My Objective is to Help You Achieve Yours
Book Review Principles-based counselling and psychotherapya Method of Levels approach by T.A. Carey, W. Mansell & S. Tai, 2015, East Sussex & New York: Routledge Reviewed by Bruce E Nevin © Bruce E. Nevin 2016 The schools of psychotherapy
number in the hundreds but fall into five broad groups. The age-old practice
of empathetic listening and counsel underlay the elaborate psychodynamic
constructs of Freud and his followers and successors. The anti-mentalist
strictures of behaviorism dictate the manipulations of cognitive-behavior
therapy. Rejecting the determinism inherent in both of these streams,
beginning in the 1950s, humanistic therapies celebrated the capacity to
awaken emotional awareness, create meaning, and actualize human potential.
Family systems therapy emerged from these in the late 1960s, informed in
part by earlier communication studies by Gregory Bateson and others. (This
was the focus of my own training in the late 1970s.) In the midst of this,
an unholy alliance has got established between psychiatry, the
pharmaceutical industry, and the insurance industry (Angell 2014), and with
it the management of symptoms as a surrogate for health. Faced with
this spectrum of dogma and practice, the majority of therapists regard their
approach as eclectic or "integrative", picking up tricks and techniques here
and there to add to one's therapeutic "toolbox".
"Unfortunately, despite the regular appearance of new and seemingly
innovative approaches on the psychotherapy scene, there has not been a
steady advance in the effectiveness or efficiency of our treatments. Many
innovations are often only innovative at a superficial level and actually
turn out to be recycled versions of well-established, more fundamental
methods. Exposure is a good example of this. Exposure, in its broadest
sense, occurs when people maintain an awareness of distressing images,
thoughts, feelings, and objects for a prolonged period of time, and arrive
at a different, less upsetting, understanding of these experiences than they
had previously. Much of the stock available in the marketplace of
psychotherapy techniques is, at its core, a way of promoting exposure, even
though it might be packaged very differently". Further, it
is obvious that no theory or technique is successful all the time, nor is
any therapist successful all the time, and not every therapist avoids the
temptation to blame the client with talk of resistance, non-compliance, and
so forth. The book
under review presents three principles which are claimed to be in effective
use whenever the psychological distress of a client is resolved, no matter
who the therapist was, what technique they employed, or what theoretical
explanation they gave. A Joint Presidential Task Force of the Society of
Clinical Psychology (Division 12 of the APA) and of the North American
Society for Psychotherapy Research came up with more than 60 "empirically
grounded" principles described by more than 40 chapter authors (Castonguay &
Beutler 2006). The bold claim is that the reader will find that this
eclectic mix of principles (such as "Client's expectations are likely to
play a role in treatment outcome" and "The therapist is likely to be more
effective if he or she is patient") boils down in practice to the three
principles identified in this book. These
principles are empirically established, and not anecdotal or eclectic,
because they are fundamental aspects of a third grand theory of psychology,
also originating in the 1950s and 1960s, that is now coming to broad
recognition alongside the more familiar behaviorist and cognitive theories
(Mansell & Marken 2015), namely Perceptual Control Theory (PCT). The three
principles are control, conflict, and reorganization. Controlling is what
living things do, that is, acting so as to experience matters as one wishes
them to be. Control is ubiquitous, from homeostatic systems in the body to
acting on an opportunity to advance one's career, from buttoning a shirt to
integrating a new concept into familiar prior understandings. Control is
generally unnoticed unless it becomes challenging, and in most instances,
control is completely autonomous - indeed, controlling is what makes one
autonomous. Push an open door and it closes; push a person or an animal and
what they do depends on what they want. When one attempts to control another
person (Marken & Carey 2015), the result can be conflict. We routinely
resolve minor conflicts with scarcely a thought -pedestrians on a busy
sidewalk nimbly tweaking their paths to avoid collisions. Obviously,
there are also conflicts within a person, and again routine conflicts get
resolved all the time with little fuss. Every choice we make is the
resolution of a conflict: "Which shirt to wear? This one is just right with
the pinstripe suit, this one goes that beautiful tie Mary just gave me. Oh,
but that important interview is today. I'll wear the more businesslike
combination." Others are more difficult. "I want people to like me and enjoy
my company, but I also want people to take me seriously and agree with my
opinions." "I hate my parents for how they treated me, but it's a sin to
hate your parents." "I want to let go and move on, but what we had was so
special I don't want to let go of it." "I want to make a living with my art,
but I don't want to sell out." Psychological distress results when conflict
persists over important personal values. The relationships of values, and
their resolution, are unique to each person. PCT provides
an exquisite, testable model of cognitive function and behavior that
explains how conflict arises and how it is resolved. Conflict occurs when
two control systems are at cross-purposes. Achieve one, and the other is
unhappy; achieve the other, and the first is unhappy. One purpose is to take
pleasure in showing off the beautiful gift necktie, the other purpose is to
impress an interviewer. So long as attention is focused on the bone of
contention - the striped shirt or the checked shirt, which should I wear? - the
conflict is irresolvable. By shifting attention up a level to the purpose
for wearing one vs. the purpose for wearing the other, one sees the obvious
resolution. More deep-seated and emotionally fraught conflicts take longer,
but the process is the same. The basis of
the process is in the third principle, reorganization. When all else fails,
the system falls back on its most primitive, unlearned process for learning
and change. Reorganization is an unconscious process that changes an
organism in the same way that evolution changes a population of organisms.
