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The Change Process in the Anger Counseling to the Married Women Experienced Family Events Shu-Yin Liu Abstract The purpose of this study was to investigate the changeprocess of the married women through the counseling sessionabout the anger events. By comparing the sucessful andnonsucessful change processes in the counseling of familyevents, a novel model of anger counseling was given to themarried women experienced family events. Counselors were 5 doctoral students who are enrolled ina counseling psycology program,the clients were 6 volunteeredmarried women, and family anger events were attributed to those6 clients. Five counselors and clients were matched individually,and each pair were conducted 6 sessions of counseling interview.Each session is taped and the change process of the clientsduring the counseling period was analysed by open coding thetranscript of counseling sessions . The major findings were as follows:1. The change process of the clients can be divided into sixstages in sequence. The sequence of the six stages were as :presented anger problems and the related experiences, explorationand experience, discovery and awareness, renewal and reorientation, action and finally, being changed.2. The inner-linked process of the clients in the process of angercounseling was : linking the past and the present, linking cognitionand emotion, linking emotion and behavior,linking the inner andthe outer world.3. When the change stages were developed, there exists a trend that can berecognized as that the concentration point are innerward and come back tothe client herself.4. The change is stepwised. There are differences in the extent of change among different clients; and the change is not all-or-none.5. The change process of the clients in the sucessful change (SC) andnonsuccessful change (NSC) after counseling were compared and theresults includes:(1) It is lack of stages of action and of change in the NSC but not in theSC.(2) It is at least 10% higher reactive ratio at the stage II(eg., explorationand experience ) in the NSC than that in the SC; and,it is the lower reactiveratio at the stage III(eg., discovery and awareness ) in the NSC than thatin the SC.(3) The anger emotion in the NSC can not be transferred and catharsis at thestage III and IV (eg., renewal and reorientation); in contrast, theclients in SC changed and developed themself to a holpful change when thecounseling stages preceeded.(4) The clients of the NSC in the counseling process can not avoid thedefense of the self-disclosure and the role played by the counselor incounseling session; however, there is no such phenomena in the counselingprocess in the SC.6.The clients may solve the anger problems and achieve the changesby means of embarking three levels of changes including catharsis ,restructuring of thought, as well as learning and performing thenew behaviors.According to the above results , it is suggested that the conclusionsmay be helpful for the furture investigations of the change processand for the educational training and counseling practice of the counselors.
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