sired outcome can be planned for during the therapeutic process, it follows that some therapy work that involves transpersonal interaction may have special utility for the client.
Corey's description of the place of theory in the training and education of psychotherapists is a useful point of departure for developing a philosophy of group counseling. He disagrees with the view of theory "as a rigid structure that prescribes step by step what to do in specific situations" and instead views theory "as a set of general guidelines that you can use in your practice . . . a map that provides direction and guidance in examining your basic assumptions about human beings" (2000, p. 57). That description implies that a therapist need not be a disciple or adherent of one particular school of thought about the best way to function productively in any helping profession. Further, the whole field of psychological counseling has been nothing so much as a shifting and evolving landscape.
Of particular relevance to the evolving land
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