Evolution depends upon random differences between individuals. The
characteristics of those that are not successful in bringing offspring to
reproductive maturity become less common and over time disappear from the
population entirely, leaving only those which are well adapted to a changing
environment. In a like manner, reorganization makes random changes in the
internal specifications for controlling one's experience. If the experience
does not improve, the reorganization process makes another random tweak, and
doesn't stop doing so (with pauses) until things are getting better. For reasons
that are not yet well understood, reorganization appears to localize where a
person's conscious attention is focused. In the Method of Levels (MOL), the
therapist helps the client shift attention from the bone of contention
("Which shirt, the checked one or the striped one?") up to the disparate
purposes that generate the conflict. The emphasis in the therapeutic dialog
shifts from the symptoms (with their various bandaid "solutions") to the
experience of distress about the symptoms, and to commentary and attitudes
about the distress, opening pathways to bring the higher-level sources of
the conflict into awareness. No advice is given, only relentless curiosity
about what the client is experiencing and about what might be behind the
client's current words and feelings. [T]here is
something very different between having a thought inside your head and
saying it out loud. It is more different still if, when you say it out loud,
you say it to someone else. We do not shy away from letting clients know
that we do not understand the reasons for this difference very well yet, but
the difference is there nevertheless. Even when thoughts seem jumbled or
racing or hard to pin down, by engaging in a conversation and answering the
questions of another, some kind of change seems to occur. The
resolution of distress is not controlled, either by the therapist or by the
client; it is discovered. Like a cat before a mouse-hole, the therapist is
alert to "disruptions" in the flow of talk - a pause, a shift of gaze, a
muttered side comment - to demand what was that about, what was passing
through your mind just then? Each disruption is a potential opening from the
current bubble of awareness to a meta-perspective about it. The goals for
the therapist are simple: (1) Encourage the client to talk, maintaining
focus on some mismatch between their experience of what is and what should
be, developing an uncensored flow, with no filtering or editing, deferring
any review of thoughts until after they are spoken. (2) As the client
overhears what they themselves are saying, inquire into their disruptions of
that flow, so as to help them shift focus to a deeper or higher perspective
on the issue. The specific content is unimportant to the therapist. There is
absolutely no need to bring childhood traumas or the like to awareness, nor
any prohibition either. The Method of Levels enables the client to open
their own way to letting go of all that (whatever it may be) and moving on
with their life in freedom. In all of this, the client is the locus of
change but not the agent, and the process is to facilitate the innate power
of reorganization unconsciously to achieve a healthful balance of the
client's own desires and needs. Because the trial-and-error changes of
internal reorganization can make things seem worse before they get better,
this requires an informed faith that the client has all the resources they
need to create just the right solution for themselves.
Many consequences follow for
the conduct of therapy and for the design of mental health programs. You
treat the distress, not the symptoms. This runs against the imperatives of
insurance formalities. Goals are set for the therapist (goals 1 and 2
above), not for the client. Problems such as non-compliance, resistance, and
non-attendance are reframed by asking what the client is controlling by
these means. Progress is directed by the client. Although reorganization is
initiated by shifting attention to a higher level, there is no need for the
client to maintain that awareness after a session. Because the process of
reorganization is unconscious and of unpredictable duration, the scheduling
of appointments is put in the client's hands, to come in when they feel
ready to do some more work. Reminiscent of the innovations of Milton H.
Erickson in hypnotherapy, this runs counter to managerial expectations in
programs and institutions. Experience is cited showing that, even when MOL
practice has amply demonstrated both effectiveness and efficiency,
eliminating a backlog caseload that had been intractable for years,
administrators resist and may even prohibit MOL practice, preferring what
fits into their familiar categories. Therapists themselves can be profoundly
unsettled by seeming to be adrift with the client in an ocean of
possibilities in which there is no a priori right answer, no preconceived
plan, and no recipe for success other than encouraging pertinent talk,
listening with tireless curiosity, ignoring the interpretations and pat
solutions that their training and experience may bring to mind (the gaining
of which may have been what drew them to psychology), poised to pounce on
subtle clues of background thoughts and feelings as a new focus of talk. But
what a recipe for success that is! Try it. You'll like it. Angell,
Marcia. 2014. The Illusions of Psychiatry. New York Review of Books,
JULY 14, 2011.
http://www.nybooks.com/articles/2011/07/14/illusions-of-psychiatry/ Castonguay, L.
G., & L. E. Beutler (eds). 2006. Principles of therapeutic change that
work. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Mansell, W. &
R. S. Marken. 2015. The origins and future of control theory in psychology.
Review of general psychology 19.4:201-430. Marken, R. S.
& T. A. Carey (2015) Controlling people: The paradoxical nature of being
human. Samford Valley, Australia: Australian Academic Press Group. Norcross, J.C.
(2005). A primer on psychotherapy integration. In J.C. Norcross & M.R.
Goldfried (Eds.), Handbook of psychotherapy integration (2nd ed., pp.
3-23). New York: Basic Books. |
Principles-based counselling and psychotherapy: a Method of Levels approach, by T.A. Carey, W. Mansell, & S. Tai, 2015, East Sussex & New York: Routledge.
|
This page last updated on August 2, 2019 |