(COMPLETE ANSWERS)
2025 (635198) - DUE 25
September 2025
For assistance contact
Email:
,Task 1: Case Study - Karen
1. Karen's Basic Conflict
Karen's basic conflict is a clash between her introjected values and her emerging, authentic self.
She is torn between the values and beliefs she has passively absorbed from her religion and
culture—the "shoulds" of her upbringing—and her own growing, organismic needs and feelings.
Her struggle is characterized by a state of polarities: the "good Catholic" daughter seeking
external approval versus the independent woman who questions those teachings and wants to
trust her own judgment. She is stuck in a state of impasse, where she is both attached to the old,
familiar way of being and simultaneously terrified of moving forward into the unknown.
2. Potential for Me as an Authority Figure
Yes, it is highly likely that Karen sees me as another authority figure. She has spent her life
seeking direction and approval from people she considers authorities. She may be hoping I will
give her the permission she feels unable to give herself—to validate her new path and tell her it's
"all right" to reject certain moral codes.
To test this possibility, I would bring her tendency to defer to authority into the here-and-now of
our session. I might say something like, "Karen, I notice that you're looking to me for an answer
about what's right and what's wrong. I wonder if you're hoping I'll give you permission to make a
choice. What is it like for you to ask me to be your guide?"
To help her without becoming another source of approval or disapproval, my goal is to help her
develop her own internal authority. I would consistently redirect her attention back to her own
experience, feelings, and body sensations. Instead of validating her choices, I would validate her
experience of the conflict. I would not say, "It's okay to do X," but rather, "I hear you saying that
you're feeling a deep sense of guilt when you consider doing X. Let's stay with that feeling and
see what it tells you." This process helps her learn to trust her own felt sense, not my external
permission.
3. Key Issues and My Gestalt Approach
a. Respecting Cultural Values and Promoting Change: I would absolutely respect her cultural
values. My role isn't to dismantle her traditions but to help her explore how they are impacting
her life right now. I would not encourage her to "reject" her background outright. Instead, I
would help her to assimilate her introjected values—to chew them over and decide for herself
which ones she wants to make her own and which ones no longer serve her. The change she
seeks would emerge from her own self-awareness, not from my agenda.
b. Adjusting to Norms vs. New Standards: My goal as a Gestalt therapist is to help Karen
achieve organismic self-regulation and greater authenticity, not to adjust to external norms that
she finds stifling. If she feels that being reserved and unassertive is not working for her, I would
not encourage her to conform. Instead, I would use techniques to help her explore what it would
feel like to be more assertive and to understand the specific fears and blocks that keep her from
doing so.
, c. Avoiding Imposing My Views: I would be diligent in avoiding the imposition of my own
views. My role is to increase her awareness of her own feelings, thoughts, and behaviors. I would
encourage her to move in the direction of greater awareness and integration. The ultimate
decision of what path to take is entirely hers. My therapeutic interventions would be aimed at
helping her see her own process more clearly, not at steering her toward a specific outcome.
d. Sex-Role and Gender Issues: My values emphasize gender equality and the right for all
individuals to define their own roles and expressions. I believe that traditional sex-role
expectations can be restrictive and lead to psychological distress. This value would influence my
interventions by encouraging Karen to explore her desire to be "freer" and "more assertive" and
by seeing her struggles not as a personal failure but as a natural response to restrictive,
introjected beliefs. I would be highly aware of my own values here and would constantly check
in to ensure I am not subtly pushing her toward a specific "feminist" outcome but am instead
staying with her unique experience and her own definition of what it means to be a woman.
4. Gestalt Techniques I Would Use
I would use the following Gestalt techniques from the list:
[x] Ask her to carry on a dialogue between different parts or sides of a conflict. (The
"good Catholic" vs. the "questioning woman" using the Empty Chair technique).
[x] Invite her to create a dialogue between an assertive woman and an unassertive
woman. (Exploring her polarities to integrate these opposing sides of herself).
[x] Ask her to rehearse out loud whatever she is thinking. (Using the Rehearsal
technique to bring her internal monologue and self-criticism into the open).
[x] Ask her to ‘become’ a significant authority and then lecture to ‘Karen’ in an
empty chair. (Externalizing the introjected authority figures and the "top dog" to help
her confront them).
[x] Ask her to imagine herself being as wild as possible, along with the worst things
that could happen if she were to lose all control. (A fantasy experiment to confront her
fears and anxieties in a safe space).
5. Other Gestalt-Oriented Techniques
In addition to the ones checked above, I would use the following:
"I take responsibility for...": I would ask Karen to complete this phrase after making a
statement about her fears or desires. For example, "I feel guilty, and I take responsibility
for my guilt." This helps her own her feelings and moves her away from blaming her past
or external forces.