Wednesday, June 10, 2009
Updated:



In recent years Existential – Phenomenology has been recognised as one of the principal
paradigmatic bases within British Counselling Psychology – creating a valid pathway
for training in Existential Counselling Psychology with the British Psychological
Society (BPS) and part of the pathway to becoming registered with the United Kingdom
Council for Psychotherapy (UKCP). The Existential -
The information provided below is intended for the casual visitor and for those who
are looking for a Counsellor or Psychotherapist -
Professional Counsellors and Psychotherapists reading this, who feel that the following tentative descriptions can be improved, are welcome to send their feedback by following the link in the side bar.
While some Existential – Phenomenological Counsellors and Psychotherapists work exclusively through the medium of Dialogue – what is commonly know as talking therapy – many others incorporate wider experiential practices and techniques, such as Mindfulness, Meditation, Focusing and / or Body Work Exercises. There are however, a number of characteristics that distinguishes the Existential approach from other modes of therapy.
As with its philosophical history, Existential – Phenomenology takes the human condition
in all its wondrous manifestations as the focus of investigation. Existential – Phenomenology
emphasises the unfolding nature of human experience and brings a curiosity to what
it means to be human. Its aim is to reveal the way in which each individual comes
to understand and construct his or her particular way of being – the way in which
we create our own lives and selves by the way we live and come to understand the
world. One of the key aims of Existential – Phenomenology is to facilitate a process
of reflection and description that reveals with ever more detail and clarity the
meaning that arises from our lived experience. We are not trying to merely explain
‘why’ things happen to be the way they are, but instead to describe ‘how’ we find
ourselves to be -
Another key element of Existential – Phenomenology, as an approach to therapy, is
that it emphasises the fundamentally relational aspect of being human -
Existential – Phenomenology calls attention to the hidden processes that occur between people – the intersubjective nature of our relationships. It may also explore the nature of the anxiety we experience as we face our lives – as might the limits to what can be known for certain in our lives. As such, Existential – Phenomenology endeavours to understand the way we come to construct an understanding of the world – our worldview.
Existential – Phenomenological Counselling and Psychotherapy is open to the exploration
of our sense of ethics, morality and issues of human freedom and facticity -
Existential – Phenomenological Counselling and Psychotherapy is often seen as challenging
the assumptions made by mainstream therapeutic models -
There is a basic assumption to all therapy that states that there are good reasons
for the way people adapt and behave as human beings in the face of difficult, challenging
and traumatic experiences – even when initially the thoughts and behaviours can seem
nonsensical, self defeating and even destructive. Another assumption being made in
therapy is that there is something we can learn from the process of reflecting upon
both our individual and shared experience of existence -
Existential – Phenomenological Counselling and Psychotherapy explores the way we
encounter issues of our own freedom and examines the role of personal choice within
our lives. For example – Do we as individuals consciously and intentionally choose
the things that we are either passionate or fearful of -
Existential -
If you are looking for a therapeutic approach that engages with and challenges you
to explore and reflect on your personal history, your way of being and your personal
philosophy of life -
Find a professionally trained Existential – Phenomenological Counsellor or Psychotherapist in your local area.
Please feel free to contact us if you require any further information about Existential Analysis or would like to provide feedback about any of the content on this website:
info@existentialanalysis.co.uk
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The SEA is a Registered Charity
No. 1039274
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Existential Analysis is perhaps best known for its developments in the field of Counselling
and Psychotherapy. One of the great challenges for practitioners and those involved
with Existential Analysis is to provide a simple description of the approach. What
makes this task so difficult is that the Existential approach has an incredibly diverse
philosophical history -
Existential Analysis in its simplest form is more than a set of rules, theories and procedures for providing therapy – it is a way of being that is embodied and is experiential in nature.
Below are some examples of the kind of themes that Existential Analysis may help us to reflect on and clarify in order to understand the context of the problems and challenges we face as human beings – you will also find a further description of what Existential Analysis is about:
· What does it mean to be alive?
· What are the possibilities that my life presents me with?
· What is my relationship to myself, to other people and the world in general?
· What are my responsibilities to myself and to other people?
· What do I value and cherish dearly?
· What is the nature of the anxiety that I experience in my life?
· What are the assumptions and attributions that underpin my thoughts and actions?
· What are the contradictions, discrepancies and paradoxes that occur in my everyday life?
· What is my worldview – the way that I have constructed the story of my life?
· What is my true potential?
· What would it be like to choose my own way of living?