on your CV—particularly if it’s in an area you’re wanting to develop specialist expertise in. Indeed, having that publication out there establishes you as a specialist in that field, and that can be great in terms of being invited to do trainings, or teaching on courses, or consultancy.

  3. It’s a way of making a contribution to your field—and that’s the very definition of doctoral level work. You’ve done your research, you’ve found out something important, so let people know about it. If you’ve written a thesis, it may just about be accessible to people somewhere in your university library, but they’re going to have to look pretty hard. If it’s in a journal, online, you’re speaking to the world.

  4. …And that means you’re part of the professional dialogue. It’s not just you, sitting in your room, talking to your cat: you’re exchanging ideas and evidence with the best in the field—learning, as well as being learnt from.

  5. You owe it to your participants. For me, that’s the most important reason of all. Your participants gave you their time, they shared with you their experiences—sometimes very deeply.  So what are you going to do with that? Are you just going to use it to get your award—for your own private knowledge and development; or are you going to use it to help improve the lives of the people that your participants represent? In this sense, publishing your work can be seen as an ethical responsibility.  

Is IT good enough?

Yes. Almost certainly. If it’s been passed, at Master’s level and especially at doctoral, it means, by definition, that it’s at a good enough standard for publication somewhere. It’s totally understandable to feel insecure or uncertain about your work—we all can have those feelings—but the ‘objective’ reality is that it’s almost certainly got something of originality, significance, and rigour to contribute to the public domain.

Focus

If you’ve written a thesis—and particularly a doctoral one—you may have been covering several different research questions. So being clear about what you want to focus on in your publication, or publications, may be an important next step. Get clear question(s), and be clear about the particular methods and parts of your thesis that answer them. That means that some of your thesis has to go. Yup, that’s right: some of that hard fought, painful, agonised-over-every-word-at-four-in-the-morning will have to be the mercy of your Delete key. That can be one of the hardest parts of converting your thesis to a publication—it’s a grieving process—but it’s essential to having something in digestible form for the outside world.

And, of course, you may want to try and do more than one publication. For instance, you might report half of your themes in one paper, and then the other half in another paper; or, if you did a mixed methods study, you could split it into quant. and qual. Or you might divide your literature review off into a separate paper, or do a focused paper on your methodology. ‘Salami slicing’ your thesis too much can end up leaving each bit just too thin, but if there’s two or more meaningful chunks that can come of your work, why not? 

Finding the right journal

This is one of the most important parts of writing up for publication, and easily overlooked. Novice researchers tend to think that, first, you do all your research, write it up for publication, and then only at the end do you think about who’s going to publish it. But different journals have different requirements, different audiences, and publish different kinds of research; so it’s really important to have some sense of where you might submit it to long before you get to finishing off your paper. That means you should have a look at different journal website, and see what kinds of papers they publish and who they’re targeted towards—and take that into account when you draft your article. 

Importantly, each journal site will have ‘Author Guidelines’ (see, for instance, here) and these are essential to consult before you submit to that journal. To be clear, these aren’t a loose set of recommendations for how they’d like you to prepare your manuscript. They’re generally a very strict and precise set of instructions for the ways that they want you to set it out (for instance, line spacing, length of abstract), and if you don’t follow them, you’re likely to just get your manuscript returned with an irritated note from the publishing team. Particularly important here is the length of article they’ll accept. This really varies across journals, and is sometimes by number of pages (typically 35 pages in the US journals), sometimes by number of words (generally around 5-6,000 words)—and may be inclusive of references and tables, etc., or not. So that’s really important to find out before you submit anywhere, as you may find out that you’re thousands of words over the journal’s particularly limit. Bear in mind that, particularly with the higher impact journals (see below), they’re often looking for reasons to reject papers. They’re inundated: rejecting, maybe, 80% of the papers submitted to them. So if they don’t think you’ve bothered to even look at their author guidelines, they may be pretty swift in rejecting your work.  

So which journals should you consider? There’s hundreds out there and it can feel pretty overwhelming knowing where to start. One of the first choices is whether to go with a general psychotherapy and counselling research journal, or whether something more specific to the field you’re looking at. For instance, if your research was on the experiences of clients with eating disorders in CBT, you could go for a specialised eating disorders journal, or a specialised CBT journal, or a more general counselling/psychotherapy publication. This can be a hard call, and generally you’re best off looking at the journal sites, as above, to see what kind of articles they carry and whether your research would fit in. 

