Abstract

A cultural opportunity is 1 of 3 pillars within multicultural orientation framework; it is defined as a moment in therapy when aspects of a client's background emerge, which can be deeply explored to better understand the salient aspects of a client's cultural identities. Research on cultural opportunities provides evidence that clients desire cultural conversations. However, no study to date has examined what cultural opportunities sound like in therapy and how therapists and clients utilize these opportunities. Accordingly, the purpose of this study was to examine the ways in which cultural conversations emerge during the first psychotherapy session and how clients and therapists engage in these cultural conversations. Psychotherapy sessions from diverse therapist-client pairings at a university counseling center (n = 22) were analyzed using (reflexive) thematic analysis. Qualitative findings revealed 4 themes around how cultural opportunities emerge (e.g., windowpane of feeling) and 3 themes in how they are responded to (e.g., look out the same window: using client's language to explore culture). Implications for therapist training and supervision are discussed. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).

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