Very Bad Therapy

Ben Fineman and Caroline Wiita
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Feb 17, 2020 • 1h 4min

40. Exploring Bad LGBTQ+ Therapy (with Dr. Joe Kort)

Today’s guest Danny shares his outrageous experience of being told to urinate in a cup so his therapist could test if he was really gay. And that’s just the beginning of the story. We also speak with Dr. Joe Kort to explore best practices for working with the LGBTQ+ community, the need for humility and curiosity in a time of rapidly changing relationships to identity, and the diagnoses that stigmatize and marginalize members of this population. Thank you for listening. Support the show by becoming a monthly subscriber on Patreon to receive access to bonus episodes or by making a one-time contribution via PayPal. Show Notes: Donate to Teen Line Exploratory study on the role of emotion regulation in perceived valence, humour, and beneficial use of depressive internet memes in depression Conversion therapy (Wikipedia) Award-Winning Social Worker Caitlin Ryan Discusses Her Groundbreaking Research On Family Acceptance of LGBTQ Children Modern Sex Therapy Institutes LGBTQ Clients in Therapy: Clinical Issues and Treatment Strategies Dr. Joe Kort's website Very Bad Therapy: Website / Facebook / Tell Us Your Story
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Feb 10, 2020 • 51min

39. Making Sense of Mean Therapy

Today’s guest Kat shares her experience with a therapist who was unnecessarily cruel in her approach to treatment. In trying to make sense of this behavior, Carrie and Ben consider the research on how and when therapeutic relationships get fractured as a result of divergent interpretations of the same significant events in therapy. Thank you for listening. Support the show by becoming a monthly subscriber on Patreon to receive access to bonus episodes or by making a one-time contribution via PayPal. Show Notes: Donate to Save the Children Book Review: All Therapy Books Significant events in psychotherapy: An update of research findings The first sessions of psychotherapy: a qualitative meta-analysis of alliance formation processes Very Bad Therapy: Website / Facebook / Tell Us Your Story
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Feb 3, 2020 • 52min

38. VBT in History (1960s): The Gloria Tapes

In 1964, Dr. Everett Shostrom had a brilliant idea: record short videos of the same person receiving therapy from three top psychologists. These videos are colloquially referred to as the Gloria tapes, and the story behind the therapy is astounding. Coercion, human ashtrays, lawsuits, Fritz Perls being a massive jerk, and more! This is episode seven in our monthly look at bad therapy through the decades. Thank you for listening. Support the show by becoming a monthly subscriber on Patreon to receive access to bonus episodes or by making a one-time contribution via PayPal. Show Notes: The March of Time (Wikipedia) Stuff You Should Know: How Conversion Therapy Doesn't Work Three approaches to psychotherapy. All three sessions (1965) The Gloria Films: Candid answers to questions therapists ask most Who was Gloria? Decoding Gloria: an application of Langs' Communicative Approach (Part 1) Living with the Gloria Films: A daughter's memory The Patient Gloria review: Revisiting therapy as an exorcising scream Is psychology a sexist discipline? Reflections on The Patient Gloria Very Bad Therapy: Website / Facebook / Tell Us Your Story
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Jan 27, 2020 • 41min

37. You Can Be a Therapist for $16 (with Jordan Dunbar)

In the UK, anyone with $16 can become a certified psychotherapist and begin seeing clients immediately. If this sounds surprising, imagine how clients feel when they have a bad experience and realize their therapist is not governed by any regulatory body. BBC presenter Jordan Dunbar joins us to share his own stories of bad therapy and his surprising findings from investigating the lack of regulation around UK mental health services. Thank you for listening. Support the show by becoming a monthly subscriber on Patreon to receive access to bonus episodes or by making a one-time contribution via PayPal. Show Notes: Donate to Northern Ireland Hospice The Next Episode: Anyone Can Call Themselves A Therapist File on 4: The therapy business Psychotherapy Expertise Should Mean Superior Outcomes and Demonstrable Improvement Over Time Mind: for better mental health Very Bad Therapy: Website / Facebook / Tell Us Your Story
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Jan 20, 2020 • 38min