Note, a lot of psychotherapy and mental health journals don’t publish qualitative research, or only the most positivist manifestations of it (i.e., large Ns, rigorous auditing procedures, etc.). It’s unfortunate, but if you look at a journal’s past issues (on their site) and don’t see a single qualitative paper, you may be wasting your time with a qualitative submission: particularly if it’s underlying epistemology is right at the constructionist end of the spectrum. And, if you’re aiming to get your qualitative research published in one of the bigger journals, it’s something you may want to factor in right at the start of your project: for instance, with a larger number of participants, or more rigorous procedures for auditing your analysis.

You should also ask your supervisor, if you have one, or other experienced people in the field, where they think you should consider submitting to. If they’ve worked in that area for some time, they should have some good ideas.  

Impact factor

Another important consideration is the journal’s impact factor. This is a number from zero upwards indicating, essentially, how prestigious the journal is. There’s an ‘official’ one from the organisation Clarivate; but these days most journals will provide their own, self-calculated impact factor if they do not have an official one. You can normally find the impact factor displayed on the journal’s website (the key one is the ‘two year’ impact factor—sometimes just called the ‘impact factor’—as against the five year impact factor). To be technical, the impact factor is the amount of times that the average article in that journal is cited by other articles over a particular period: normally two years. So the bigger the journal’s impact factor, the more that articles in that journal are getting referenced in the wider academic field—i.e., impact. The biggest international journals in the psychotherapy and counselling field will have an impact factor of 4 or 5, and ones of 2 or 3 are still strong international publications. Journals with an impact factor around 1 may tend towards a national rather than international reach, and/or be at lower levels of prestige, but still carrying many valuable articles. And some good journals may not have an official impact factor at all: journals have to apply for an official one and in some cases the allocation process can seem somewhat arbitrary.

Of course, the higher the journal’s impact factor, the harder it is to get published there, because there’s more people wanting to get in. So if you’re new to the research field, it’s a great thing to get published in a journal with any impact factor at all; and you shouldn’t worry about avoiding a journal just because it doesn’t have an impact factor, or if it’s fairly low. At the same time, if you can get into a journal with an impact factor of 1 or above that’s a great achievement, and something that’s likely to make your supervisor(s), if they’re co-authors on the paper (see below), very happy. For more specific pointers on publishing in higher impact journals, see here.

These days, the impact of a journal may also be reported in terms of its quartile: so from Q1 to Q4.  Essentially Q1 journals are those with impact factors within the top 25% of the subject area, and down to Q4 journals which are in the lowest 25%.  

In thinking about impact factor, a key question to ask yourself is also this: Do I want to (a) just get something out there with the minimum of additional effort, or (b) try and get something into the best possible journal, even if it takes a fair bit of extra work. There’s no right answers here: if you have got the time, it’s great if you can commit to (b), but if that’s not realistic and/or you’re just sick and tired of your thesis, then going for (a) is far better than not getting anything out at all.

General counselling and psychotherapy research journals

If you’re thinking of publishing in a general therapy research journal, one of the most accessible to get published in is Counselling Psychology Review – particularly if your work is specific to counselling psychology.  The word limit is pretty restrictive though. There’s also the European Journal for Qualitative Research in Psychotherapy, which is specifically tailored for the publication of doctoral or Master’s research, and aims to ‘provide an accessible forum for research that advances the theory and practice of psychotherapy and supports practitioner-orientated research’. If you’re coming from a more constructionist perspective, a journal like the European Journal of Psychotherapy & Counselling might also be a good first step, which publishes a wide range of papers and perspectives.

For UK based researchers, two journals that are also pretty accessible are Counselling and Psychotherapy Research (CPR) and the British Journal of Guidance and Counselling (BJGC). Both are very open to qualitative, as well as quantitative studies; and value constructionist starting points as well as more positivist ones. The editors there are also supportive of new writers, and know the British counselling and psychotherapy field very well. See here for an example of a recent doctoral research project published in the BJGC (Helpful aspects of counselling for young people who have experienced bullying: a thematic analysis), and here for one in CPR (Helpful and unhelpful elements of synchronous text‐based therapy: A thematic analysis).

