PROBLEMS OF CLIENT
1. Lack of confidence,
feeling lethargy
; Meaninglessness, Existential guilt
2.Being afraid of meeting
people
; Existential isolation, Deprivation oriented relationship, Hyper reflection
Set counseling goal
realize his existential state and the need of isolation.
overcome his past sufferings / admit himself being free and responsible for his life
2. Directive 지배적
-Jackie hornby, an existential therapist, describes van Deurzen’s challenges as ‘very directive’ and writes that she does seems surprisingly anxious to teach this client something’
-Laura, one of her client, said ‘I felt an ideology was being conveyed to me’
3. Limited range of outlooks
-tend to promote an existential outlook on life over and above such a
accept this fact of the universe. This calls for many things, the first of which being a disbelief in God-to Hemingway, such faith was a cheap way of falsely instilling order upon existence (this is where the priest falls short). Because there is no God, there are no universal moral codes, no abstract values such as "justice" or "glory," and certainly no need for moral conventions. The code hero
accepted
By his family and friends,
There were a few drawbacks
To being, uh, a human in, uh an elfs world.
[Music plays chattering]
Hey, Ming Ming.
Um...
Im gonna be a little bit short on todays quota.
Its all right, buddy.
Just how many etch-a-sketches
Did you get finished?
Come on, buddy. How many?
I made, uh... 85.
Eighty-five?
That puts you...
915 off the pace.
[Female elf:] O
Advanced
GENERALIST SOCIAL WORK PRACTICE
by David S. Derezotes
PART V. PROFESSIONAL SELF-DEVELOPMENT
< 목 차 >
PART V Introduction
Professional Self-Development
Chapter 16. Affective Development
Self-Awareness
Self-Acceptance
The Capacity to Feel
Chapter 17. Physical and Spiritual Development
Physical Dimension
Spiritual Development
Moral Development
Chapter 18. Cognitive and Social Developmen