Article

Coherence Therapy

Topic: Therapy and CounselingPublished July 30, 2008

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Coherence therapy is based on the premise that whatever difficulty you are having makes sense on a deeper emotional level. In other words, it is coherent and not a sign of dysfunction or irrationality. Discovering this hidden sense is the key to deep and lasting change.nnIt was developed by Bruce Ecker and Laurel Hulley in the 1990's as they sought to understand what makes certain therapy sessions so much more effective than others. They undertook a detailed study of all sessions that led to significant improvement in their clients and found that there were specific qualities that made them different. They found that in those sessions, the therapist did nothing to try to overpower the symptom or to make it stop. Instead, in each of these sessions, the client had a powerful experience that the symptom -- which had seemed so irrational and dysfunctional -- actually made sense on a deeper level. Aware of the hidden sense of the symptom, they experienced deep and lasting changes.nnWhile this approach may sound simple or even obvious, it is a significant departure from how most therapy is done. For the most part, the field of psychology currently looks at people and sees irrational thoughts, dysfunctional patterns and imbalanced chemicals. Coherence therapy understands that we are intelligent human beings coping with difficult circumstances in ways that always make sense, even if the sense is hidden at the start of therapy.nnEcker and Hulley took these principles and designed a way of doing therapy that aims to facilitate the kinds of experiences that create deep change from the first session. What they found is that their clients were able to improve much more quickly and consistently by using these new methods.nnRecently, there has been some research into how coherence therapy may work with the brain's own mechanisms for change. A newly discovered process called reconsolidationcould hold the key to understanding the brain's role in these transformative experiences. Neuroscientists believe that reconsolidation may occur when someone experiences two incompatible things to be true at the same time. When that happens, one of them is completely transformed to maintain internal consistency. Amazingly, this process was described by Ecker and Hulley several years earlier and called transformative juxtaposition. It is the basis for how change happens once the hidden sense of a symptom is discovered. For example, someone may discover that the purpose of his anxiety is to keep him safe. Once he has connected with that, it is now possible to experience "anxiety keeps me safe" and "anxiety doesn't keep me safe" as true at the same time. If there are no other complicating factors, "anxiety keeps mensafe" will completely cease to feel true or real, and the neural circuits storing it will be reconsolidated. If that was the only purpose he had for feeling anxious, then his anxiety would be gone as well. While there is a lot of evidence to support this conclusion, more research needs to be done to know for sure. nnMore information and phone counseling is available at www.coherencecounseling.com

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