 Another good choice, though a step up in terms of getting accepted, is Counselling Psychology Quarterly. It doesn’t have an official impact factor, but it has a very rigorous review process and publishes some excellent articles: again, both qualitative and quantitative.

Then there’s the more challenging international journals, like Journal of Clinical Psychology, Psychotherapy Research, Psychotherapy, and Journal of Counseling Psychology, with impact factors around 3 to 5 (in approximate ascending order). They’re all US-based psychotherapy journals, fairly quantitative and positivist in mindset (though they do publish qualitative research at times), and if you can get your research published in there you’re doing fantastically. Like a lot of the journals in the field, they’re religiously APA in their formatting requirements, so make sure you stick tightly to the guidelines set out in the APA 7th Publication Manual. A UK-based equivalent of these journals, and open-ish to qualitative research (albeit within a fairly positivist frame), is Psychology and Psychotherapy, published by the BPS.

There’s even more difficult ones, like the Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology with an impact factor of 4.5, and The Lancet is currently at 53.254.  But the bottom line, particularly if you’re a new researcher, is to be realistic. Having said that, there’s no harm starting with some of the tougher journals, and seeing what they say. At worse, they’re going to reject your paper; and if you can get to the reviewing stage (see below), then you’ll have a really helpful set of comments on how to improve your work. 

If a journal requires you to pay to publish your article, it’s possible a predatory publisher (‘counterfeit scholarly publishers that aim to trick honest researchers into thinking they are legitimate’, see APA advice here). In particular, watch out for emails, once you’ve completed your thesis, telling you how wonderful your work is and how much they want to publish it in their journal—only to find out later that they charge a fortune for it. You may also find yourself getting predatory requests to present your research at conferences, with the same underlying intent. Having said that, an increasing range of reputable journals—particularly online ones that publish papers very quickly, like Trials—do ask authors to pay Article Processing Charges (APC). Generally, you can tell the ‘kosher’ ones by their impact factor and whether they have a well-established international publisher. It’s also very rare for non-predatory journals to reach out to solicit publications. Check with a research supervisor if you’re not sure, but be very, very wary of handing over any money for publication.  

Writing your paper

So you know what you’re writing and who for, now you just have to write it. But how do you take, for instance, your beautiful 30,000 word thesis and squash it down to a paltry 6,000 words?

If you’re trying to go from thesis to article, the first thing is that, as above, you can’t just cut and paste it together. You need to craft it: compiling an integrated research report that is carefully knitted together into a coherent whole. It’s an obvious thing to say, but the journal editors and reviewers won’t have seen your thesis, and they’ll care even less what’s in it. So what they’ll want is a self-contained research report that stands up in its own right—not referring back to, or in the context of, something they’ll never have time to read. That’s particularly important to bear in mind if you’re writing two or more papers from your research: each needs to be written up as a self-contained study, with its own aims, methods, findings, and discussion.

In writing your paper, try and precis the most important parts of your thesis in relation to the question(s) that you’re asking. Take the essence of what you want to say and try and convey it as succinctly and powerfully as possible. Think ‘contracting’ or ‘distilling’: reducing a grape down to a raisin, or a barley mash down to a whiskey—where you’re making it more condensed but retaining all the goodness, sweetness, and flavour. That doesn’t mean you can’t cut and paste some parts of your thesis into the paper, but really ask yourself whether they can be condensed down (for instance, do you really need such long quotes in your Results section?), and make sure you write and rewrite the paper until it seamlessly joins together.

Your Results are generally the most important and interesting part of your paper, so often the part you’ll want to keep as close to its original form as possible. So if you’ve got, say, 7,000 words for your paper, you may want your Results to be 2-3,000 of that (particularly if it’s qualitative). Then you can condense everything else down around it. Your Introduction/Literature Review may be reducible to, perhaps, 500-1,000 words. Maybe 1,000 words for your Methods and Discussion sections; 1,000 words for References. 

If you’ve written a thesis, you may be able to cut some sections entirely. If you’re submitting to a more positivist journal, your reflexivity section can often just go; equally your epistemology. Sorry.  If your study is qualitative, you may also find that you can cut down a lot of the longer quotes in your Results. Again, try and draw out the essence of what you are trying to say there… and just say it.

