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The Art of Presence in Mental Health

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Being Present: Compassion and Empathy in the Therapeutic Encounter

“No one cares how much you know, until they know how much you care” ― Theodore Roosevelt       Following the work of Carl Rogers’ Person Centered psychotherapy, Dr. Geller and Dr. Greenburg (2012) discuss the concept of presence in the therapeutic encounter as one of the greatest gifts one person can give to another. Even […]Read Post ›

Compassionate Presence: Primum non nocere – first, do no harm

John is too distraught and anxious. He is incapable of taking out the trash, sort out his laundry, even decide what to wear. Frantically, the only time he picks up the phone is to call his cousin and let her, miles away,  guide him on how to do the mundane activities he was once able to do. Plagued by the […]Read Post ›

The Art of Presence: An Image

Presence: A New Beginning in the Therapeutic Encounter

Historically, immorality and spiritual failings were banished from the righteous community members. Stigmatized nonconformists were exiled from the mainstream in an attempt to cure them from their transgressions: As the years progressed, the old stigmatizing mentality is torn down to bring in a new mentality: Mental Illness is the cause for the transgressions and lapse of reasoning: As the asylum […]Read Post ›

History of Mental Illness Treatment: Medical and Societal Treatment of the Non-Conformist

Insanity is relative. It depends on who has who locked in what cage.             Ray Bradbury Since early communal living, humans have banished those who are either different or unproductive, due to an atypical physical, mental or emotional condition.  Deemed different and some unproductive and/or non contributors to the tribe they […]Read Post ›

Behind the Heavy Metal Doors: Institutionalization and Medicalization through the Lens of Metallica’s Welcome Home Lyrics

                            I told him to wait for me by the lobby.  When I finally got the doctor on the phone, the doctor tells me to call PESP.  I go find him and he is not in the lobby like I asked him to […]Read Post ›

Be Still and Be Present

Individual psychotherapy – that is, engaging a distressed fellow human in a disciplined conversation and human relationship – requires that the therapist have the proper temperament and philosophy of life for such work. By that I mean that the therapist must be patient, modest, and a perceptive listener, rather than a talker and advice-giver. Thomas […]Read Post ›

The Art of Presence in the Therapeutic Encounter: Including the Un-included

The Art of the Clinician’s Presence and Spirituality: Encompassing the Whole Person in the Therapeutic Encounter       The clinician’s sense of spirituality and state of presence is controversial, if not lacking, in many settings. Social Work schools do not focus on the clinician’s spirituality and the essence of presence in the therapeutic encounter. Rather […]Read Post ›

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