Integration and Growth
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About this ebook
This book is written with two important goals in mind. One of the aims of the book is to introduce the Gestalt therapy approach and, while introducing it, to help the readers to be aware of their needs, wishes, the styles of contact they use in their relations, their unfinished businesses, their impasses, and their resistance to change. The second purpose of the book is to help those therapists in therapy training by presenting the theory and methods of the Gestalt approach with examples, and thus contribute to the raising of their therapeutic knowledge and skill levels.
Prof. Dr. Ceylan Das
Prof. Dr. Ceylan Das is a clinical psychologist and psychotherapist. She has given lectures in the psychology departments of universities for years, and she also has her private practice. She works with individuals, couples, as well as with groups. She started her Gestalt therapy training with Metanoia, England, and continued with different Gestalt Institutes in Europe and the USA. She is the president of Turkish Gestalt Therapy Association and the editor of Contact: Gestalt Therapy Journal.
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Integration and Growth - Prof. Dr. Ceylan Das
Copyright © 2014 by Prof. Dr. Ceylan Das.
Library of Congress Control Number: 2014919588
ISBN: Hardcover 978-1-5035-1165-1
Softcover 978-1-5035-1168-2
eBook 978-1-5035-1169-9
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Rev. date: 12/10/2014
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Contents
PREFACE
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
PART I INTRODUCTION
1 DEVELOPMENT AND FUNDAMENTALS OF THE GESTALT THERAPY APPROACH
The Development of the Gestalt Therapy Approach
Fundamentals of the Gestalt Therapy Approach
2 PSYCHOLOGICAL HEALTH
Characteristics of a Healthy Person
Factors Causing Mental Health Deterioration
Layers of Psychological Problems
The Goals of the Therapy
Clinical Applications
Group Practices
3 THERAPEUTIC RELATIONSHIP AND THE GESTALT THERAPIST
Characteristics of the Dialogic Relationship
Characteristics of the Gestalt Therapist
PART II BASIC CONCEPTS
4 AWARENESS
The Meaning of Awareness
Characteristics of Awareness
How to Work with Awareness in Therapy
5 NEEDS
Figure and Ground Relations
The Need-Satisfaction Cycle
Factors Preventing Need Satisfaction
6 UNFINISHED BUSINESS
The Meaning of Unfinished Business
Fixed Gestalt
The Consequences of Unfinished Business
How to Work with Unfinished Business in Therapy
7 CONTACT
Contact Is Experienced on the Contact Boundary between the Organism and Its Environment
Growth and Change Can Only Be Achieved through Contact
In Order to Achieve Good Contact, the Pathways of Contact Have to Be Open
For Good Contact, the Contact Boundary Must be Flexible and Permeable
Contact and Withdrawal Are a Rhythm
The Rhythm of Contact and Withdrawal Is Determined by the Styles of Contact
Both the Individual and the Environment Are Equally Responsible for Disrupting the Rhythm of Contact and Withdrawal
8 INTROJECTION
What Is Introjection?
The Advantages and Disadvantages of Introjection
The Basis of Introjection
Personality Characteristics of People Who Use Introjection as a Contact Style Frequently
How to Work with Introjection in Therapy
9 DESENSITIZATION
What Is Desensitization?
The Advantages and Disadvantages of Desensitization
The Basis of Desensitization
Personality Characteristics of People Who Use the Desensitization Contact Style Frequently
How to Work with Desensitization in Therapy
10 DEFLECTION
What Is Deflection?
The Advantages and Disadvantages of Deflection
The Basis of Deflection
Personality Characteristics of People Who Use the Deflection Style of Contact Frequently
How to Work with Deflection in Therapy
11 PROJECTION
What Is Projection?
The Advantages and Disadvantages of Projection
The Basis of Projection
Personality Characteristics of People Who Use the Projection Style of Contact Frequently
How to Work with Projection in Therapy
12 RETROFLECTION
What Is Retroflection?
The Advantages and Disadvantages of Retroflection
The Basis of Retroflection
Personality Characteristics of People Who Use the Retroflection Style of Contact Frequently
Physical Characteristics of People Who Use the Retroflection Style of Contact Frequently
How to Work with Retroflection in Therapy
13 EGOTISM
What Is Egotism?
The Advantages and Disadvantages of Egotism
The Basis of Egotism
Personality Characteristics of People Who Use Egotism as a Contact Style Frequently
How to Work with Egotism in Therapy
14 CONFLUENCE
What Is Confluence?
