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(More) Myths About Therapy    

by Dr. Rob Burkham

1. Therapy is primarily about "getting your feelings out"

A very popular understanding is that therapy is helpful because the client can express their feelings in a cathartic way, the therapist provides a venue for that and the simple acting of "venting" makes the client get better. There is some truth to this statement but it is only a partial truth: it is important for you to feel comfortable enough to express any of your feelings and thoughts without being judged by your therapist. It can also be helpful for you to hear yourself in a new way by expressing previously unexpressed feelings and thoughts to your therapist.

Being able to get your thoughts and feeling out to your therapist is a necessary but not sufficient condition for successful therapy. In other words, it is important to be able to express yourself freely but it is not enough if you want to make lasting change. You need to work on changing some patterns of thought and behavior in your life. You need to change some of the ways you connect to others, particularly those closest to you. You may need guidance from your therapist to do this and you will probably need to work outside of therapy (in "real life") to make these changes.

2. Therapy is done to you.

The belief that therapists can make people better is a strong one. The myth is that a client can go to a therapist, have them work their magic, and come out feeling better and having made major changes in their personality.

Therapy is not surgery. You can have your appendix taken out or your knee repaired without any effort on your part. You only need to submit to the operation (and the anesthetic which makes you even more passive!) and surgery can be successful. You don't need to know how the surgeon does what he or she does, you only need to show up and do what you're told.

With therapy, you need to be an active participant for it to work. Therapists do not have magic wands that they can wave over you to make you better. You and your therapist must work together to understand your problems and solve them. Your therapist cannot make you better.

Because therapy requires active collaboration, people who are not motivated to use therapy will not be helped by it. A common misconception is that if I can only get my spouse or friend or child or colleague to see a therapist, that will help. It will only help if the person who goes to therapy wants to make changes in their life. There is a joke about this: "How many psychologists does it take to change a light bulb? Only one, but the light bulb has to want to change."

3. Therapy always involves exploration of your childhood and always ends up blaming your parents.

Often, successful therapy involves understanding how your childhood may have contributed to the problems you are currently experiencing. Often, it involves looking at problems your parents may have had. However, therapy which gets stuck in the past and never moves to resolving the problems in the present is not successful. Therapy which gets mired in blame of parents or others and never moves you to take responsibility for your life is not successful.

4. Therapy takes many years and hundreds of sessions.

Sometimes it does, but not usually. I have had clients who benefit greatly from three or four sessions and they are able to take what they learn and make excellent changes. I have also had clients who have benefited from 10 years of regular therapy. Most clients who use therapy to make important and lasting changes in their lives are seen somewhere between 10 and 50 times over a period of 6 months to 2 years.

It takes time but not forever!

 

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About the Author

Robert Burkham, Ph.D. is a clinical psychologist with 25 years of experience doing psychotherapy and 20 years of experience supervising other therapists. He has been a licensed psychologist in the state of Wisconsin since 1982 (License #991) and has practiced in Appleton, Wisconsin for 20 years. He is a member of both the American Psychological Association and the Wisconsin Psychological Association

The Therapy Triangle Robert Burkham, Ph.D. http://www.therapytriangle.com

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