Xue Wei's Psychology Micro-Course 101 Episodes: The Devil is One Foot High, the Way is Ten Feet High - 101 Times to Face Up to Challenges Video Course Resource Introduction: The Devil is One Foot High, the Way is One Foot High Series ——101 times of rising to the challenge Same case A different way of thinking Same problem Different solutions Same psychological counseling issues Different interpretations from Chinese and Western perspectives PSY Xin Licheng & Xue Wei Perfect presentation 1. What should I say? (Technology) 2. When do I speak? (Diagnosis) 3. Working Alliance and Therapeutic Framework 4. People who don’t have a clear problem (or “chief complaint”) 5. Can you make a diagnosis based on the presenting problem (chief complaint)? 6. When to use the drug 7. Should we use drugs to treat depression? Or should we try to find the psychological root of depression? 8. Platform diagram for psychotherapy work: where to do it 9. Alternate between supportive and explanatory techniques 10. How to stop people from dropping out of treatment too early 11. How to deal with the client’s early resistance? 12. What should I do before each treatment? Is it to be a "container" or to provide enough "holding environment"? 13. "Situation"? Who are they with? They are obsessive-compulsive neurotic, 14. Borderline or schizophrenic person? 15. People with physical illness and conversion symptoms 16. Financially successful 17. People with high IQ 18. Those who are habitually late 19. Do all alcoholics need to attend support groups? 20. What kind of work does one do with different types of alcoholics? 21. Bullies 22. Procrastinator 23. Passive (cowardly) people 24. A man who is afraid of his wife 25. Self-centered people 26. Do you understand the meaning of obsessive thoughts? 27. Various types of disabilities, both obvious and subtle 28. The adventurous counter-terrorist 29. Elderly people with a sense of privilege 30. People who have promiscuous sex 31. What is a boundary? 32 “Let’s Make a Deal” and Gifts—Crossing Borders 33. Breaking boundaries, eroticism and eroticized empathy 34. People who rebuke and verbally attack you 35. “Action-seekers” or impulsive people 36. Those who understand themselves before you do 37. People who ask you to hug them or want to hug you. People who try to undress or seduce you in front of you during treatment. 38. And those who want to touch you 39. People who chat with your assistant 40. The person who dates your assistant 41 Acting in Action: “Actors in Therapy” 42. People who bring their spouse into the consultation room 43. People who bring their parents to therapy 44. People who cannot leave the consultation room on time 45. Someone who accuses you of not paying attention to him/her 46. People who don’t let the therapist interrupt them 47. A woman who came to consult with a baby 48. Silent Visitor 49. People standing and walking around in the consulting room 50. People who keep looking at their watches 51. Various “parting words” 52. Asking you how you feel 53. The Teenager Sitting in Your Chair 54. People who bring drinks into the consultation room 55. People who don’t hang their coats on hangers 56. The person who asks you to borrow a magazine 57. People who do not pay for medical treatment 58. People who repeatedly miss consultation appointments 59. People who request to take medicine 60. Person who moves furniture in treatment rooms 61. People sleeping in the waiting room 62. People with high suicide risk 63. When CBT alone is ineffective, clients who have had a negative experience with a previous counselor 64. Clients who have had negative experiences with previous counselors 65. People who ask you questions 66. What is countertransference? How is it different from empathy? 67. Countertransference to Disloyal People 68. The Submissive Interlocutor 69. People who want to understand you 70. Countertransference to marital quarrels 71. People you don’t like and people who don’t like you 72. People who do not respond to explanations of questions 73. People who want solutions and suggestions 74. People who question your theoretical orientation 75. People who have read your professional articles or books 76. People who react to any interference as an intrusion 77. When you find yourself asking too many questions 78. People who threaten therapists 79. Encountering clients outside of therapy 80. Therapists reduce treatment fees 81. Use of email and video software 82. Bosses who let their assistants contact you 83. Visitors who want to be your friends - call them directly 84. Elevator phobia, having to take the elevator to reach your office 85. Lawyers who want to see psychological evaluation reports and clients who want to seek advice from lawyers 86. Want your opinion but is receiving treatment from someone else 87. People who come for consultation due to pressure from a third party 88. Child-centered counseling 89. People who travel long distances to seek advice 90. What should the therapist do if the client withdraws from the national medical insurance? Or how can the therapist be in the "medical insurance network"? In addition to providing treatment? |
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