Do’s and Don’ts For a Competent Therapist
Do’s
Don’ts
Source: William J. Doherty, Take Back Your Marriage: Sticking Together in a World That Pulls Us Apart. New York: Guilford Press, 2001.
Do’s
- The therapist is caring and compassionate to both of you.
- The therapist actively tries to help your marriage and communicates hope that you solve your marital problems. This goes beyond just clarifying your problems.
- The therapist is active in structuring the session.
- The therapist offers reasonable and helpful perspectives to help you understand the sources of your problems.
- The therapist challenges each of you about your contributions to the problems and about your capacity to make individual changes to resolve the problems.
- The therapist offers specific strategies for changing your relationship, and coaches you on how to use them.
- The therapist is alert to individual matters such as depression, alcoholism, and medical illness that might be influencing your marital problems.
- The therapist is alert to the problem of physical abuse and assesses whether there is danger to one of the spouses.
Don’ts
- The therapist does not take sides.
- The therapist does not permit you and your spouse to interrupt each other, talk over each other, or speak for the other person.
- The therapist does not let you and your spouse engage in repeated angry exchanges during the session.
- Although the therapist may explore how your family-of-origin backgrounds influence your problems, the focus is on how to deal with your current marital problems rather than just on insight into how you developed these problems.
- The therapist does not assume that there are certain ways that men and women should behave according to their gender in marriage.
Source: William J. Doherty, Take Back Your Marriage: Sticking Together in a World That Pulls Us Apart. New York: Guilford Press, 2001.