36. Please Renew Your License

In America, psychotherapist licensure requirements vary – often absurdly – from state to state. What does not vary is the need for periodic license renewal, an otherwise mundane fact that holds foreboding significance in our guest Dee’s story. Join us for a surprisingly interesting exploration of licensure requirements and the consequences of practicing without authorization. Thank you for listening. Support the show by becoming a monthly subscriber on Patreon to receive access to bonus episodes or by making a one-time contribution via PayPal. Show Notes: Donate to a LGBTQ+ Charity Three Decades Later: The Life Experiences and Mid-Life Functioning of 1980s Heavy Metal Groupies, Musicians, and Fans Survey Says Metalheads Least Likely to Have a Side Piece Licensure Requirements for Professional Counselors - 2010 Summary of License Requirements Understanding how counselors are regulated Very Bad Therapy: Website / Facebook / Tell Us Your Story
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Jan 13, 2020 • 55min

35. What is Pastoral Counseling? (with The Reverend Meredith Harber)

The exploitation of uneven power and emotional vulnerability is, of course, not limited to the field of psychotherapy. Today’s guest Megan shares her experience of very bad pastoral counseling, and we speak with the Reverend Meredith Harber to explore the nuances of Megan’s story and what proper pastoral care looks like with a contemporary understanding of power dynamics, boundaries, and gender norms. Thank you for listening. Support the show by becoming a monthly subscriber on Patreon to receive access to bonus episodes or by making a one-time contribution via PayPal. Show Notes: Donate to Solid Ground Better Results: Using Deliberate Practice to Improve Therapeutic Effectiveness Very Bad Therapy: Website / Facebook / Tell Us Your Story
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Jan 6, 2020 • 45min

34. VBT in History (1950s): The DSM-I and Thou

The first Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-I) was published with the intention of creating standardized language for mental abnormalities. It was also basically a war department bulletin. The controversial compendium is responsible for many important contributions to the fields of psychiatry and psychotherapy, but it also legitimized new forms of oppression and stigmatization in the name of normalizing judgments. This is part six of twelve monthly episodes revisiting bad therapy through the decades. Thank you for listening. Support the show by becoming a monthly subscriber on Patreon to receive access to bonus episodes or by making a one-time contribution via PayPal. Show Notes: Diagnostic and Statistical Manual: Mental Disorders (DSM-I) A brief historicity of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders: Issues and implications for the future of psychiatric canon and practice Sexual Sunday School: The DSM and the Gatekeeping of Morality Very Bad Therapy: Website / Facebook / Tell Us Your Story
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Dec 30, 2019 • 42min

33. Boundary Entanglements

Today’s story from T is a cautionary tale about a therapist causing harm by blurring boundaries around texting, personal space, and self-disclosure. Carrie and Ben attempt to hold space for T’s experience while seeking a middle ground in their differing perspectives about her therapist’s behavior. One thing is certain: if a therapist has a sexual dream about a client, the therapeutic relationship is not the place for processing. Thank you for listening. Support the show by becoming a monthly subscriber on Patreon to receive access to bonus episodes or by making a one-time contribution via PayPal. Show Notes: Very Bad Therapy: Website / Facebook / Tell Us Your Story
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Dec 23, 2019 • 39min

32. When No Therapy is Bad Therapy

The absence of evidence is not evidence of absence. In today's episode, the absence of bad therapy is indeed evidence of bad therapy as our guest Eric joins us to discuss the impact of showing up for multiple sessions only to discover that the therapist is nowhere to be found. Plus, we talk about therapists going to prison, cars exploding, and Ben unveils the six-word joke that will single-handedly change the future of psychotherapy. Thank you for listening. Support the show by becoming a monthly subscriber on Patreon to receive access to bonus episodes or by making a one-time contribution via PayPal. Show Notes: Donate to American Foundation for Suicide Prevention Humor Associated With Positive Outcomes in Individual Psychotherapy Very Bad Therapy: Website / Facebook / Tell Us Your Story
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Dec 16, 2019 • 43min

31. How Important is Therapist Attachment Style? (with Jon Hook)

Jon Hook, PhD student at Western Michigan University, is contributing to research on how the coding of session transcripts to determine therapist attachment styles can be used to facilitate better client outcomes. He joins us to discuss the significance of therapist attachment and shares his story as a client of two therapeutic alliances that were anything but securely attached. Show Notes: Support Very Bad Therapy on Patreon Donate to Sojourner Truth House Therapist Attachment-Related Behaviors and Their Effects on Psychotherapy Process and Outcome ResearchGate: Alessandro Talia / Eric Sauer / Jon Hook Division 29: Society for the Advancement of Psychotherapy Jon Hook on Twitter Very Bad Therapy: Website / Facebook / Tell Us Your Story

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