Gestalts Therapy In The 1940's

1131 Words5 Pages

Fritz and Laura Perls are responsible for the establishing of gestalt treatment in the 1940's. From that point on, Gestalt has contributed fundamentally to the field of psychotherapy, advising, and self-improvement. At the point when specialist develops this technique, his or her definitive point is to guarantee the customer accomplishes self-awareness and advancement. To achieve this result, gestalt uses existential rationality and phenomenology. This type of treatment expects to enable the patient to utilize his inner and outer faculties for the motivations behind creating moral duty and a self-strong framework. This reflective paper will expound on the goals of the Gestalt Theory and how its goal is to realize new mindfulness so that move …show more content…

The Now approach which emphasis on learning to appreciate and fully experience the present moment. To place your focus on your past or future can be a way to avoid coming to terms with the present. As quoted by Polster & Polster (1973)states, “power is in the present” which means as a client waste their energy in focusing towards what was or could have been or live in a dream of what can happen in their future allows the power of the present to diminish and go away. We look at the approach of unfinished business which emerges from the background but are not completed ad resolved, therefore, individuals are left with unfinished business. This approach tends to manifest in unexpressed negative such as hate, pain, resentment and anxiety, etc. (Corey, 2015).Unfinished business is not designed for the therapist to rescue the client from his experiences but to acknowledge the feelings that have baggage and learn to deal with them and hopefully get rid of them. It is stated by (Conyne, 2015), that when energy is blocked, it may result in unfinished business, Gestalt therapy gives special attention where energy is located, how it is implemented or used and how it is blocked. As the therapist is to help the client find the focus of interrupted energy, identify ways in which they are blocking energy, and transform this energy into more adaptive this form of behavior. (Corey, G.,