Locus of Control in Adults Who Stutter

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Re: Internal Locus of Control and Emotional Intelligence

From: Orlin Baev
Date: 19 Oct 2007
Time: 12:31:32 -0500
Remote Name: 87.120.206.34

Comments

You are absolutely right! The therapy is two way interaction! One of the most important processes in the course of therapy is the transfer. Here I mean not only the standard psychoanalytic view on this subject, i.e. that the patient transfers his attitude toward authorities on the clinician. This is perfectly right, but transfer is something deeper. It is interchange between two cognitive, emotional and behavioral systems – and not only on pure verbal or body language level. There is something more – when I meet client, in the course of the therapy, I feel how our two energies connect in one mutual net. If someone reacts to this statement as an unusual, I would reply: “work out on your cognition, broad your mind and you will feel the same!” In respect of the clinicians LOC – if he is not internal, how could he aid his client in the process of gaining internal locus? It is rhetoric question (i.e. clear one, with no necessity of answer). And the internal locus without developed EI and IQ would be only harmful for the person himself (in the long run) and for the people around him.


Last changed: 10/23/07