Generally, and particularly for the higher-end US journals, you’re best off following the structure of a typical research paper (and often they require this): Background, Method, Results, Discussion, References. They’re may be more latitude with the more constructionist journals but, again, check previous papers to see how research has been written up. 

Make sure you write a very strong Abstract (and in the required format for the journal). It’s the first thing that the editor, and reviewers, will look at; and if it doesn’t grab their attention and interest then they may disengage with the rest. There’s some great advice on writing abstracts in the APA 7th Publication Manual as well as on the internet (for instance, here).  

Supervisors and consultants

If you’ve had a supervisor, or supervisors, for your research work, there’s a question of how much you involve them in your publication, and whether you include them as co-author(s). At many institutions, there’s an expectation that, as the supervisor(s) have given intellectual input into the research, they should be included as co-author(s), though normally only as second or third in the list. An exception to the latter might be if a student feels like they don’t want to do any more work at all after they’ve submitted their thesis, in which case there might be an agreement that one of the supervisors take over as first author. Here, as with any other arrangement, the important bit is that it’s agreed up front and everyone is clear about what’s involved. 

Just to add, as a student, you should never be pressurised by a supervisor into letting them take the first author role. I’ve never seen this actually happen, but have heard stories of it; and if you feel under any coercion at all then do talk to your Course Director or another academic you trust.

The advantage of keeping your supervisor(s) involved is that they can then help you with writing up for publication, and that can be a major boost if they know the field and the targeted journal well. So use them: probably, the best way of getting an article published in a journal is by co-authoring it with someone who’s already published there. A way that it might work, for instance, is that you have a first go at cutting down your thesis into about the right size, and then the supervisor(s) work through the article, tidying it up and highlighting particular areas for development and cutting. Then it comes back to you for more work, then back to your supervisor(s) for checking, then back to you for a final edit before you submit.  

One final thing to add here: even though you may be working with people more senior and experienced to you, if you are first author on the paper, you need to make sure you ‘drive’ the process of writing and revising, so that it moves forward in a timely manner. So, for instance, if one of your supervisors is taking a while to get back to you, email them to follow up and see what’s happening; and make sure you always have a sense of the process as a whole. This can be tough to do, given the power relationship that would have existed if you were their supervisee; but, in my experience, the most common reason that efforts at publication fizzle out are because there’s no one really ‘holding’ or driving the process: no one making sure it does happen. Things fall through gaps: a supervisor doesn’t respond for a month or two, no one follows them up, the other supervisor wanders off, the student gets on with other things… So spend a bit of time, at the start, agreeing who’s going to be in charge of the process as a whole (normally the first author) and what roles other authors are going to have. And, if it’s agreed that you are in the driving seat, you’ve got both the right and the responsibility to follow up on people to make sure it all gets done.

How do you submit?

That takes us to the process of submitting to a journal.  So how does it work? Nearly all journals now have an online submission portal so, again, go to the journal website and that will normally take you through what you need to do. Submission generally involves registering on the site, then cutting and pasting your title and abstract into a submission box, entering the details of the author(s) and other key information, and uploading your papers. The APA 7th Manual has some great advice on how to prepare your manuscript so that it’s all ready for uploading (or see here), and if you follow that closely you should be ok for most journals.

You also normally need to upload a covering letter when you submit, which gives brief details of the paper to the Editor. This can also cover more ‘technical’ issues, like whether you have any conflicts of interest (have you evaluated, for instance, an organisation that you’re employed by?), and confirmation of ethical approval. If you’ve submitted, or published, related papers that’s also something you can disclose here. Generally, it’s fine to submit multiple papers on different aspects of your thesis, but they should be different; and it’s always good just to let the editor know so that it doesn’t come as a surprise to them later. 

Note, you definitely mustn’t submit the same paper (or similar papers) to more than one journal at any one time. That’s a real no-no. Of course, if your paper gets rejected it’s fine to try somewhere else (see below), but you could get into a horrible mess if you submitted to more than one journal in parallel (for instance, what happens if they both accept it?). So most journals ask you, on submission, to confirm that that’s the only place you’ve sent it to and that’s really important to abide by.  

What happens then?

The first thing that normally happens is that a publishing assistant will then have a quick look over your article to check that it’s in the right format. As above, they can be pretty pernickety here, and if you’re over the word limit, or not doing the right paragraph spacing, or even indenting your paragraphs when you shouldn’t, you can find your article coming back to you asking for formatting changes before it can be considered. So try and get it right first time.

