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  1. Aug 3, 2021 · Countertransference is a phenomenon that occurs within the context of psychotherapy. Sigmund Freud first termed the term countertransference in the early 1900s.

  2. Aug 9, 2023 · Countertransference is a psychological phenomenon that occurs when a clinician lets their own feelings shape the way they interact with or react to their client in therapy. Often, countertransference is unconscious, and both the clinician nor the client realizes it is happening. Countertransference is an important reminder that therapists are ...

  3. Nov 20, 2023 · The American Psychological Association (APA) defines countertransference as a reaction to the client or client's transference, which is when the client projects their own conflicts onto the therapist. Transference is a normal part of psychodynamic therapy. However, it's the therapist’s job to recognize countertransference and do what's ...

  4. Feb 19, 2024 · Countertransference may create a conflict of interest that impedes the professional’s ability to remain unbiased or objective. Practitioners can get wrapped up in their own emotional and personal issues, which interferes with the ability to provide effective treatment and impartial judgement.

  5. Sep 25, 2019 · Countertransference, which occurs when a therapist transfers emotions to a person in therapy, is often a reaction to transference, a phenomenon in which the person in treatment redirects feelings ...

  6. Neurotic countertransference is more about the therapist's unresolved personal issues, while countertransference proper is a more balanced and clinically useful response. This differentiation has been widely accepted across various psychoanalytic schools, though some, like followers of Jacques Lacan, view countertransference as a form of resistance, potentially the most significant resistance ...

  7. Nov 6, 2023 · Countertransference arises when a therapist experiences an emotional reaction toward a client. Generally, countertransference in therapy does not pose a problem if the therapist is aware of these responses and prevents them from interfering with sessions. However, problematic and potentially harmful behavior can occur with unchecked countertransference.

  8. Mar 24, 2010 · More often, though, countertransference is problematic when it is negative. The therapist feels bored, irked, paralyzed, or contemptuous in the presence of a particular patient.It is the therapist ...

  9. Aug 11, 2022 · Introduction. Comparing current and past experiences is automatic and mostly unconscious. 1 Thus, transference and countertransference reactions present valuable sources of information about the individual’s inner world, either a patient, a therapist or a supervisor 2, 3, 4, 56.Examining the supervisee’s countertransference is a crucial but delicate part of the supervision process. 5 ...

  10. Mar 24, 2010 · To understand countertransference, it helps to tackle transference first. Transference was a word coined by Sigmund Freud to label the way patients "transfer" feelings from important persons in ...