2 Types of Therapies
2 Types of Therapies
There are many different types of therapies or psychological methods used to alleviate problems. First, there are therapies that emphasize the value of gaining insight to personal problems. Then there are behavior therapies and cognitive therapies, which are used to directly change troublesome actions and thoughts. Two therapies I will be describing are rational-emotive behavior therapy and psychoanalysis.
According to author Dennis Coon of Introduction to Psychology, “Rational-emotive behavior therapy (REBT) attempts to change or remove irrational beliefs that cause emotional problems.” Albert Ellis states the basic idea of rational-emotive behavior is easy as ABC. He assumes that people become unhappy and develop self-defeating habits because they have unrealistic or faulty beliefs.
Ellis analyzes problems in this way: The letter A stands for an activating experience, which the person assumes to be the cause of C, an emotional consequence. For example, a person who is rejected (the activating experience) feels depressed, threatened, or hurt (the consequence). Rational-emotive therapy, however, shows that the real problem comes between A and C. In between is B, the patient’s unrealistic beliefs.
There are many irrational or unrealistic beliefs that we all tend to hold. For instance, certain people I must deal with are thoroughly bad and should be severely blamed and punished for. This could lead to “The old man next door is such a pain. I’m going to play my stereo even louder the next time he complains.” Another irrational belief is it is awful and upsetting when things are not the way I would very much like them to be. For example, “I should have gotten a B in that class. The teacher doesn’t like me.” Rational-emotive behavior therapy holds that events do not cause us to have feelings. We feel as we do because of our beliefs.
Psychoanalysis resolves internal conflicts that lead to emotional suffering. Because of the huge amounts of time and