Then, when it’s through that, it’s normally reviewed by the journal editor, or a deputised ‘action editor’. Here, they’re just getting a sense of whether the article is right for the journal, and at about the required level. Often papers will get rejected at that point (a desk rejection), with a standard email saying that they get a lot of submissions, they can’t review everything, it’s no comment on the quality of the paper, etc., etc. Pretty disappointing—and generally not much more feedback than that. Ugh!

If you don’t hear from the journal a week or so after submission, it generally means it’s then got through to the next stage, which is the review process. Here, the editor will invite between about two and four experts in the field to read the paper, and give their comments on it. This process is usually ‘blind’ so they won’t know who you are and you won’t know who they are. In theory, this helps to keep the process more ‘objective’: the reviewers aren’t biased by knowing who you actually are, and they don’t have to worry about ‘come back’ if they give you a bad review.  

The review process can take anything between about three weeks and three months. You can normally check progress on the journal submission website, where it will say something like ‘Under review.’ If it gets beyond three months or so, it’s not unreasonable to write to the journal and ask them (politely) how things are going. But there’s no relationship between the length of the time of the review and the eventual outcome—it’s normally just that one of the reviewers is taking too long getting back to them, and they may have had to look elsewhere. Note, even if it is taking a long time and you’re getting frustrated, you can’t send the paper off somewhere else until things are concluded with that first journal. You could withdraw the paper, but that’s fairly unusual and mostly people wait until the reviews are eventually back.

The ‘decision letter’

Assuming the paper has gone off for review, you’ll get a decision letter email from the editor. This is the most exciting—but also the most potentially heartbreaking part—of the publication process: a bit like opening the envelope with your A-level results in. Generally, this email gives you the overall decision about acceptance/rejection, a summary from the editor of comments on your paper, and then the specific text of the reviewers’ comments.

In terms of the decision itself, the best case scenario is that they just accept it as it is. But this is so rare, particularly in the better journals, that if you ever got one (and I never have), you’d probably worry that something had gone wrong with the submission and review process.

Next best is that they tell you they’re going to accept the paper, but want some revisions. Here, the editor will usually flag up the key points that they want you to address, and then you’ll have the more specific comments from the reviewers. Sometimes, journals will refer to these as ‘minor revisions’, as opposed to more ‘major revisions’, but often they don’t use this nomenclature and just say what they’d like to see changed. Frequently, they don’t even say whether the paper has been accepted or not—just that they’d like to see changes before it can be accepted—and that can be frustrating in terms of knowing exactly where you stand. Generally, though, if they don’t explicitly use the ‘r’ word (‘reject’), it’s looking good.

Then you can get a ‘reject and resubmit’. Here, the editor will say something like, ‘While we can’t accept/have to reject this version of the paper, due to some fairly serious issues or reservations, we’d like to invite you to resubmit a revision addressing the points that the reviewers have raised’. In my experience, about 60% of the time when you resubmit a rejected paper you eventually get it through, and about 40% of the time they subsequently reject it anyway. The latter is pretty frustrating when you’ve done all that extra work, but at least you’ve had a chance to rework the paper for a submission elsewhere. 

Then, there’s a straight rejection, where the editor says something fairly definitive like, ‘…. your paper will not be published in our journal.’ That’s pretty demoralising but, at least, if you’ve got to this stage, you’ve nearly always got some very helpful feedback from experts in this field to help you improve your work.

Emotionally, the editorial and reviewing feedback can be pretty bruising, especially when it’s a rejection. Reviewers don’t tend to pull punches: they say what they think—particularly, perhaps, because they’re under the cover of anonymity. So you do need to grow a fairly thick skin to stick with it.  Having said that, a good reviewer should never be diminishing, personal, or nasty.  Even when rejecting a submission, they’ll be able to highlight strengths as well as limitations, and to encourage the author to consider particular issues and pursue particular lines of enquiry, to make the best of their work and their own academic growth. So if something a reviewer says is really hurtful, it’s probably less about the quality of your work, and more about the fact that they’re being an a*$e (at least, that’s what I tell myself!).

