| What is Provocative Therapy |
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What is Provocative Therapy?
Provocative Therapy is a system of psychotherapy in which the therapist plays the devil's advocate, siding with the negative half of the client's ambivalence toward his life's goals, his relationships, work and the structures within which he lives. The therapist also plays the Satanic role by facetiously agreeing with the doom and gloom feelings and expectations of the client, and "tempting" him to continue his "sinning," his self-defeating attitudes and behavioral patterns. The purpose of this therapy is to change the client. One of the therapist's main tools to implement this change is warm-hearted humor in its varied forms -- exaggeration, irony, self-deprecation, Daliesque absurdities, etc. With a twinkle in his eye, a smile playing about his lips, and genially employing the style of affectionate banter between friends, the therapist uses humor both to sensitize and desensitize the client to problematic cognitive, affective, and behavioral patterns. This is the key to Provocative Therapy -- humor. Jocular, whimsical, caring, supportive humor. The root meaning of provocative is pro + vocare, to "call out", and there are five different types of behaviors that are "called out" in the client in this approach. Every single interview with every single client does not elicit all five of these, but each interview with each client demonstrates at least some of these five.
This thumbnail sketch does not pretend to answer all questions about Provocative Therapy. For a full explanation of this system, the reader is referred to the book Provocative Therapy, with its seventy-three case examples. Watch an interview with Frank on what Provocative Therapy is: |
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