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Existential Therapy
Rating: 3.3 out of 5(2 ratings)
6 students

Existential Therapy

Learn existential therapy approach
Last updated 6/2021
English

What you'll learn

  • Existential Therapy

Course content

1 section5 lectures30m total length
  • Existential Therapy i5:22

    Explore existential therapy as a philosophy-based approach to inner conflict, freedom and responsibility, and the givens of existence, focusing on the here and now and meaning beyond past events.

  • Existential Therapy ii5:00

    Explore four existential realms—physical, social, personal, and transcendence—and how each shapes reality, concerns, and meaning. Embrace freedom and responsibility, face anxiety, and live authentically with meaning.

  • Existential Therapy iii4:24

    In existential therapy, the past is used as a tool to promote freedom and assertiveness, helping clients release obligatory chains and discover meaning, self-awareness, and responsibility for recovery.

  • Existential Therapy iv6:01

    Existential therapy addresses basic human anxieties and issues like depression, anxiety, addiction, and PTSD, guiding meaningful, authentic choices and lasting change for those ready.

  • Existential Therapy v9:36

    Explore new existential therapy developments that integrate positive psychology and meaning therapy to foster personal growth, well-being, and meaning across physical, social, psychological, and spiritual dimensions.

Requirements

  • Psychology Background

Description

Existential therapy is a unique form of psychotherapy that looks to explore difficulties from a philosophical perspective.

Focusing on the human condition as a whole, existential therapy highlights our capacities and encourages us to take responsibility for our successes.

The roots of existential psychotherapy lie in philosophy from the 1800s, and more importantly with philosophers whose work dealt with human existence.

A key element of existential counselling is that it does not place emphasis on past events like some other therapy types.

Instead of putting blame on events from the past, however, existential counselling uses them as insight, becoming a tool to promote freedom and assertiveness.

The inner conflict stems from an individual's confrontation with the givens of existence:

•freedom and responsibility

•existential isolation

•meaninglessness

•death

People in therapy who are willing to explore the reasons for their intrapsychic conflicts and the decisions that led to their current circumstances can benefit greatly from existential psychotherapy.

There are many behavioral and mental health issues that may be successfully treated with this therapeutic approach, including depression, anxiety, substance dependency, and posttraumatic stress, interpersonal violence, or other life-threatening experiences.

For some individuals, pushing them into consideration of death, isolation, and meaninglessness may result in unintended consequences, including deep depression, suicidal thoughts, or even suicide attempts.

Similarly, an individual who is only looking for a quick fix to his or her current challenges may not be ready or willing to dive into such an intense form of therapy.

Who this course is for:

  • People who want to learn about existential therapy
  • psychology students