What about suicide then?
The actualising tendency, in my experience, is a soft target from other modalities and oftentimes a perplexing concept for those who are studying and practicing as PC professionals.
Where is it then?
Indeed, I would argue that poor training around this is the main reason that nominally or one-time PC practitioners veer away from or ultimately discredit the approach as a whole.
No, seriously, why do some people kill themselves then?
This workshop, Person-Centred 101 if you will, will seek to revisit and further your understanding and engagement with this vital and foundational construct. Both classic – whatever that might mean to you – and post-Rogerian thinking will be covered, veering away from needless abstraction and making this directly applicable to your client work.
As such, this workshop may appeal to:
- PCA therapists looking to integrate the Actualising Tendency more confidently into their everyday practice
- PCA trainers looking to refine their engagement with and delivery of theory
- Anyone interested in connecting with the core philosophy of the PCA in a non-psychobabbling, accessible manner
- Theory obsessives (such as myself).
This is the first part of a series of Person-Centred Fundamentals I am offering, a review and broadening of the key components of Person-Centred Theory for specialists and non-specialists alike.
Learning Objective Participants Can Expect From This Event
- Reconnecting with the core principle of the PCA – the Actualising Tendency
- Appreciating the ongoing relevance of the Actualising Tendency to practice
- Awareness of the post-Rogerian developments in furthering understanding of the Actualising Tendency
How May This Workshop Impact Your Practice?
- I want to demystify the Actualising Tendency and demonstrate its fundamental application to *all* that we do as PC therapists
Course Content
Presenter
Jonno is Director of Training at Counselling Training the Midlands, a Nottingham-based Person-Centred training organisation.
He’s delivered counselling training, conference speeches and CPD nationally and internationally, and as a theory nerd his research interests include the core, clinical philosophy of the Person-Centred Approach as well as how multidisciplinarity across the natural and social sciences can inform counselling training and practice.
On a more personal note, he was once hit by lightning, and has swum in both polar regions. He would definitely recommend the latter over the former.