The Advantages and Disadvantages of Confluence
The Basis of Confluence
Personality Characteristics of People Who Use Confluence as a Style of Contact Frequently
Contact Patterns of People Who Frequently Use Confluence
How to Work with Confluence in Therapy
15 POLARITIES
The Gestalt Perspective on Polarities
How to Work with Polarities in Therapy
PART III APPLICATION
16 RESISTANCE
The Gestalt Approach Viewpoint on Resistance
Creative Adjustment
Paradoxical Theory of Change
Impasse
Creative Indifference
How to Work with Resistance in Therapy
17 BODY LANGUAGE
Fundamental Perspectives of Body Work
How to Work with Body Language in Therapy
How to Work with Body Reactions That Emerge in Therapy
Exploring the Meaning of Bodily Reactions in Therapy
How to Work with Physical Disturbances in Therapy
How to Work with Body Structure and Posture in Therapy
18 DREAMS
Meaning of Dreams
The Aims of Dreamwork
How to Work with Dreams in Therapy
19 A CASE PRESENTATION
The Case
The Story
Gestalt Diagnosis
DSM-IV Diagnosis
The Point of View of the Gestalt Therapy Approach to Personality Disorders
The Goals of Therapy and Issues to Be Considered in the Therapy of Personality Disorders
Therapy Process
REFERENCES
To my children: Ceren and Buğra
PREFACE
Integration and growth. The magic strength of the Gestalt therapy approach is hidden in these two vast words. One of my clients beautifully expressed this in the following lines:
I wanted to grow, to be strong
I was so alone in this big world
Small and in pieces
Afraid of being alive
And mostly of myself.
But I wanted to grow, to be strong
I first took a look at myself from a corner, hesitating
Then from another corner, shyly
The more I looked, the more I wanted to look
And I gathered whatever there is
I got rid of all that clutter
And I did put myself together, integrated.
I wanted to grow, to be strong
Then I looked at my loved ones
At the world which scared me
Looked at life and every living thing
The more I looked, the more I approached them
I saw them, they saw me
First we greeted each other, but it took a while
But then we hugged, oh so warmly
I gathered them and put them inside me
We are integrated
And suddenly I saw that what I wished for was now true…
I had grown.
(H. D.)
This book is written with two important goals in mind. One of the aims of the book is to introduce the Gestalt therapy approach and, while introducing it, to help readers to understand themselves better. The second purpose of the book is to help those therapists in therapy training by presenting the theory and methods of the Gestalt approach with examples, and thus contribute to the raising of their therapeutic knowledge and skill levels. In order to achieve these goals, I put this book together by going over the literature of Fritz Perls, the founder of the Gestalt therapy approach, by reviewing the contributions of his followers and those of contemporary Gestalt therapists and adding my own views and experiences.
I organized and explained the information according to my own gestalt,
born from the training I have had over a long period at various Gestalt institutes in the USA and Europe. In other words, the theoretical and methodical information included in this book reflects how I understand the Gestalt approach and how I practice it. In almost all sections of the book, the information given is supported by examples from daily life, from my clients, and from technical practices. However, the Gestalt therapy approach has such a rich technical repertoire that it was not possible to cover it all in this book. Furthermore, a detailed investigation of all methods and techniques is not the purpose of this book. The examples given regarding therapeutic interventions are based on work I have carried out with my clients over the years. However, with due respect for confidentiality, which is of utmost importance in psychotherapy work, and in accord with ethical rules, all names and all identifying characteristics of the sample cases have been changed. On the other hand, as the Gestalt therapy approach is focused on what is experienced in the here and now,
it was rather difficult to fully convey in words what really was experienced during therapy and in particular the nonverbal and bodily reactions. Furthermore, since Gestalt therapy approach is based on a people-to-people dialogue, the written narrative of a dialogic relationship also emerged as another difficulty.
