09.04.2024 Views

The Brief Therapy Toolkit Ebook V9

Welcome to the "Brief Therapy Toolkit" eBook. This book is crafted as a concise reference guide, complementing my training course under the same title. My goal is to distill the powerful principles of solution-focused brief therapy and tailor them specifically for you, the youth worker. By deconstructing the methodology, we aim to reconstruct it in a manner that transitions seamlessly from the therapy room to your youth club, school, or children's home. As a youth worker, you are often the first point of contact in times of crisis. Armed with these tools, you will gain confidence in your approach and be better equipped to make a difference.

Welcome to the "Brief Therapy Toolkit" eBook. This book is crafted as a concise reference guide, complementing my training course under the same title. My goal is to distill the powerful principles of solution-focused brief therapy and tailor them specifically for you, the youth worker. By deconstructing the methodology, we aim to reconstruct it in a manner that transitions seamlessly from the therapy room to your youth club, school, or children's home. As a youth worker, you are often the first point of contact in times of crisis. Armed with these tools, you will gain confidence in your approach and be better equipped to make a difference.

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How can you work with a client who is not willing to<br />

co-operate or cannot see his own problems when<br />

everyone else can?<br />

If it ain’t broke don’t fix it. Some things that appear as<br />

major issues for one professional may just be everyday life<br />

for the client. However, it would be worth asking why the<br />

client is here assuming he is not bound and gagged and<br />

delivered like a parcel. If he had to attend then where<br />

would he have to be before his social worker or YOT worker<br />

feels he does not have to attend again.<br />

In a world of the free will there must be some motivation to<br />

do everything even if it is something you don’t want to do.<br />

How do you know when your work with a client is<br />

finished?<br />

<strong>The</strong> client will be the judge of when they no longer feel the<br />

need to attend the sessions. However, the therapist is<br />

constantly pushing the client away anyway. <strong>The</strong> average<br />

time period is six sessions not six weeks. <strong>The</strong> most<br />

productive has shown to be 3 to 5 sessions.

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