Most journals do have some kind of appeal process if you’re really unhappy with the decision made. But you need a good, procedural argument for why you think the editorial decision was wrong (for instance, that it was totally out of step with the actual reviews, or that the reviewers hadn’t actually read your paper) and, in my experience, appeals don’t tend to get too far. However, I have heard of one or two instances of successful outcomes.

By the way, sometimes, quite quickly after you’ve started to submit papers (and possibly even before), you may be asked to review for the journal yourself. That can be a great way of getting to know the reviewing process better—from the other side. It’s also part of giving back to the academic community: if people are spending time looking at your work, it’s only fair you do the same. So do take up that opportunity if you can. There’s some very helpful reviewer guidelines here.  

Revising and resubmitting

If you’re asked to make revisions, journals will generally give you six months or so—less if they’re relatively minor. Here, it’s important to address every point raised by each of the reviewers. That doesn’t mean you have to do everything they ask for, but you do have to consider each point seriously, and if you disagree with what they’re saying, you need to have a good reason for it. Generally, you want to show an openness to feedback and criticism, rather than a defensive or a closed-minded attitude. If the editor feels like they’re going to have to fight with you on each point, they might just reject the paper on resubmission.

As well as sending back the revised papers, you’ll need to compile a covering letter indicating how you addressed each of the points that the reviewers’ raised. You may want to do this as a table as you go along: copy-pasting each of the reviewers’ points, and then giving a clear account of how you did—or why you did not—respond to that issue.

Pay particular attention to any points flagged up by the editor. Ultimately it will be their decision whether or not to accept your paper, so if they’re asking you to attend to some particular issues, make sure you do so. 

Resubmissions go back through the online portal. If the changes required are relatively minor, it may just be the editor looking over them; anything more substantive and they’ll go back to the reviewers again for comment. Bear in mind that the reviewers are often the original ones who looked at your paper, so ignore their comments at your peril.

It’s not unusual to have three or four rounds of this review process: moving, for instance, from a ‘revise and resubmit’ to ‘major revisions’ to ‘minor changes’. At worst, it can feel petty and irritating; but, at best, and far more often, it can feel like a genuine attempt by your reviewers to help you improve the paper as much as possible. The main thing here is just to be patient and accept that the process can be a lengthy one. If you’re in a rush and just desperate to get something out whatever it’s quality, you’re likely to be profoundly frustrated—unless you’re prepared to accept publication in a journal of much lower quality.  

Once it’s accepted

Yay! You got there! That’s it… not quite. It’s brilliant to have that final acceptance letter from the journal telling you that they’ll now go ahead and publish your paper, but there is still a little more to do. A few weeks after the acceptance email, they’ll send you a link to a proof of the paper, where there’ll be various, relatively minor copy-editing corrections and queries. For instance, they may suggest alternate wording for sentences they think could be improved, or ask you to provide the full details for a reference. Sometimes, this may be in two stages: with, first, a copy-edited draft of your manuscript, and then a fully formatted proof). Note, at this point, they really don’t like you to make any substantive changes, so anything you want to see in the final published article should be there in your final submitted draft.

Then that it is. Normally the paper will be out, online, a week or so after that. And once it is, you can finally celebrate, but do also make sure you let people know about the paper, and give everyone the link via social media. The journal, itself, are unlikely to do any specific promotion of the article, so it’s up to you to tell colleagues about it and encourage them to let others in the field know.

Open Access?

Although it’s great you’ve got your paper out, the final pdf version may only be available to people who have access to the journal. So students at higher education institutes are likely to be fine, as are colleagues working for large organisations like the NHS, but what about counsellors or psychotherapists who don’t have online access, and where the cost of purchasing single articles are often prohibitively high? One possibility is that you (or the institution you are affiliated to) can pay to make your article ‘open access’. However, this can cost £1000s (unless the University has a pre-established agreement with the publisher) and is not something most of us can afford.

Fortunately, journals normally allow you to post either your original submission to the journal (an ‘author’s original manuscript’, or ‘preprint’ version of your article), or your final submission (a ‘prepublication’, ‘author final’, ‘postprint’, or ‘author accepted manuscript’ version of your article) on an online research depository, such as ResearchGate. Policies vary, so check the specific policies for the journal that published your paper:

This version of your paper won’t be the exact article that you published, and it won’t have the correct pagination etc., but if you prepare it well (see an example, here), then it means that those who don’t have access to journal sites can still find, read, and cite your research. Different journals do have different policies on this, though, so make sure you check with the specific publisher of your journal before making any version of your paper publicly available. Generally, what the publishers are very vigilant about is the making available, in a public place, of the final formatted pdf of your paper (unless, as above, it’s specifically open access).

