therapy

When a client is attracted to their therapist?

When a client is attracted to their therapist? Sean Grover, a psychoanalyst in New York, added that your romantic or tingly feelings for your therapist could be a standard case of something called transference. “Transference is a psychoanalytic term that basically means you’re transferring feelings from one relationship to another,” Grover said. It’s not uncommon […]

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Do therapists have crushes on patients?

Do therapists have crushes on patients? It’s not uncommon for therapists to have feelings for clients, and vice versa—call it transference, countertransference, or something else. But we have to remember that it’s the therapist’s job to meet the client’s therapeutic needs and goals, not the therapist’s own personal or professional wants and needs. Transference [3]

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Can therapists sense transference?

Can therapists sense transference? All well trained therapists are aware of transference and countertransference and should be comfortable bringing the dynamics up, when they sense that there is some form of transference happening. For example, transference in therapy happens when a patient attaches anger, hostility, love, adoration, or a host of other possible feelings onto

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What happens when a therapist is attracted to a client?

What happens when a therapist is attracted to a client? Transference [3] is when the client becomes fixated on the therapist. More often than not, this fixation is sexual. It involves more than just acknowledging the client’s attractiveness to the therapist and can lead to inappropriate behaviour on the client’s part that violates therapeutic boundaries.

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