Overview
Gestalt Therapy is a powerful experiential
psychotherapy focusing on contact and awareness in the here and now. By
following their client's ongoing process, with special attention to both the
therapeutic relationship and the client's style of interrupting that process,
the Gestalt Therapist can help their client to both work through and move beyond
their painful emotional blocks. This frees them to begin to explore new
behavior, first in the "safe emergency" of the therapeutic
relationship and/or group and then, as appropriate, in the outside world. The
emphasis of the therapy is not on talking about what has happened but on fully
experiencing both what is, and what can be.
Unlike psychoanalysis,
Gestalt therapy does not focus on talking about the client's past. The past is
not neglected, but its importance, including that of one's childhood, is not in
what happened then, but in how it affects now. What we experienced as we
developed, and how we adapted to that experience, come into the present as both
our "unfinished business" and our character styles, or ways of being
in the world. Gestalt therapists deal directly with these elements in the
"here and now", working with contact styles and focused awareness to
help their clients complete and work through unfinished business and learn to
experience and appreciate their full beingness. By learning to follow their own
ongoing process, and to fully experience, accept, and appreciate their complete
selves, Gestalt Therapy clients can free themselves to move past pain, fear,
anxiety, depression or low self-esteem. They can then discover who they really
are, and allow themselves to develop in the ways appropriate for them.
The origins of Gestalt
Therapy derive from several sources, including psychoanalysis (by way of Wilhelm
Reich), field theorists (such as Lewin), experimental Gestalt psychologists
(studying the nature of visual perception), and the Humanist-Existential
movement. Each has made its own unique contribution to Gestalt Therapy. From the
work of Reich, we get an awareness of the impact of our early development on our
current being, the tendency to hold our feelings in our bodies through
tightening our muscles and constricting our energy flow, and the formation of
character structure. The field theorists have helped us to see our
interconnectedness, that we exist as part of our environmental field, and can
only be understood in relation to that field. The Gestalt psychologists have
demonstrated the holistic nature of our relationship with the world,
"Gestalt" referring to the whole
form or configuration which is greater than the
sum of its parts.
The existential roots of
Gestalt Therapy come especially through the work of the philosopher Martin Buber
and his emphasis on the "I-Thou" relationship. According to this view,
often now referred to as the "Dialogic" approach, it is within the
context of the healing relationship, in which the therapist practices
"presence", "inclusion" and the "IThou
attitude" that true healing takes place. Gestalt Therapy has in recent
years been moving strongly in the direction of emphasizing this powerful
therapeutic dialogue, as well as the importance of providing support for the
client during the therapeutic process. Combining the power of the healing
dialogue, in which the client can experience understanding and validation, with
directed awareness and appropriately designed "Gestalt experiments",
has enabled Gestalt Therapy to prove a highly effective approach to
psychotherapy.
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