03 The person-centered approach (Carl Rogers): Unconditional Positive Regard
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- Опубликовано: 15 сен 2024
- Unconditional Positive Regard is the second important core condition of Rogers' three core conditions.
Here are the sections of this video with time stamps.
- What is Unconditional Positive Regard? Two key aspects 02:26
- In illustrative fictitious example of a client expressing negative emotions about his therapist 08:19
- Unconditional Positive Regard - A high ideal? 11:25
- Congruence and Unconditional Positive Regard - a possible conflict? 15:33
- Limits in therapy (passage about play therapy written by Elaine Dorfman) 26:20
- Conditional Positive Regard under some circumstances? 28:55
- Acceptance vs. change: A contradiction? 31:02
- Functions of Unconditional Positive Regard 34:56
- Unconditional Positive Regard - A way of life? UPR outside of therapy 42:20
References:
- Barrett-Lennard, G. T. (1993). Understanding the person-centered approach to therapy: A reply to questions and misconceptions. E. McIlduff & D. Coghlan. The person-centered approach and cross-cultural communication: An International Review, 2, 99-113. Link: world.std.com/~...
- Kirschenbaum, H. E., & Henderson, V. L. E. (1989). Carl Rogers: Dialogues:
Conversations with Martin Buber, Paul Tillich, BF Skinner, Gregory Bateson,
Michael Polanyi, Rollo May, and others. Houghton, Mifflin and Company.
(contains a great summary of client-centered therapy at the beginning,
written by Rogers).
- Lietaer, G. (2001). Unconditional acceptance and positive regard. In: J.D. Bozarth, P. Wilkins (Eds.), Rogers' therapeutic conditions: evolution, theory and practice; v.3: Unconditional positive regard, (88-108). Llangarron (Ross-on-Wye): PCCS books.
- Rogers, C. R. (1951). Client-Centered Therapy. Boston: Houghton Mifflin.
- Rogers, C. R. (1961). On becoming a person: A therapist's view of psychotherapy. Boston: Houghton Mifflin.
- Rogers, C. R. (1977). On Personal Power: Inner Strength and Its Revolutionary Impact. New York: Delacorte Press.
- Rogers, C. R. (1980). A way of being. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.
- Sachse, R. (2016). Therapeutische Beziehungsgestaltung. Hogrefe Verlag.
(Great book. Recommended if you can read German)
- Sachse, R. (2017). Konflikt und Streit. Springer Berlin Heidelberg.
- Sanford, R. (1984). Unconditional positive regard: A misunderstood way of being. Link: ruthsanford.tri...
I've been sharing this with all of my clinical supervision groups this month- it is wonderful. Thank you for creating it!
I feel honored. Thank you :)
Thank you for making and sharing this video. It’s really help me to learn.
Thanks for doing and sharing this interesting video!
Enriching information and your voice communicates positive attitude and warmth ^^!
Thank you very much :)
thank you so much for this! I am completing my dissertation in the role of UPR in weight management after the COVID-19 lockdowns :).
Thank you so much for sharing with us 🥰
You're welcome. :)
thank you
This was awesome thank you
You're welcome :)
Thank you so much for this video..❤
You're welcome :)
Thanks
What if the client punch the therapist in the face, still unconditional positive regards?
In the book "Client-centered therapy" published in 1951 there is a section on limits in therapy in the chapter about play therapy with children.
It says that the child is not allowed to physically attack the therapist (and I guess it's true for therapy with adults as well :P).
So yeah, I guess there are limits to unconditional positive regard. It's not entirely unconditional.
Now you may decide whether calling it "UNCONDITIONAL positive regard" is a case of false advertising :D.
Greetings
Marshall Rosenberg talks about it.
Sorry you got punched while being the nice guy. Being in the savior-victim-persecutor triangle(Karpman) is a good recipe for the drama you experience.
I wish you the best.
I m learning a new way.
Let me know how it goes.
I thought he was saying praising not prizing
Usually it's "prizing" if you read descriptions of unconditional positive regard.
See this paper by Carl Rogers for example: psyc405.stasson.org/rogers.pdf
Go to page 243, look for the headline "unconditional positive regard" -> There is this sentence: "It means a “prizing” of the
person, as Dewey has used that term"
@@jh-psychotherapyandmotivat7680 thanks for the clarification
@@jh-psychotherapyandmotivat7680 I understand that Rogers was nondirective and stayed away from giving diagnosis but do you have any resources that relates to his work with individual seen as ODD or DID
His voice is soo monotone. This is information that I really need at this time. There are so few videos in UPR on the Internet. Do better
Right, so if I understood you correctly, you're saying that while my voice is too monotone, the video contained information that you needed.
Ok, I'll keep that mind. Maybe there's something I can do to improve on my way of speaking.
Thx for the feedback!
@@jh-psychotherapyandmotivat7680 Do not try to change your way of speaking mate 😂 I greatly enjoyed hearing your talk.
If she'd watched your video, perhaps Lucy would understand that unconditional positve regard means accepting the people in this world just as they are. We should have faith that people are doing the best they can with the life conditions and experiences they have been through.
Its easy to be a critic Lucy, how about you up your game and be a nicer more accepting person?
absolutely... must of been a warmer way of suggesting the beautiful efforts of this chap be voiced with a more engaging manner!! ;)
@@jh-psychotherapyandmotivat7680 I don't think your voice is monotone at all, you had great enunciation and were engaging. Thank you for making this!
@@jh-psychotherapyandmotivat7680 Wow, well, I couldn't give this lecture in my second language! I was very impressed.
Thank you