Q27.
How would you prioritise
the client and specific, localised, contextual issues over
inflexible, rule-based thinking? i.e. bottom up versus top down
thinking.
Learning ou1tcomes: 1.4
Student
answer
As
human beings we process information in different ways. In order to
work effectively with a client it is important to identify and
work with their own methods of information
processing. Two classic methods of these are top down and
bottom up processing.
Top
down processing is where the clients processing method is to start
with the global picture and subdivides it into sections in
order to understand
it.
An
example of this
would be a smoker
who states ‘I gave up smoking for 7 years. Then I went through a
relationship break-up and went to the pub with my friend. She gave
me a cigarette and that was it. I was smoking again’. As the
therapist I would examine this global statement as to its validity
– was it really just the one cigarette that undid those 7 years?
When did you next have a cigarette (because there must have been a
next cigarette for them to be a smoker).What does smoking mean to
you? What were your reasons for stopping? These would elicit
underlying detail (e.g. a defiant act against the ex-partner who
didn’t like the client smoking, a belief that smoking helps them
to relax….). The aim of this would be to shift from the global
statement to examining and addressing the more specific details.
Bottom
up processing is where the client processes information by
building up from the smaller details into a larger picture. This
is similar to how a jigsaw is built- from smaller pieces into a
bigger picture.
A
bottom up client may be very focussed on the precise details of
how they feel for example the need for a cigarette after a meal.
“I can’t not have a cigarette after a meal, it makes the food
taste better, it shows me that the meal has ended….” In this
scenario the client may well respond well to examining the detail
to build up the picture of being a smoker and to work with making
changes in a step wise manner e.g. no cigarette after a specific
meal- but may also benefit from shifting to a more top down
process of challenging with a more global statement –‘what
every single time you eat? Anything at all?’ “Are there every
any occasions in which you don’t smoke after eating. How do you
manage those occasions..” The aim would be top shift from
specifics to a wider perception where the detail can be
challenged. However if the client is adamant that they do smoke
after every single morsel or food, it may be worth changing
direction as this could become a false focus. In this circumstance
the therapist could change to looking at strategies – what could
you do instead? How else could you know that the meal has ended?
(LO 1.4
Prioritising the client and specific, localised, contextual issues
over inflexible rule-based thinking (i.e. 'bottom-up' versus
'top-down' thinking).
|
Tutor
feedback (DO NOT delete/edit feedback. Write amendments,
additional information & thoughts underneath this table)
Correct.
You have prioritised the client and brought them to their own
particular experience and map of the world. I enjoy your metaphor
of the jigsaw and can envisage you using that one in an
Ericksonian approach. The returning smoker example is a very
valid one and I hope you get many opportunities to put it to good
use as it is a common dilemma. Your ability to switch focus from
one mode of thinking to another in order to help a person process,
will serve you well in your engagement with clients and also with
friends.
|
Further Example Student Answer: All
clients will have their own standard way of thinking and processing
their life, the hypnotist must identify which processes the client
utilises and ensure they use a hypnotic/therapeutic process that
compliments the client.
The
top down client sees the big picture/situation first and then has to
break it right down to understand the finer details/workings of the
situation whilst the bottom up thinking client sees the small details
first and builds upon them to create the bigger picture.
To
work with a top down client you would have to get them to accept more
generalised suggestions, a process which would work well for a top
down thinker is for general suggestions to be given and then to let
their sub-conscious mind make the changes necessary to bring about
the outcome they desire, utilising the Future paced process would
allow them to just focus on the bigger picture or end result and
allow the sub-conscious mind to work out the route to achieve the
desired overall changes.
Where
as the bottom up client would respond better to smaller suggestions
that lead to the overall required outcome such as slow your breathing
and notice how relaxed you become leading to a reduction in stress,
utilising the new behaviour generator would work well for them as
they do not need to be bothered with the end outcome consciously but
to concentrate on the small changes which eventually results in the
desired changes to the bigger picture.
One
of the first challenges for the hypnotist is to identify the clients’
style of thinking and working out the best process for them, whilst
keeping in mind the stated outcomes the client has requested.
Q27.
Correct. Additional to this however, it is importance to recognise
the value of working with swapping these constructs around. For
example, when a client thinks themselves 'fat' at an identity level,
believing that fat is very difficult to shift after the age of forty,
this is an example of inflexible top down rule-based thinking
programmed into the client. Encouraging them to swap to bottom up
thinking could serve them well. For example, 'Yes, I understand you
are saying your particular body has built up some reserve of excess
energy at the moment and you would prefer that energy to be used up
and shifted from your body. Maybe a deeper level of thinking about
your own specific circumstances can encourage an experiment to change
to how you live your life every day and what you may be able to do to
use up some of that energy or reduce the amount of energy that is
ingested into the body so that this situation is addressed and is
more under your own personal control.'
No comments:
Post a Comment