Greenberg's emotion-focused therapy combines elements of:
a. interpersonal and Gestalt therapy . c. experiential and Gestalt therapy.
b. Gestalt and existential therapy. d. Gestalt and person-centered therapy.
Q. 2At this point in time, the most researched and influential experiential therapy is:
a. Gestalt therapy. c. sensate-focusing therapy.
b. emotion-focused therapy. d. present-centered therapy.
Q. 3Gendlin's method of helping clients to turn their attention inward to their bodies, label their feelings, and recognize their felt meanings is known as the:
a. acceptance method. c. process-experiential method.
b. Gestalt method. d. focusing method.
Q. 4The defining and primary focus of experiential therapies is therapeutic experiencing of a client's:
a. relationships. c. emotions.
b. phobic behaviors. d. thoughts and memories.
Q. 5The most recent considerations of the Gestalt therapy relationship have highlighted Perls' concept of authentic contact, by which is meant:
a. the genuine confrontation and frustration of client defenses.
b. use of unconditional positive regard.
c. the creation of safe emergencies that support catharsis.
d. sensitive attunement to differences between the existences of client and therapist.
Q. 6According to gestalt therapy, the therapeutic relationship is part of:
a. both the content and the process of therapy.
b. neither the content nor the process of therapy.
c. the content of therapy but not the process of therapy.
d. the process of therapy, but not the content of therapy.
Q. 7A criticism that the gestalt approach is certainly dangerous with patients who are barely able to hold onto their sanity, let alone able to be mature, self-supporting, whole human beings would be leveled by:
a. cognitive therapy.
b. contextual therapy.
c. person-centered therapy.
d. psychoanalysis.