oh my goodness! A qualified counsellor here, this was helpful to bring awareness to some mistakes I may be making, talking too much i think is one of them! But this was SO cringey to watch 😩 But also has helped my confidence knowing that I do a lot right! :)
OMG comedy classic! This should really be promoted as self-care for counsellors! Mick - hidden talents there! I've watched this several times just as a way to relieve tension and stress..and to have a good old chuckle. This is just too good to be a one off.
Number 12 “ being weird” had me in stitches. I’ve had this exact thing when I went for councelling in my 20’s. I was like “ what is wrong with this dude!?!” It’s like Mick is doing an exact impression of him 😱😂
"Don't cry" eeessshh, hallarious but a worthwhile reminder how these things can really prevent us from being alongside the client. Has helped my confidence tons so thanks Mick 😊
Just had a skills practice (3rd time, we are at very beginning), I played a role of client my “helper” did many from this list: interrupting me a lot, asking too many questions, filling silence right away while I was focusing on my feelings and story I was telling, comforting me by saying: “Don’t worry, everything will be fine”… I knew right away, she didn’t do her homework, haven’t read anything about skills practice. 🤪 But that was fun, and very educational, because now I know exactly how clients feel when you do something like this. I even had to say at some point :”Sorry, what did you say? What was your question?” 🙂 I was all in my own thoughts living them through to describe, and was pulled away from my experience each time, and was forced to focus on questions mostly irrelevant to what I was telling at that moment, what was important to me.
So difficlut to watch but great for self reflection as I consider whether I would be right as a therapist and if I want to retrain. I once had a therapist who was offended when they told me I should view them as a friend. I sponsed by saying that we were not friends. That I saw this as a professional relationship. They were offended that I felt this way. Not long after they told me they didn't feel they could help me. That I was very self aware and that it would be a waste of my money to continue therapy. Or that maybe someone else would bebetter suited to helping me. I don't remember them helping me to find a replacement. I have many friends I could talk to about what's going on with me but I was choosing to seek professional help. That experience is still sitting with me.
This is great! In my business I deal with new moms postnatally and I've chosen to further my knowledge by taking a course which touches on counseling techniques. It really takes practice to do it correctly and having a demonstration of what not to do is so helpful actually. Thank you.
The caricature “being weird” bit was fascinating I am newly qualified and sometimes I’ve caught myself overdoing it and saying wow I’m an exaggerated way but the main thing I hope is that I clicked in the moment it was wrong and never did it again 😮😅
Terrifying to watch but thank god for the relief that I don’t do (too much of) this. The phone thing is a masterpiece so obnoxious! Well done that was really really bad.
This is super hilarious and spontaneously extremely informative. I was laughing so hard but will also keep this list as a reminder as a novel therapist. Thank you so much!
If anyone feels they’ve screwed up as a counsellor - I once had a first therapy session where the counsellor screamed at me to stop counselling myself, told me she got into it because she’s a narcissist, and that I was ‘too broken to be fixed’ 😂.
If a client says they want to go into traumatic experiences from early life to understand and accept them better, do you have any suggestions of what to do to ensure they are prepared for this kind of work?
Validating is about reflecting the client's experiencing, while colluding is about saying that their view or perspective is right. It's the difference between an experiential response and one based on 'objective' assessments of the 'truth'
@@mickcoopercounselling well I think I said this because I can’t imagine really trained and if he/ she had enough personal therapy can behave like that. I can’t even imagine that even vulnerable client will put up this long. Clients are more insightful than we, you or any professionals think. Also I follow my gut feelings that this is how I felt. However good luck in your profession. Best wishes.
@@vladimirolenka7903 these are all things that people have experienced in therapy sadly, and also sadly clients often don't realise they can challenge them. There's a power dynamic and poor practice does happen. Part of the point of this video is to help clients feel empowered to challenge practices that don't seem right.
oh my goodness! A qualified counsellor here, this was helpful to bring awareness to some mistakes I may be making, talking too much i think is one of them! But this was SO cringey to watch 😩 But also has helped my confidence knowing that I do a lot right! :)
OMG comedy classic! This should really be promoted as self-care for counsellors! Mick - hidden talents there! I've watched this several times just as a way to relieve tension and stress..and to have a good old chuckle. This is just too good to be a one off.
Number 12 “ being weird” had me in stitches. I’ve had this exact thing when I went for councelling in my 20’s. I was like “ what is wrong with this dude!?!”
It’s like Mick is doing an exact impression of him 😱😂
"Don't cry" eeessshh, hallarious but a worthwhile reminder how these things can really prevent us from being alongside the client. Has helped my confidence tons so thanks Mick 😊
A fantastic tutorial, very helpful in demonstrating skills, and I want to praise Ariana's acting skills !!
Just had a skills practice (3rd time, we are at very beginning), I played a role of client my “helper” did many from this list: interrupting me a lot, asking too many questions, filling silence right away while I was focusing on my feelings and story I was telling, comforting me by saying: “Don’t worry, everything will be fine”… I knew right away, she didn’t do her homework, haven’t read anything about skills practice. 🤪 But that was fun, and very educational, because now I know exactly how clients feel when you do something like this.
I even had to say at some point :”Sorry, what did you say? What was your question?” 🙂 I was all in my own thoughts living them through to describe, and was pulled away from my experience each time, and was forced to focus on questions mostly irrelevant to what I was telling at that moment, what was important to me.
‘Oh WOW, wow, oh wow, wow! I really feel that. ‘
I laughed way to hard at this.