The book is divided into three parts. The first, the introduction, includes sections such as the development and fundamentals of the Gestalt theory approach, psychological health, therapeutic relations and the Gestalt therapist. The section on the development and fundamentals of the Gestalt therapy approach covers how it has integrated various opinions within itself and how it regards the human from existentialist, phenomenological, and holistic points of view. According to the Gestalt perspective, healthy people can take their own responsibilities, can actualize themselves, and are authentic and mature. Moving on from these characteristics, the ultimate goal of the therapy is to create people who are able to meet their own needs and who are in harmony with their environment without obstructing their growth and development. In the later part of the psychological health section, information is given on how the Gestalt approach can be used for almost all psychological problems that may come to mind, as well as for personal development within individual, couple, family, or group therapy. In the section on therapeutic relations and the Gestalt therapist, the importance of a dialogue relationship during therapy, that is, a deep person-to-person relationship, is emphasized. Within this relationship, the Gestalt therapist reflects his/her own personality, creativity, knowledge, and existence onto the therapy and works with and for the client without judging, interpreting, or labeling them.
In the second part of the book, the basic concepts of the Gestalt approach and how these are used in therapy are covered. The first concept given in this part is awareness, which is like an inland sea a person can reach for whenever in trouble and where he/she can access the source of those troubles. This can be very hard at times, but every voyage taken on this sea has a cooling and invigorating effect. The most important thing to be aware of during such a journey is one’s needs. The more a person is aware of his/her needs, meets them as soon as possible and through the most appropriate means, the more he/she will feel happy, at peace, adequate, and safe. In the section entitled Needs,
the factors that prevent the satisfaction of needs and problems caused by the difficulties faced at different phases of the need-satisfaction cycle are discussed. One of the factors that prevent need satisfaction is unfinished business, which not only obstructs the meeting of a person’s current and new needs, but also leads to a number of psychological problems due to the failure to satisfy past needs. Unfinished business that is related to deep unmet needs causes the formation of fixed gestalts and affects the current existence of the person not only emotionally and mentally but also physically.
Another significant concept in terms of the Gestalt approach is contact. Its importance comes from the belief that a person can only integrate and grow through contact, by meeting him-/herself and the environment. The most important barriers that prevent the integration and growth of the person are the contact styles used in this meeting. Each of the styles of contact, which are called in the Gestalt approach introjection, desensitization, deflection, projection, retroflection, egotism, and confluence, is taken up in detail in separate sections, which cover the definition, the advantages and disadvantages, the basis of each contact style as well as the personality characteristics of people who use them frequently and how to work with them in therapy. Introjection, which forms the basis of the other styles of contact, is a way of contact that depends on the messages a person has taken from the environment while growing up, that is, on what information he/she has introjected. Introjects determine how the person regards the world and him-/herself. Desensitization, which is generally developed to enable the person to cope with highly traumatic experiences, leads to numbness in a person, preventing him/her from enjoying life, being happy and joyful. The next style of contact, deflection, by causing a person to reject positive or negative external reactions, while protecting him/her against negative reactions, also prevents that person from hearing and assimilating the positive ones. Projection means attributing the person’s unique characteristics, thoughts and feelings, whether or not he/she is aware of them, onto his/her environment. How we perceive the people and the environment around us is defined by our projections. In this sense, the people and the world around us are a projection screen that we have created according to our perceptions. A person who uses retroflection as a style of contact does not go to the environment to meet his/her needs and appears to have condemned him-/herself to meeting his/her needs on his/her own. While this in a way makes the person feel strong, when used chronically, it could make him/her feel lonely and eventually psychologically weakened as contact with the environment is blocked. In the style of contact known as egotism, instead of living his/her life as if watching a film based on his/her life where he/she has the leading role, a person focuses solely on the leading actor—him-/herself. Hence, people who use egotism frequently can find it very hard to go beyond themselves and contact others. People who try to contact through confluence do not behave like themselves. Since they greatly fear being alone, criticized, or excluded, they cannot put forward their own wishes and ideas, cannot say no to anybody, and do not own their needs. Since they lack the power for self-support, they continuously need the approval and support of others.
Integration of polarities is one of the primary goals of the Gestalt approach. In the section on polarities, it is mentioned that personality traits are located on a dimension with opposite traits at the different ends. The evaluation of these polarities, or personality traits, as positive or negative is not determined according to the values of society but according to the needs of the person and his/her environmental conditions. For this reason, the person has to claim the personality characteristics at both poles. Disclaimed poles lead to the emergence of inner conflicts that lead to neurotic symptoms.
