jillio
New Member
- Joined
- Jun 14, 2006
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whoa there, grummer! calmate! lot of therapists/counselors/psychologists do not have direct experience with the trauma but quite a handful of them do a damn good job counseling the victims/patients.
You ask - how can they effectively help people without having direct experience with the situation?
Answer - that's why they were intensively trained mostly by shadowing and tons of hand-on experience along with mentoring and in-depth education based on thousand years of knowledge & experience in human history.
IMO - I feel that therapists/counselors/psychologists cannot effectively counsel the patients/victims if they have direct experience with the situation because they will most likely be biased or even stray from the path. and that will cause harm to patient/victim. just IMO.....
You are absolutely correct that too close a relationship and/or experience can ruin the objectivity that is mandatory to treat effectively. One of the reasons we do not take family members or friends as clients, and why the code of ethics strictly forbids dual relationships.
What I really meant is what I said. Nothing more, nothing less.