Do people really do this 😂
So difficlut to watch but great for self reflection as I consider whether I would be right as a therapist and if I want to retrain. I once had a therapist who was offended when they told me I should view them as a friend. I sponsed by saying that we were not friends. That I saw this as a professional relationship. They were offended that I felt this way. Not long after they told me they didn't feel they could help me. That I was very self aware and that it would be a waste of my money to continue therapy. Or that maybe someone else would bebetter suited to helping me. I don't remember them helping me to find a replacement. I have many friends I could talk to about what's going on with me but I was choosing to seek professional help. That experience is still sitting with me.
I had a counsellor ask me why had I go to see her hadn't vi got any friends
Always great to see these scenarios! Thank you for producing/posting - much appreciated!
This is great! In my business I deal with new moms postnatally and I've chosen to further my knowledge by taking a course which touches on counseling techniques. It really takes practice to do it correctly and having a demonstration of what not to do is so helpful actually. Thank you.
Brilliant Mick. I'm at college level 4 2nd year. That was a hard watch.. cringey 🙈
This was a surprisingly difficult watch! You both did a great job of highlighting the errors that can crop up.
The caricature “being weird” bit was fascinating I am newly qualified and sometimes I’ve caught myself overdoing it and saying wow I’m an exaggerated way but the main thing I hope is that I clicked in the moment it was wrong and never did it again 😮😅
Me too!
Terrifying to watch but thank god for the relief that I don’t do (too much of) this.
The phone thing is a masterpiece so obnoxious!
Well done that was really really bad.
Brilliant comedy and teaching. You're wasted as counsellor Mick 😃
Wow... This is really insightful Mick. Lota things to take away from watching this fun and educative tutorials.
This is super hilarious and spontaneously extremely informative. I was laughing so hard but will also keep this list as a reminder as a novel therapist. Thank you so much!
If anyone feels they’ve screwed up as a counsellor - I once had a first therapy session where the counsellor screamed at me to stop counselling myself, told me she got into it because she’s a narcissist, and that I was ‘too broken to be fixed’ 😂.
Brilliant video! Thank you so much. Really helpful.
Thanks Mick as a trainee Im constantly worried whether Im colluding or not in Triads. Would love to see more on this subject .
Funny, but also a great reminder to what we shouldn’t be doing 😊
A great demonstration and Mick, as always an inspirating teacher. Thank you.
This was super useful to watch and reassuring as I was cringing throughout 😂
Hahaha 'giving empty reassurances' cracked me up so much.
This was great. Wondering if you have any upcoming vids on working with younger clients? Especially adolescents.
Not by myself, but see some counselling videos at: th-cam.com/video/zL4aBKJjqF8/w-d-xo.html
I found this incredibly useful, thank you.
Nice one Mick we are covering this in counseling today.
Very helpful thank you
As a student I found this very very interesting
number 12 had me in stitches!!!
I love this, funny but educational 🤣
really worth a watch listen and learn
A very helpful video 👍😊
If a client says they want to go into traumatic experiences from early life to understand and accept them better, do you have any suggestions of what to do to ensure they are prepared for this kind of work?
I LOL at 8 - her face!
🤣 the real Mick would never do these things..
I hope not..
is "collude" not similar to validating the client's feelings? im having difficulty separating the two
Validating is about reflecting the client's experiencing, while colluding is about saying that their view or perspective is right. It's the difference between an experiential response and one based on 'objective' assessments of the 'truth'
ah makes sense, thank you :)
@@mickcoopercounselling
This was amazing and hilarious!!!!!!!!!!!
Maybe the occasional wow is OK Mike. Like in your response to Julie testing positive to Covid. 😂
Thank you 😊 really helpful
Useful! Thanks!
OMG, this dude is so fired! lol thanks for the post.
Awesome!
Her face after he talks about psychodynamic theory 😂
😂
What would you do differently in relation to 11?
so HOW does one prepare clients to be ready to disclose their traumatic experiences?
There's lots on that in the literature now, around grounding for instance. Needs proper study and reading.
Ouch!
I enjoyed that way too much 😂
Can’t stop laughing 😂
Ah this is great, but also hard to watch.
This is great 😂
😁😁 so funny he is hilarious and she is a really good actress
hilarious :)
The re-assurances section made me want to throw up, lol This is something I hate hearing from people lol
😁👏👏👏👏
Number 1 should be interrupting!!!!!
It's that as well
@@mickcoopercounselling I don't necessarily see interrupting as bad thing. It all depends on the context.
This is really hard to watch.
Ha ha my sons vegetarian 🤣
4 is so funny 🤣🤣🤣
I laughed but in real life ..
.. not funny.
😂 cringy 😂
Oh my goodness cringe. 😂
Very patronising video…
I'm sorry you feel that way. Can you say how/why?
@@mickcoopercounselling well I think I said this because I can’t imagine really trained and if he/ she had enough personal therapy can behave like that. I can’t even imagine that even vulnerable client will put up this long. Clients are more insightful than we, you or any professionals think. Also I follow my gut feelings that this is how I felt. However good luck in your profession. Best wishes.
@@vladimirolenka7903 these are all things that people have experienced in therapy sadly, and also sadly clients often don't realise they can challenge them. There's a power dynamic and poor practice does happen. Part of the point of this video is to help clients feel empowered to challenge practices that don't seem right.
@@mickcoopercounselling I hope -as you think-your video will help clients. If they can watch patiently. Best wishes.