The third part of the book emphasizes what should be taken into consideration in understanding humans and their integration and growth according to the Gestalt approach. In this part, which includes practice-oriented information, firstly the concept of resistance that obstructs growth and development is discussed. According to the Gestalt approach, resistance is not a situation that should be hastily and forcefully eliminated during therapy. On the contrary, it is a case that should be understood, investigated, and experienced. In the Gestalt approach, in order for the clients to be ready for growth and integration, they first of all need a therapist who accepts them as they are, including their resistances, and who respects them. Work on bodily reactions, physical complaints, body structure and posture—in short, work on body language—is very useful in recognizing impasses, unfinished business, creative adjustment, dysfunctional contact styles and polarities as well as resistances. The section on body language gives examples of methods that may be used during therapy and shows how integration of body, mind, and soul can be achieved.
According to the Gestalt approach, one of the paths to integration is dreams. Dreamwork is very important in therapy since dreams serve a purpose in the recognition of the rejected and disowned parts of the personality and their integration, the recognition of needs and the determination of existential messages, and the recognition and changing of unhealthy styles of contact in interpersonal relations. Hence, Gestalt therapy offers a wealth of methods for working with dreams. In a case presentation, which is the last subsection of the book, which maps could be used while diagnosing according to the Gestalt approach, the points that should be taken into consideration during therapy and the therapy process are explained through a real-life case.
The Gestalt therapy approach enables the achievement of highly impressive results in cases of numerous psychological problems. In the achievement of these successful results, the role of the various and creative methods it offers is significant. However, it should never be forgotten that the success of the Gestalt therapy approach is not merely dependent on the methods it offers. For the therapy to be successful, the therapist must have integrated the points of view and theoretical bases of the Gestalt approach into him-/herself. Therefore, unless the reader has completed Gestalt therapy training, gone through therapy him-/herself and had supervision for a sufficient period from a qualified Gestalt therapist, practicing these methods would be both extremely harmful and unethical.
Lastly, I hope that this book can contribute to your being more aware of yourself and those around you, to your integration with yourself and the world without judging or accusing, without feeling ashamed, scared or worried, and to exist as fully-grown and as you are.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
I first of all like to extend my sincere gratitude to my teachers at the Gestalt Therapy Center and Metanoia Institute in England, where I started my training, Petruska Clarkson, Talie-Levine Bar, Lynda Osborn, Sue Fisher, and my supervisors Todd Buttler and Marianne Fry, who supported and helped me in learning all the information and methods included in this book, integrating them and using them according to my personality, my past, and my culture. I would also like to thank my trainers at the Los Angeles Gestalt Therapy Institute during the later years of my training Robert and Rita Resnick, Todd Burley and Vernon de Riet. I am grateful for the support and help they gave at the last stage of my training, to Judith Hemming from the Systematic Training Center in England and to Anne Teachworth from New Orleans Therapy Institute in working with couples in therapy, to Ruella Frank in working with the body and to Ansel Wolt who generously helped in the work on Scale of Contact Styles mentioned in the book. Furthermore, my eternal thanks to my teacher and supervisor Paul Rebelliot, who is the founder of the San Francisco Gestalt and Existential Training School in whose work I participated with great admiration and who permitted me to practice the techniques he developed in Turkey and who supported me in developing my own.
I would like to thank from the depths of my heart and with all my sincerity to my clients who gave me the opportunity of practicing the knowledge and techniques I learned, who allowed me to be with them in their difficult moments, who put themselves forward as they were and who accepted me as I am, and to my students for encouraging me to write this book.
My thanks also go to my dear daughter Ceren and my son Buğra for the patience and understanding they showed during my studies. I am also really thankful to Aydan Erim who showed great care and attention in the translation of this book, to Robert West for his attentive efforts for the proofreading, and to Gözde Akkın for her creative designs and images.
PART I
INTRODUCTION
1
DEVELOPMENT AND FUNDAMENTALS OF THE GESTALT THERAPY APPROACH
Fritz (Frederick) Perls, Laura Perls, and Paul Goodman started to develop the Gestalt therapy approach in the 1940s. At the very start, some ambiguity was experienced concerning the title of this therapy approach. In his first book entitled Ego, Hunger and Aggression, Fritz Perls (1947/1992, 219) gave it the title of concentration
therapy, due to its especial focus on the process
and awareness.
Another suitable name suggested for this therapy approach was existential therapy
(Korb, Gorrell, and Van de Riet 1989, 1). However, toward the end of the 1940s, Fritz and Laura Perls attended a meeting held in New York along with other therapists who were working on this therapy approach at the time and decided on the name Gestalt therapy approach.
