Abstract

Clients who seek psychotherapeutic treatment have had personal experiences involving some form of distress. Although research has shown that the client's ability to experience and express painful emotions during therapy can have a therapeutic benefit, it has also been argued that displaying distress may convey a form of helplessness and vulnerability, and thus, clients may be reluctant to cast themselves in this light. Using the methods of conversation analysis, this paper explores how a client's upsetting experience is managed over the course of a single session of client-centered therapy. The main analytic focus will be on (1) the different therapist practices used to orient to the client's distress, (2) the varying forms of client opposition to the therapist's attempts to work with the distress, and (3) the context sensitivity of orienting to distress and how certain practices may be uniquely shaped by what had occurred in prior talk. It was found that, whereas certain types of therapist responses tended to be endorsed by the client, others were forcefully rejected as inappropriate displays of understanding or empathy. By focusing on repeated sequential episodes over time in which a client conveys distress, followed by the therapist's response, this paper sheds light on the interactional trajectory through which a client and therapist are able to resolve impasses to emotional exploration and to successfully secure extended and intense emotional work.

Highlights

  • Psychotherapy offers a setting in which clients are able to report on their personal experiences, some of which involve intense moments of distress

  • Managing Distress Over Time in Psychotherapy need to decide which aspect of the distress should be oriented to first but may need to manage distress at both these levels

  • Using the methods of conversation analysis (CA) (Sidnell and Stivers, 2013), this paper examines how a client’s upsetting experience is managed over the course of a single session of client-centered therapy

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Psychotherapy offers a setting in which clients are able to report on their personal experiences, some of which involve intense moments of distress. From the analysis of how the client, Eve, conveyed distress—by reporting personal upsetting experiences and/or by displaying distress in the moment—and how the client’s distress talk was responded to and subsequently negotiated over extended sequences, a certain interactional trajectory involving discreet phases, roughly corresponding to a beginning, middle, and end (Sacks, 1995b; Robinson, 2013), was identified. The beginning phase consisted of the client’s initial reporting of her experience of having watched the prior week’s video-recorded session (see Extract 1) While recounting her experience, Eve displayed distress in the present moment, during which the therapist attempted but failed to guide the client into exploring her distress concerning her brother’s death more deeply. Following the client’s emotional outburst, the therapist would use directive actions to maintain the client’s focus

Therapist responses that orient to client’s report of distress
30 Ther: fragile?
DISCUSSION
10 Eve: ah:hh hh
ETHICS STATEMENT
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