Monday, May 31, 2010

Family Systems Theory and Virginia Satir

Hi Team, this is the start of the new blog! Each of you is going to give some input for this initial post

4 comments:

  1. ok. now I've posted twice. How come when I come back to it, it's gone??? :(

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  2. Ok. so NOW, when something does stick, it's THAT Comment...figures...anyway, what I was trying to say on earlier postings:

    I like Ms. Satir's view of not looking at the "problem as the problem", but the way a person copes with that problem & influence of one's sense of self worth, family system rules & contact w/outside world on person's ability to cope - strong CBT flavor. Maybe why I like...

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  3. Regarding professional boundaries, my instructors always said, is this personal information therapeutic for the client? I do give some examples from my life in a very limited way. Julie, I think it was your client using your son's name back to you that was the most upsetting.

    My co-worker was sharing a lot of information about her cousin's bipolar manic episodes before I asked our supervisor to talk to her about it. Her phone calls stopped being about the client and started being about her cousin.

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  4. I think there's a difference between professional boundaries & self disclosure. I can "connect" with my plumber client by swapping toilet troubles on occasion, but I wouldn't seek him out for help with said problems. To me self disclosure is totally dependent on the client & their needs.Sometimes "meeting her where she is at" requires some level of self disclosure. Clients want to know you get them-you know where they're coming from, be it divorce, children, death of a sibling. Not necessarily gory details, just knowing you've been there, that they are not alone, normalizing the thought/behavior/situation...

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