The influence of the perception studies conducted by Gestalt psychologists such as Wertheimer, Koffka, and Kohler and the holistic point of view of this approach were significant in the selection of the name (Estrup 2000). During this period, there were some who argued that the use of this name wasn’t completely appropriate, as Gestalt therapy approach and Gestalt psychology are two different disciplines. Despite such arguments, Fritz Perls did not forego this name, and later Yontef (1982) demonstrated that in terms of its philosophy, the fundamental methods of Gestalt therapy are based on the information collected from Gestalt psychology, and Wheeler (1998, 12–41) thoroughly examined the histories of Gestalt psychology and Gestalt therapy. The role of the perception studies of Gestalt psychologists on Gestalt psychotherapy theory will be given in more detail later in this chapter.
Gestalt is a German word and has no entirely accurate correspondence in English. For this reason, it is not possible to describe its meaning with a single word. Thus, Gestalt is a word for a complete pattern or configuration (Korb et al. 1989, 1). It represents a unified whole that cannot be broken without destroying its nature. In order to define Gestalt, three phenomena should be mentioned. The first of these is a thing (or person, animal, color or anything), the second is the context or environment in which this object is located, and the third is the relation between them.
1.jpgThe bride and groom cutting the wedding cake
2.jpgA woman cutting the carrot
3.jpgA woman stabbing a person
For example, as seen above, there are three different illustrations that include the same knife. Despite the presence of the same knife in each illustration, each constitutes a different gestalt, and the emotions, thoughts, and associations evoked by these different gestalts are consequently different. In other words, the knife in each illustration has a different meaning depending on its context and thus constitutes a different gestalt.
Just a short time after the publication of the book entitled Gestalt Therapy: Excitement and Growth in Human Psychology written jointly by Perls, Hefferline, and Goodman (1951), Fritz and Laura established the first Gestalt institute in New York. The second institute was established in Cleveland under the guidance of Fritz and Laura, and with contributions from Paul Goodman and Isodore From. The Gestalt therapy approach started to become popular in the 1960s with the studies of Perls in the Esalen Institute, California. Today, there are more than four hundred Gestalt institutes in the United States. Additionally, there are numerous Gestalt institutes or centers that provide therapy training in various countries of Europe, Asia, and even Australia. This approach is used in many parts of the world, and various meetings, conferences, and congresses are held on Gestalt therapy. In addition to that, there are Gestalt journals in Russian, French, German, Spanish, Norwegian, Portuguese, and Turkish as well as in English.
The Development of the Gestalt Therapy Approach
One of the most significant statements of field theory that constitutes the basis of the Gestalt approach is that the whole is always more than and different from the sum of its parts.
Parallel to that, the Gestalt approach has integrated a variety of therapy approaches, theories, and perspectives into itself and has consequently emerged as a more and different
approach. Fritz Perls’s acknowledgement of exciting ideas of his time and his intelligence in reorganizing these ideas were significant for the Gestalt approach’s taking inspiration from various opinions (Estrup 2000). Below, you may find how and by which ideas Perls was inspired when creating the Gestalt therapy approach. These are summarized using Perls (1969/1992), Clarkson and Mackewn (1993, 1–29), and Estrup (2000) as references.
Perls was born in Berlin on July 8, 1893, to a Jewish family as the third and youngest child. His childhood and youth passed in an environment where significant developments took place in fields of science such as physics, chemistry, physiology, as well as literature and peace. Perls began his university education in the Faculty of Medicine of Berlin University and joined the army upon the start of World War I. After the war, Perls continued his education and graduated as a neuropsychiatrist. During this period, Perls’s interest in the arts increased, and he met a variety of writers, poets, actors, actresses, dancers, and architects. These meetings led Perls to think that art, dance, and movement can be spontaneous and creative ways to express oneself, and later, he utilized them in his Gestalt therapy practices. In the meantime, Perls came across philosopher Sigmund Friedlander. Greatly impressed by his idea that opposites define each other and opposites have a resting point in the middle,
Perls integrated this idea into his theory in the following years.
