That Hot Fuzz reference was amazing LOL This was amazingly done. Very informative, thorough, well-communicated and nicely edited. Thank you! I had been looking for a clear description of psychodynamic therapy, so this was really helpful. I may have to check out more of your videos~
this is cool! a lot of my classmates only focuses on Freud when they're analysing psychodynamics, most of them overlooked the fact that lots of important people have contributed to this school of thought!! nice work
Currently in my first MFT online class and it has been interesting to say the least. I am naturally and creative and I learn hands on. This was so informative and intriguing. The flow compliments what I'm reading and helped me understand the entire concept in 12 minutes. Thank you so much!
Hold on, I came here to get information on Psychodynamic therapy and I am seeing Xbox games and the Triforce in the video???? I think I am going to cry, I salute this individual who thought of this!!!
I'm not so sure about inferiority defining what we strive for. I've been told that I'm smart from a young age. I always enjoyed impressing adults with my thinking skills. Today I'm a scientist.
Yeah, the theory definitely hinges on the personal experience of Adler rather than empirical data. However, I do think that inferiorities do influence us...just maybe not always motivate us to strive in that domain.
hi Micah, thank you! this is such an amazing video. just another suggestion. would you make a video about theory of personality disorders? that would be great :D
Correct me if I'm wrong but...isn't this Adlerian therapy not Psychodynamic therapy? Carl Jung and other neo-Freudians created the Psychodynamic theory, but the whole superiority/inferiority thing was made by Alfred and is called Adlerian Therapy...right..?
At 10:00, isn't that solution more behavioral or CBT than psychoanalytic or psychodynamic? Wouldn't addressing the core causes of the sense of inferiority, inability to act, indecisiveness, self-debasement, etc. be more useful over the long-term as opposed to suggestions aimed at changing behavior? If she has a self-defeating schema and is suggested to act like somebody that she doesn't think she is, will the sense of deceiving herself be eradicated through behavioral rewards, or will she know internally that the core emotions that caused her issues in the first place remain and still cause psychological distress? If unaddressed childhood stress, trauma, or memories are not dealt with, won't they still lie dormant as psychopathological energy?
Studying for my BBS LMFT. Thought the video on Adlerian therapy was excellent! Adlerian therapy is, as you note one form of Psychodynamic Therapy and preferred throughout referenced as Adlerian. One other note. The common Factor model seems to indicate the Dodo bird effect - most therapies are equally effective. The bias towards evidence base justification has some very serious flaws. However, the video was very well done and I very much enjoyed listening and felt your presentation was lucid and filled with great energy. -thanks,, mike durrigan
nice video. thanks ! I am happy that I was able to find your channel trough the video you guys made for Tom Scott. thanks for the video and have a wonderful day / night cheers : )
I appreciate the humor in explaining this great contribution to how we do therapy and help make life better for someone else, you certainly helped to do that for me today. Fun video, while I study for my NCE!
When I heard "striving for superiority" I starting thinking about narcissists. I'll admit, I was so busy rolling my eyes with all the superiority and inferiority complex, I missed a lot of this.
Hard to see how this sort of simplistic therapy could work for people who are severely depressed - especially if they already have lots of insight into their problems. Ditto for CBT.
"...We both made mistakes" - Mistakes? That should have been the question first. It would elaborate and give him insights also more info to the therapist. Then it could ask the showed question.
Whith this approach how woukd you treat a person with TOC or DPD or BIPOLAR disorder. As it is proven in TOC that cbt is pretty usefull then i send the patient with someone else?
great fucking video, thank you so much for this. I def need some psychodynamic therapy. it along with a little bit of dialectial behavioral therapy may be the best for me based on my research so far
I would not use a notebook in front of the client. It creates an atmosphere of inequality in the relationship. My opinion and more from the perspective of the humanistic approach. Other than that interesting way of presenting the approach.
This is nonsense. Alfred Adler developed Individual psychology, not psychodynamic therapy. PT is synonime to Analytic therapy developed from psychoanalysis.
Huh... a bit confusing. You mentioned Adler and psychoanalysis but then jumped to psychodynamic,. Why not mention who came up with psychodynamic then discuss that? Really informative video otherwise.