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Chapter 3

Chapter 3. Adlerian Therapy. Adlerian Theory. Also known as individual psychology. Based on the common sense approach of Alfred Adler. Alfred Adler. Was invited to join Freud’s Vienna Psychoanalytic Society in 1902 where he quickly gained prominence.

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Chapter 3

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  1. Chapter 3 Adlerian Therapy

  2. Adlerian Theory • Also known as individual psychology. • Based on the common sense approach of Alfred Adler.

  3. Alfred Adler • Was invited to join Freud’s Vienna Psychoanalytic Society in 1902 where he quickly gained prominence. • Stressed the importance of subjective feelings rather than biological drives. • Established the Society of Individual Psychology.

  4. Major Tenets of Adlerian Theory • Conscious aspects of behavior, rather than the unconscious, are central to the development of personality. • Belief that individuals are goal-directed and purposeful. • Each person strives for growth and has a need for wholeness.

  5. Inferiority and Superiority Complexes • There is a tendency for each person to feel inferior to others initially. If not resolved, the person develops an inferiority complex. • In contrast, a person who overcompensates for feelings of inferiority may develop a superiority complex, or what Adler terms a neurotic fiction.

  6. Birth Order • Considerable emphasis is placed on birth order. • Those who share ordinal birth positions may have more in common than siblings. • 5 ordinal positions are emphasized: • firstborns • secondborns • middle children • youngest children • only children

  7. Firstborns • They are socialized to conform, achieve, behave, and please. • Take responsibility when parents are absent and often act as parent-substitutes. • Experience the loss of their unique position when a second child is born. • This experience sometimes leads to resentment.

  8. Secondborns • An enviable position according to Adler. • Never have to worry about issues of power and authority because their position will never change. • Usually are more outgoing, carefree, and creative and less concerned with rules than firstborns. • Likely to be just the opposite of their older sibling.

  9. Middle Children • These children often feel “squeezed in” and treated unfairly. • Learn a great deal about family politics and the art of negotiation. • These skills prove useful for manipulating events to get what they want and choosing areas where they can be successful.

  10. Youngest Children • Receive a great deal of attention from others, who are likely to cater to their needs. • May become “charmers”, but may also have difficulty breaking out of the role of “the baby” or “family pet.” • Face the danger of becoming spoiled. • May also make great strides in achieving because of role models provided by older siblings.

  11. Only Child • Any child born more than seven years or more apart from siblings is psychologically an only child. • These children are never dethroned and are at an advantage in receiving a great deal of attention. • May mature early and become high-achievers. • May develop rich imaginations because of the amount of time they spend alone. • May also become pampered, selfish, and not well-socialized.

  12. Lifestyle Creation • Adlerian theory stresses that by age 5, each person creates a style of life, or lifestyle. • Gained primarily through interacting with other members of the family. • A healthy lifestyle focuses on main tasks: • Society • Work • Sexuality • Two other challenges include spirituality and coping with self.

  13. Basic Mistakes Caused by Fictions Fictions – subjective evaluations of themselves and their environments. • Overgeneralizing • False or impossible goals of security • Misperceptions of life and life’s demands • Minimization or denial of one’s worth • Faulty values

  14. Roles of the Counselor/Therapist • Function as a diagnostician, teacher, and model for the client. • Make an assessment by gathering information on the family constellation and client’s earliest memories. • Assign clients homework. • Make little use of assessment techniques.

  15. Goal • Help clients to develop healthy, holistic lifestyles.

  16. Process and Techniques • Establishing a relationship. • Performing analysis and assessment. • Promoting insight. • Reorientation.

  17. Establishing a Relationship • Crucial if goals are to be achieved. • Counseling is seen as a collaborative effort. • Actively listen and respond. • Focus on clients’ strengths. • Employ confrontation when necessary to point out clients’ inconsistencies. • Maintain a flexible interaction process and stress clients’ responsibilities.

  18. Performing Analysis and Assessment • Concentrate on an analysis of clients’ lifestyles including family constellations, dreams, early memories, priorities, and ways of responding. • Encourage clients to recall early memories and examine for specific themes and specific details. • Adlerian theory holds that dreams are a possible rehearsal for future courses of action. • Lifestyle priorities and ways of responding are challenged.

  19. Promoting Insight • Help clients develop insight through open-ended questions and making interpretations. • Interpretation often takes the form of intuitive guesses. • May be based on family ordinal position and family constellations. • Clients are never forced to accept the counselor’s point of view. • Empathy – the ability to feel what it is like to be the client before “zeroing” in on the present behaviors.

  20. Reorientation • Confrontation • Asking “the question” • Encouragement • Acting “as if” • “Spitting in the client’s soup” • Catching oneself • Task setting • Push button

  21. Multicultural and Gender Sensitive Issues • Well-suited for use in multicultural and gender-sensitive issues. • Emphasizes that individuals need to extend themselves beyond their family to be healthy. • Such a stretch often means learning about and understanding different cultural groups. • Sensitive to equality issues between the sexes.

  22. Strengths and Contributions • Fosters an equalitarian atmosphere. • Versatile over the lifespan. • Useful in the treatment of a variety of disorders. • Contribution to other theories and to the public’s knowledge and understanding of human interactions. • Can be employed selectively in different cultural groups.

  23. Limitations and Criticisms • Lack of a firm, supportive research base. • Vague in regard to some terms, concepts, and ideas. • May be too optimistic about human nature. • If basic principles cannot be followed, the impact of the theory may be lessened. • Relies heavily on verbal erudition, logic, and insight and may be limited in its applicability to clients who are not intellectually bright.

  24. The Case of Linda: Adlerian Therapy • How would you conceptualize this case using Adlerian therapy? • What would be your treatment plan for this client using an Adlerian approach?

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