Abstract

Several counselling psychology perspectives have argued that authenticity should be the primary goal of treatment, while defining alienation from the self as the root cause of distress and psychopathological suffering. Recent findings have provided evidence that the tripartite model of dispositional authenticity based on Rogers’ person-centered theory can predict mental well-being. Considering the lack of research in clinical samples, this study examined the unique predictive utility of trait authenticity for distress in outpatients seeking counselling (N = 105, 58% female; age range: 18-65) and demographically matched controls (N = 102, 62% female; age range: 18-52 years). Most of the outpatients were diagnosed with anxiety and/or mood disorders, while the controls were screened for utilization of mental health services. Results revealed higher self-alienation and acceptance of external influence in the clinical sample, as well as higher neuroticism and symptomatic and overall distress relative to controls. Only self-alienation was able to account for unique variance in clinical distress in outpatients, above and beyond neuroticism, reaffirming the assumption that the greater the discrepancy between actual experiences and their symbolization, the greater the risk of psychological dysfunction. The findings further revealed a differentiated role of self-alienation relative to the severity of experienced distress and a need to examine causal links with neuroticism. Implications regarding clinical practice and the measurement of authenticity as treatment outcome are discussed.

Highlights

  • Several counselling psychology perspectives have argued that authenticity should be the primary goal of treatment

  • Authenticity is comprised of low self-alienation, i.e., having an identity consistent with beliefs, feelings and objective reality; high authentic living, that is living in accordance with one’s identity, and low acceptance of external influences that are not in line with one’s beliefs

  • Self-alienation was moderately related to authentic living and accepting external influence, while authentic living was insignificantly related to acceptance of external influences in both samples

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Summary

Introduction

Several counselling psychology perspectives have argued that authenticity should be the primary goal of treatment. Within the person-centered approach (PCA), Rogers (1961, 1980) defined congruence (genuineness/realness) as accurate matching of experience, awareness, and communication. He conceptualized it both as a condition of therapeutic presence and as the upper end of the continuum of change that clients experience. Based on Rogers' theory, BarrettLenard (1998, p.82) subsequently proposed a tripartite model of authenticity (congruence), defining it as the “consistency between the three levels of (a) a person’s primary experience, (b) their symbolized awareness, and (c) their outward behavior and communication”. From a humanistic-experiential point of view, what is defined as alienation or maladjustment from an external frame of reference, is experienced as ‘psychological suffering’ from an internal frame of reference (Schmid, 2005)

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