Trying elsewhere

If your paper gets rejected, your choices are (a) just to give up, (b) resend the paper as is it somewhere else, or (c) make revisions based on the feedback and then resubmit elsewhere. There’s also, of course, a lot of grey areas between (a) and (b) depending on how many changes you feel willing—and able—to make. Generally, if you can learn from the feedback and revise your paper that’s not a bad thing, and can help form a stronger submission for next time. Of course, it is always possible that the next set of reviewers will see things in a very different way; and sometimes changes made to address one set of concerns will then be picked on by the next set of reviewers as problems in themselves. As for (a), well, I promise you this: if the research is half-decent, then you can always get it published somewhere. Bear in mind that, as above, if you’ve been awarded a doctorate for your research (and, to some extent, a Master’s), it’s publishable by definition

Generally, when people get their papers rejected, they move slowly down the impact hierarchy: so to journals that might be more tolerant of the ‘imperfections’ in your paper. But there’s no harm in trying journals at a similar level of impact when you’re trying somewhere else or even higher up—particularly when you really don’t agree with the rejecting journal’s feedback.

Ultimately, it’s about persistence. To repeat: if you want to get something published, and it’s passed at doctoral (or, often, Master’s) level, you will. But it needs resilience, responsiveness, and a willing to put up with a lot of knockbacks.   

Other pathways to impacts

Journals aren’t the only place where you can get your research out to a wider audience and make an impact. For instance, you could write a synopsis of your thesis and post it online: such as on Researchgate. You won’t get as big a readership as in an established journal, but at least it will be more accessible than your university library, and you can tell people about it via social media. Or you could do a short blog about your research, or make a video, or talk to practitioners and other stakeholders about your work. If you want to make your research findings widely accessible to practitioners, you could also write about them for one of the counselling and psychotherapy magazines, like BACP’s Therapy Today or BPS’s The Psychologist.   

There’s also many different conferences that you can go to to present your findings: as an oral paper, or simply as a poster. Two of the best, for general counselling and psychotherapy research in the UK, are the annual research conference of the British Association for Counselling and Psychotherapy (BACP), and the annual conference of the BPS Division of Counselling Psychology (DCoP). Both are very friendly, encouraging, and supportive; and you’ll almost certainly receive a very warm welcome just for having the courage to present your work. At a more international level is the annual conference of the Society for Psychotherapy Research (SPR). That’s a great place to meet many of the leading lights in the psychotherapy research world, and is still a very friendly and supportive event. 

You can also think about ways in which you might want your work to have a wider social and political impact. Would it make sense, for instance, to send a summary to government bodies, or commissioners, or something to talk to your local MP about?

Of course, this could all be in addition to having a publication (rather than instead of it), but the main point here is that, if you want your research to have impact, it doesn’t just have to be through journal papers.  

To conclude…

When you’ve finished a piece of research—and particularly a long thesis—often the last thing you’ll want to be doing is reworking it into one or more publications. You can’t stand the sight of it, never want to think about it again—let alone take the research through a slow and laborious publication process. But the reality is, as people often say, the longer you leave it the harder it gets: you move away from the subject area, lose interest; and if you do want to publish at a later date, you’ll have to familiarise yourself with all the latest research (and possibly without a library resource to do so). So why not just get on with it, get it out there; and then you can have your work, properly, in the public domain, and people can use it and learn from it, and improve what they do and how they do it. And then, instead of spending the next few decades wishing you had done something with all that research, you can really, truly, have the luxury of never having to think about it again.

Acknowledgements

Many thanks to Jasmine Childs-Fegredo, Mark Donati, Edith Steffen, and trainees on the University of Roehampton Practitioner Doctorate in Counselling Psychology for comments and suggestions. 

Further Resources

There is a great, short video here from former University of Roehampton student, Dr Jane Halsall, talking about her own experience of going from thesis to published journal paper. Jane concludes, ‘You’re doing something for the field, and you’re doing something for the people who have actually taken the time out to participate. So be encouraged, and do do it.’

An accessible set of tips on publishing in scholarly is also available from the APA:

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