Perls began his training in psychoanalysis with the effect of his first analyst, Karen Horney. Horney’s opinions on therapeutic relations also had an impact on Perls’s approach to dialogue. In the same period, Perls attended courses on Gestalt psychology. Thence, he deepened this knowledge of perception in the light of the studies of Gestalt psychologists such as Wertheimer, Koffka, and Köhler, and later, he utilized a set of main principles that stemmed from perception studies while developing his approach. One of the principles that Perls took into consideration was people merely perceive things that draw their attention and by giving a meaning to those things within a whole, they form a gestalt or a figure.
Perls was also influenced by Zeigarnik’s (1927) statement that people tend to remember the tasks they have not completed rather than the ones they have
and Ovsiankina’s (1928) statement that people have a tendency to complete unfinished tasks and make meaning out of incomplete information.
In that period, Perls met Goldstein, who was deeply interested in Gestalt psychology and ran studies on brain-injured soldiers. Being an academician, Goldstein (1939) discovered during his researches that any damaged part of the body affects the whole organism and that the organism as a whole is attempting to repair this damage; in other words, the organism as a whole is in search of actualizing itself. Perls, deeply inspired by the studies of Goldstein, adopted Goldstein’s opinions regarding self-actualization,
functioning of the organism as a whole,
and all parts of the organism being in relation to each other
in the development of his own theory.
While attending courses on Gestalt psychology, Perls met Lore Posner, who would be known as Laura Perls and would later be his wife. In those days, Lore was interested in existentialism and phenomenological methods and was working with existentialists such as Buber and Tillich and with Husserl, who was a phenomenologist. Later, Lore’s studies on existentialism and phenomenology had a considerable impact upon the future development of Gestalt therapy. Perls was also impressed by the existentialist perspective and introduced the concepts of freedom, responsibility, authenticity, and anxiety to Gestalt therapy. Furthermore, he incorporated both existentialist and phenomenological perspectives and gave a place to ideas that people have a tendency to give meaning to their lives,
that there is no single indisputable truth,
and truth may differ from person to person and from one perspective to another
in his approach.
Meanwhile, Perls completed his Freudian psychoanalysis training and got his degree. Although he believed that much of the philosophy and methods of psychoanalysis were ancient, he attached great importance to Freud’s opinions. Afterward, although he criticized, altered, and rejected some of Freud’s ideas, he used several of Freud’s opinions such as the organism, the living things are in search of a homeostatic balance,
neurosis and psychosis have a meaning for that person,
childhood has an influence upon adulthood behavior
while developing Gestalt therapy approach. Affected by the significance Freud gave to dreams, Perls added dreamwork to the Gestalt therapy approach, but his way of working with dreams was totally different than Freud’s. Perls was not only influenced by Freud but by many psychoanalysts, especially those who rejected orthodox psychoanalytical approaches. For example, he integrated into Gestalt practices the active techniques
of Ferenczi, the creative imagination techniques
of Jung, and the here and now
approach used by Otto Rank in dream studies.
All the way along, because of his training, Perls worked with a number of therapists and supervisors. One of them was Eugene Harnik. Believing in passive analysis, Harnik remained silent during much of their sessions. After one and a half years, Perls quit therapy, and soon after, he learned that his therapist had been diagnosed with paranoia. This negative experience had a tremendously adverse effect on Perl’s professional and philosophical development, which led him to question many aspects of psychoanalysis, especially those aspects of the analysis with Harnik, which he found very disturbing. He ended up with the opinion that in Gestalt therapy, the therapist–client relationship must be different to the relation in analysis and emphasized the importance of contact between the therapist and client. According to Perls, contact must be experienced fully in the therapy session and in the therapy room, or in other words, contact must be experienced in the here and now.
He also added that for good contact instead of interpreting,
phenomenological perspective must be used.
Following the disappointing experience with his former therapist, Perls began searching for a new therapist and, with the suggestion of his first therapist Horney, started working with Wilhelm Reich. Although Reich was a psychoanalyst, he was a critic of psychoanalysis, and he suggested that people store both emotional memories and the defenses against those memories in the form of muscular contractions and body armour. Perls, being greatly impressed with Reich’s ideas related to the body, decided to integrate his suggestions in his own therapy approach.
Laura and Fritz got married in 1929. In 1933, as Germany’s Nazi Party acquired more power and Hitler initiated genocide against the Jewish population, Perls was forced to seek refuge in Holland. Later, he and his family put down roots in South Africa where he and his wife established the first institute for psychoanalysis. In South Africa, Perls path crossed with Smutz who was the prime minister, an accomplished general and philosopher of that time, and was deeply impressed by his book Holism and Evolution. Moving on from the rules of physics, the book also encompassed Gestalt psychology and field theory and suggested that everything has a field
and things and organisms are unintelligible if considered without these fields.
