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The BACP definition of counselling By listening attentively and patiently the counsellor can begin to perceive the difficulties from the client's point of view and can help them to see things more clearly, possibly from a different perspective. Counselling is a way of enabling choice or change or of reducing confusion. It does not involve giving advice or directing a client to take a particular course of action. Counsellors do not judge or exploit their clients in any way. In the counselling sessions the client can explore various aspects of their life and feelings, talking about them freely and openly in a way that is rarely possible with friends or family. Bottled up feelings such as anger, anxiety, grief and embarrassment can become very intense and counselling offers an opportunity to explore them, with the possibility of making them easier to understand. The counsellor will encourage the expression of feelings and as a result of their training will be able to accept and reflect the client's problems without becoming burdened by them. Acceptance and respect for the client are essentials
for a counsellor and, as the relationship develops, so too does trust
between the counsellor and client, enabling the client to look at many
aspects of their life, their relationships and themselves which they
may not have considered or been able to face before. The counsellor
may help the client to examine in detail the behaviour or situations
which are proving troublesome and to find an area where it would be
possible to initiate some change as a start. The counsellor may help
the client to look at the options open to them and help them to decide
the best for them. Models of counselling Eclectic Therapists There are several well defined schools of psychotherapy, each with its own organizing philosophy, procedures, techniques and methods. Some therapists use only the teachings of one particular school of therapy. Other therapists mix and match techniques, which is called Eclectic Therapy.
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