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Carl Rogers

On Becoming a Person

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  • cecilia ceciliahas quoted6 years ago
    If I can create a relationship characterized on my part:

    by a genuineness and transparency, in which I am my real feelings;

    by a warm acceptance of and prizing of the other person as a separate individual;

    by a sensitive ability to see his world and himself as he sees them;

    Then the other individual in the relationship:

    will experience and understand aspects of himself which previously he has repressed;

    will find himself becoming better integrated, more able to function effectively;

    will become more similar to the person he would like to be;

    will be more self-directing and self-confident;

    will become more of a person, more unique and more self-expressive;

    will be more understanding, more acceptant of others;

    will be able to cope with the problems of life more adequately and more comfortably.
  • cecilia ceciliahas quoted6 years ago
    I was asking the question, How can I treat, or cure, or change this person? Now I would phrase the question in this way: How can I provide a relationship which this person may use for his own personal growth?
  • cecilia ceciliahas quoted6 years ago
    Yet the paradoxical aspect of my experience is that the more I am simply willing to be myself, in all this complexity of life and the more I am willing to understand and accept the realities in myself and in the other person, the more change seems to be stirred up. It is a very paradoxical thing—that to the degree that each one of us is willing to be himself, then he finds not only himself changing; but he finds that other people to whom he relates are also changing. At least this is a very vivid part of my experience, and one of the deepest things I think I have learned in my personal and professional life.
  • cecilia ceciliahas quoted6 years ago
    When someone expresses some feeling or attitude or belief, our tendency is, almost immediately, to feel “That’s right”; or “That’s stupid”; “That’s abnormal”; “That’s unreasonable”; “That’s incorrect”; “That’s not nice.” Very rarely do we permit ourselves to understand precisely what the meaning of his statement is to him. I believe this is because understanding is risky. If I let myself really understand another person, I might be changed by that understanding. And we all fear change. So as I say, it is not an easy thing to permit oneself to understand an individual, to enter thoroughly and completely and empathically into his frame of reference. It is also a rare thing.
  • cecilia ceciliahas quoted6 years ago
    that we cannot change, we cannot move away from what we are, until we thoroughly accept what we are. Then change seems to come about almost unnoticed.
  • cecilia ceciliahas quoted6 years ago
    I had been working with a highly intelligent mother whose boy was something of a hellion. The problem was clearly her early rejection of the boy, but over many interviews I could not help her to this insight. I drew her out, I gently pulled together the evidence she had given, trying to help her see the pattern. But we got nowhere. Finally I gave up. I told her that it seemed we had both tried, but we had failed, and that we might as well give up our contacts. She agreed. So we concluded the interview, shook hands, and she walked to the door of the office. Then she turned and asked, “Do you ever take adults for counseling here?” When I replied in the affirmative, she said, “Well then, I would like some help.” She came to the chair she had left, and began to pour out her despair about her marriage, her troubled relationship with her husband, her sense of failure and confusion, all very different from the sterile “case history” she had given before. Real therapy began then, and ultimately it was very successful.

    This incident was one of a number which helped me to experience the fact—only fully realized later—that it is the client who knows what hurts, what directions to go, what problems are crucial, what experiences have been deeply buried. It began to occur to me that unless I had a need to demonstrate my own cleverness and learning, I would do better to rely upon the client for the direction of movement in the process.
  • Noctilucent Cloudhas quoted7 years ago
    I used to feel that if I fulfilled all the outer conditions of trustworthiness—keeping appointments, respecting the confidential nature of the interviews, etc.—and if I acted consistently the same during the interviews, then this condition would be fulfilled. But experience drove home the fact that to act consistently acceptant, for example, if in fact I was feeling annoyed or skeptical or some other non-acceptant feeling, was certain in the long run to be perceived as inconsistent or untrustworthy. I have come to recognize that being trustworthy does not demand that I be rigidly consistent but that I be dependably real.
  • Noctilucent Cloudhas quoted7 years ago
    The therapist procedure which they had found most helpful was that the therapist clarified and openly stated feelings which the client had been approaching hazily and hesitantly.
  • Noctilucent Cloudhas quoted7 years ago
    most personal and unique in each one of us is probably the very element which would, if it were shared or expressed, speak most deeply to others
  • Noctilucent Cloudhas quoted7 years ago
    “In carrying on my own humble creative effort, I depend greatly upon that which I do not yet know, and upon that which I have not yet done.”
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