Perls, focusing on ideas in the book such as all things are in an incessant process of creative change
and every living thing functions according to its structure and in a holistic way,
integrated them into his therapy approach.
Perls later took part in World War II, and following the war, he and his family moved to New York from South Africa. Subsequently, in New York, Fritz and Laura Perls started to run weekly training/therapy sessions on the therapy approach they had been developing and exchanged ideas with various therapists participating in the groups. During these sessions, Perls met Sullivan and highly appreciated his interpersonal psychoanalysis
movement. Sullivan’s ideas such as mental illnesses is a reaction to the events taking place between the person and his environment
and the most important factor for a successful therapy is the relationship between the therapist and the patient
played a significant role in Perls’s focusing on here and now
and addressing the relationship between the person and his environment as a whole. Weisz, whom he met during group sessions, was another important name for Perls. With Weisz’s influence, Perls started to gain interest in Zen Buddhism and realized remarkable similarities between his own opinions and those of Zen Buddhism. For instance, Perls’ here and now awareness
and the notion of mindfulness
in Zen Buddhism or his paradoxical theory of change
and the notion of paradox
in Zen Buddhism had much in common. Perls was also affected by Moreno, the founder of the psychodrama approach, who integrated psychology and drama and stressed the significance of encounter.
Impressed by techniques of psychodrama such as empty chair
and hot seat,
Perls incorporated them into his own therapy practice, but in the Gestalt approach, these techniques are used in a different way than they are in psychodrama.
Consequently, Fritz Perls harmonized all the mentioned viewpoints within his own approach and, together with Laura Perls and Paul Goodman, developed the Gestalt therapy approach. He continued to run workshops and training sessions in Vancouver Island, Canada, during the last years of his life and passed away on March 14, 1970, after a battle with pancreatic cancer.
As can be understood, the Gestalt therapy approach, starting with psychoanalysis, was influenced by various theories and viewpoints and was eventually structured on existentialist, holistic, and phenomenological bases. In order to be able to understand Gestalt therapy better, these three perspectives will be given in detail below.
Fundamentals of the Gestalt Therapy Approach
Existentialist Perspective
Laura Perls had an immense impact on the existentialist foundations of the Gestalt approach. The existentialist perspective can be summarized through the concepts of the life-death dilemma, the meaning of life, anxiety, and responsibility. All living things are born with two innate goals: the first is survival; and the second is growth (Perls 1973, 7). Each plant, animal, or human being is able to survive, grow, and develop when the appropriate conditions are met. Nonetheless, unlike other living beings, it is not predetermined in which direction human beings will grow. According to the existentialist perspective, life does not have a predetermined meaning. Individuals themselves have to give a meaning to their lives. In other words, one must take responsibility for one’s own existence (Smith 1977, 15) and decide in which direction he/she will develop and grow. Along with the responsibility of determining the meaning of their lives, individuals are also responsible for their feelings, the meanings they attribute to their experiences, and the ways they choose to cope with these experiences. Even though people do not have the freedom to choose their parents, the environment into which they are born, or the culture and conditions in which they grow up, they do have the freedom to choose what to accept or reject, how to think, how to feel, and what to do (Estrup 2000). Therefore, the existentialist perspective states that people are always capable of choosing and re-creating themselves.
According to the existentialist perspective all living things have the drive to actualize themselves, that is, to be as they are
and to reveal their existent potentials, characteristics and sides.
However, social values and prohibitions lead the person to deny, suppress, or be ashamed of his/her innate and idiosyncratic aspects (such as sexuality, anger, crying, etc.). This causes the individual to be alienated from him-/herself and leads the individual not to him-/herself but to his/her self-image. Thus the individual will end up not actualizing him-/herself but his/her self-image (Perls 1973, 99). Among all living things, only human beings strive to become
something they are not,
which is actually contradictory with raison d’être. The existentialist perspective suggests that all we need is to accept who we really are and face up to life and the situations around us authentically (Clarkson and Mackewn 1993, 38).
During self-actualization, people rediscover themselves continuously, or in other words, they become aware of their needs, their feelings, and their thoughts and they reshape their lives accordingly. As personal needs,