Wow. I learned so very much from this lucid, wise monologue and I deeply appreciate the explanation which is so intricately and profoundly based on both the complexity of the human experience and the relational nature of healing. It’s like Tolstoy said: everyone suffers in our own way. So to claim that there is one solution for everyone’s unique setting of existential and material suffering is a vain false belief. The art of the healer must of course account for patterns based on trauma from societal or familial abuse and neglect - and/or from random harms-but the art is the love in trying to understand the pain and help us find solutions within ourselves.
Dr. Corbett, if you ever see this, THANK-YOU. You gave me hope that the heart and soul of who I am may be poured into my work, should I pursue psychotherapy.
With due respect; the greatest failure of Freudian/ Jungian Unconscious and Depth Psychology - It does not offer a solution. It cannot be proven. It doesnt present a methodology, let alone an intervention. If our personality was forged by early childhood experiences which we cannot control, how can we self-improve. How can we change something we cannot see. And dont say, hypnotherapy or Projective tests.
That being said: I accept and respect the philosophy of the unconscious. Freudian psychologists need to derive a Psychotherapy technique that is both empirically reliable and replicable. *_The iceberg._*
@@OmarCapital No its still classified as pseudo-science and contemporary psychotherapy. An individual with high internal locus will show resistance and will not get hypnotized.
@@naughtyskywalker9292 I Totally Understand Where You’re Coming From & Even Though I Respect Your Opinion I Would Have To Say That People Are Already In Trance So A Skillful Hypnotherapist Would Help Someone See & Understand That & Then Be The Conduit That Facilitates Change Work By Using A Predictable Framework
Wow. I learned so very much from this lucid, wise monologue and I deeply appreciate the explanation which is so intricately and profoundly based on both the complexity of the human experience and the relational nature of healing. It’s like Tolstoy said: everyone suffers in our own way.
So to claim that there is one solution for everyone’s unique setting of existential and material suffering is a vain false belief. The art of the healer must of course account for patterns based on trauma from societal or familial abuse and neglect - and/or from random harms-but the art is the love in trying to understand the pain and help us find solutions within ourselves.
Dr. Corbett, if you ever see this, THANK-YOU. You gave me hope that the heart and soul of who I am may be poured into my work, should I pursue psychotherapy.
beautiful cogent defense for the necessary practice of alternative "non-scientific" psychotherapies....not every experience can be explained
Nothing to defend
With due respect; the greatest failure of Freudian/ Jungian Unconscious and Depth Psychology - It does not offer a solution. It cannot be proven. It doesnt present a methodology, let alone an intervention.
If our personality was forged by early childhood experiences which we cannot control, how can we self-improve. How can we change something we cannot see.
And dont say, hypnotherapy or Projective tests.
That being said: I accept and respect the philosophy of the unconscious. Freudian psychologists need to derive a Psychotherapy technique that is both empirically reliable and replicable.
*_The iceberg._*
So are you saying Hypnotherapy isn’t proven to be effectively concrete ?
@@OmarCapital No its still classified as pseudo-science and contemporary psychotherapy. An individual with high internal locus will show resistance and will not get hypnotized.
@@naughtyskywalker9292 I Totally Understand Where You’re Coming From & Even Though I Respect Your Opinion I Would Have To Say That People Are Already In Trance So A Skillful Hypnotherapist Would Help Someone See & Understand That & Then Be The Conduit That Facilitates Change Work By Using A Predictable Framework
@@OmarCapital well said!