RE: Understanding Psychotherapy: A Brief Introduction by dysfunctional
Viewing a response to: @dysfunctional/understanding-psychotherapy-a-brief-introduction
psychology·@alexander.alexis·
0.000 HBDCriminal psychologist! Interesting! A [Mindhunter](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mindhunter_(TV_series)) type of fella? --- Always in these types of posts the same question comes to mind: what qualifies as an *issue*? The way I see it, the only thing that designates something as being an issue, is the client himself comes to the therapist asking for assistance. It's like me going to the grocery store to buy tomatoes. The teller is not going to question my need for tomatoes. My being there almost by definition means I need tomatoes. The whole relationship evolves from that. But I think most people who are in need of therapists do not go to therapy. For example, scenario 1: it takes a person longer than 6 months to get over a depression caused by the departure of a loved one. Most therapists will say that qualifies as a reason to pay a visit to therapist. Scenario 2: A person pays 20 dollars to buy more lives on candy crash or whatever, instead of spending that money to buy vaccines for Africans. A therapist could be sitting in the room hearing me telling this story, and he wouldn't flinch an eyebrow, much less recommend that that person should go to a therapist and have his head examined. Same for organized religion: the mere fact that it's a shared delusion means you're fine, you don't need a therapist. So I always found the subjectivity of what we consider an 'issue' or an 'illness' quite interesting.