As anyone knows who has played that silly "whisper in the ear game" as kids. (dont know its name in English) There is only one way to know the intention, and what was actually said and that is to ask the person who intended and who said it. Therefore, we do not know the therapists intention, or what she actually said. We know that what she did, didnt work for this client, because the client has told us personally. We know the client felt burdened by the disclosure, and took on a responsibility that did not belong with the client. (ie balancing the needs of the therapist with his or her own needs). For the therapy to successfully proceed the client will need to give that responsibility back to the therapist, and hopefully negotiate a better way of handling similar situations in the future. There are many possible interpretations of why the therapist did it, and there are many variations on how the client "could" have reacted to it. Da Friendly Puter Tech
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