What Therapists Really Think About Their Clients

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  • Опубликовано: 2 июн 2024
  • What Therapists Really Think About Their Clients
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    One thing that I’ve always wondered about is what therapists think about their clients. Even in therapist circles, we don’t always talk about what we really feel and think towards our clients because our work is focused on prioritizing what our clients really think and feel.
    So for today’s video I put a poll on instagram inviting you to share how you really feel towards your clients and I thought I’d share the results here. Thank you to all of you who participated - there were over 60 responses! Your replies made this video possible.
    APA Article: "Better relationships with patients lead to better outcomes"
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    00:00 Intro
    01:22 Primary emotion towards clients
    02:21 Thoughts about struggling clients
    06:17 Do you think about your clients?
    09:10 Have you learned from your clients?
    11:10 Do you look forward to seeing clients?
    12:36 Extra comments
    13:57 Closing thoughts
    14:22 TherapyNotes
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    This video is geared for therapists of all kinds, including psychologists, MFTs, LPCCs, social workers, and others in the clinical counseling field.
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Комментарии • 17

  • @jakebull2496
    @jakebull2496 21 день назад +1

    I'd really like to hug this Therapist, a lot of clients wonder about their support workers too 🤗

  • @homefryniles3983
    @homefryniles3983 Год назад +23

    Warm positive feelings for the client are of course beneficial. And, I say, negative feelings toward clients can sometimes be very helpful. That's because those negative feelings or dislikes can tell the therapist something about the client's creation of negativity in his or her life. And in this interpretive way, the therapist might be able to use the negative feelings to break the code of dysfunction in the client's life. Also, warm and positive feelings toward clients can SOMETIMES indicate that the clients are creating a defense, a pleasing show of likability that is actually thin and covering dysfunction.

  • @sandyapolinar8244
    @sandyapolinar8244 Год назад +8

    I’m not sure if I’ve been lucky but I love most of my clients in that I want to be protective and help to the best of my ability.

  • @iloveiberia
    @iloveiberia 6 месяцев назад +4

    This video was super entertaining. I'm a client, not a therapist and have wondered about this. Thanks for posting :) Fun watch!

  • @kimcarrots
    @kimcarrots Год назад +4

    I always miss your surveys! I love to take a moment to check in with myself after a session to see what emerges. Most of the time I feel deep compassion for my clients but sometimes I might feel something different such as impatience or frustration. I actually love when I feel these feelings because most of the time it points to something in therapy that isn't being addressed adequately by me! Maybe I need to use these clinically in session? Maybe they are pointing at a sore spot a client hit on? Maybe I'm feeling so bored because my client is not trusting me enough to open up and let their "challenging" parts show? All of it is relevant.

  • @julierose2398
    @julierose2398 Год назад +8

    “People may have self-selected out of responding if they didn’t have such positive emotions toward their clients”
    As a client, I see that as them taking responsibility for their negativity. I don’t need to be told that a therapist thinks positively about me per se; I just need them to deal with their negative feelings - which are most likely due to things that have nothing to do with me - on their own time and not make me responsible for them.

    • @echofoxtrot2.051
      @echofoxtrot2.051 4 месяца назад

      Facts! Unlike a therapist that I had to fire recently. That was the most unpleasant decision I've ever had to make.

  • @RoyGobstopperandKuntFlapz
    @RoyGobstopperandKuntFlapz 10 месяцев назад +5

    Honestly no one is going to admit they write nasty stuff about their clients are they? What they really think and what they tell you are completley different.

  • @jan2351
    @jan2351 Год назад +4

    I cant help but wonder if mine holds onto a false sense of hope for me. I often bring feelings of hopelessness to our session- and I am able to logically give real reasons why it's not looking good for me (physical and mental health, lack of support/appropriate care, inability to maintain relationships and jobs and so financially which affects relationships, opportunities, ability to parent, etc). They seem to go "you don't know its always going to be like this" but with the given info it is clearly not looking good? My mental health has progressively gotten worse over last 20 yrs and is now affecting my physical health. It's confusing- is she downplaying or do they not get it? Maybe a little of both. She indirectly acknowledged she's not always thinking that people experience things differently. (One person may not hear the dog barking. Another person may be so physically heightened and bothered by the dog they can barely function.) I truly do wonder- are they bs-ing me to make me feel a false sense of hope? When else are they bs-ing me? Thanks for making the video!

    • @too_tired_for_this
      @too_tired_for_this 11 дней назад

      Have you been seeing the same therapist the whole time? Maybe a different approach/therapist would be a better fit right now. I feel like that sometimes, and I have told her very explicitly that I find it quite triggering when she says that kind of thing. We’ve worked it out to ask more questions and phrase things differently.

  • @ladytube64
    @ladytube64 8 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you for these questions. I've been very new to going to therapy and I wonder what she is really thinking...

  • @rajarizwan5374
    @rajarizwan5374 4 месяца назад

    I have one question. Non genetic depression is cure able 100% by therapy?

  • @ryank2434
    @ryank2434 6 месяцев назад

    Therapy 🎉

  • @kellyschmidt1743
    @kellyschmidt1743 4 месяца назад

    Mmmhm clients can leave their therapist if they aren’t vining but therapists have to deal with them

  • @radivojevasiljevic3145
    @radivojevasiljevic3145 7 месяцев назад +2

    Boring cash cows (while they pay), not important at all (when they drop out and thus stop paying). Everything else would be called "rationalization" or in simple word: fluff.