Applied Helping Skills
Second Edition
Types of Therapist Responses
You can have several of these types of responses within one response to the client, such as: “you are tired of being taken for granted.” (Feeling and content reflection). See the workbook for more details.
Feeling Reflections:
- Emotions (happy, sad, angry, overwhelmed, etc)
- Physical sensations (burdened, weighted down, pressured, etc)
Content Reflections:
- Parts of the content (not a feeling reflection) or
- Client’s belief or thoughts or
- Summarizations
Reflection of Discrepancy/Confrontations:
- Contradictions, “you say you want to lose weight, yet you keep eating fast food daily.”
- Two sides of one self: “part of you… and part of you…”
Questions:
- Intonation—raising your voice at the end—or
- Starting a sentence with: who, what, where, when, how, is, does, etc…
Supportive Statements:
- Reinforcement or judgment: “good job” or
- Trying to make them feel better or see another point of view, “it will be okay”
Directing Behavior:
- In session such as experiments like an empty chair—“pretend your mother is sitting in that chair and tell her how you feel,” or
- Advice
Self-Disclosure:
- Disclosing your own experience as it relates to the client’s content—“me, too” or
- Answering direct questions from client or my experience of you in session—“When you speak loudly like that, I experience you as feeling angry.”
Silence:
- More than 8 seconds long—whether the client or the therapist
Small Talk:
- Non-therapy oriented conversation such as, “How are you?”