Hi, thank you for this. Focusing is the best! I just feel a need to point out something quite crucial: Gendlin and his fellow researchers did NOT find that it was important that the THERAPIST listen to the client. That was exactly what was so disturbing and shocking to them at first, because that was the assumption which was shattered by the research. That assumption was the whole basis of Carl Rogers' work. The research revealed that IT DIDN'T MATTER what the therapist did, but that successful CLIENTS already came into therapy with a certain skill. It was devastating, but Rogers told Gendlin "The truth is always friendly." So Gendlin studied what the CLIENTS who were successful were doing. It was the CLIENT'S skill that Gendlin named Focusing (originally he called it Experiential Focusing) and he began to teach that to people (not to therapists particularly, since they aren't actually needed) in the 70's. That was what was revolutionary. Focusing doesn't require a therapist at all, although every therapist needs it.
4:45 It's important to point out that when we are rationalizing our actions, we aren't coming up with logical reasons why we did something, but logical reasons why we imagine we did something. It's very subtle but an important difference.
This is such a great description of how to drop in with focusing. I like the process of sitting with the sensation and then asking the body if it agrees.
Hi I have been into focusing for a while. At the beginning you start with gendlins research which discovered that certain " clients" seemed to be more in touch etcetc not the " master clinician"!!! Sorry just making a point
Hi, thank you for this. Focusing is the best! I just feel a need to point out something quite crucial: Gendlin and his fellow researchers did NOT find that it was important that the THERAPIST listen to the client. That was exactly what was so disturbing and shocking to them at first, because that was the assumption which was shattered by the research. That assumption was the whole basis of Carl Rogers' work. The research revealed that IT DIDN'T MATTER what the therapist did, but that successful CLIENTS already came into therapy with a certain skill. It was devastating, but Rogers told Gendlin "The truth is always friendly." So Gendlin studied what the CLIENTS who were successful were doing. It was the CLIENT'S skill that Gendlin named Focusing (originally he called it Experiential Focusing) and he began to teach that to people (not to therapists particularly, since they aren't actually needed) in the 70's. That was what was revolutionary. Focusing doesn't require a therapist at all, although every therapist needs it.
4:45 It's important to point out that when we are rationalizing our actions, we aren't coming up with logical reasons why we did something, but logical reasons why we imagine we did something. It's very subtle but an important difference.
I’ve been doing focusing a few years, and this is amongst the best and most concise tutorials I’ve found so far
Thanks 🙏🏼
Brilliant explanation!!! ❤❤❤
This is such a great description of how to drop in with focusing. I like the process of sitting with the sensation and then asking the body if it agrees.
Thank you for your beautiful and clear explanation.
Hi I have been into focusing for a while. At the beginning you start with gendlins research which discovered that certain " clients" seemed to be more in touch etcetc not the " master clinician"!!! Sorry just making a point
A crucial point.
There are tons of classes in Focusing through the Focusing Institute, btw. Many are quite inexpensive.
I'd like more by Melissa on Focusing and somatics in general