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Published byJocelyn Gray Modified over 9 years ago
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Basic guidelines in limit setting o “Limits provide structure for the development of the therapeutic relationship and help to make the experience a real-life relationship. Without limits a relationship would have little value” (p. 257). o “Therapy cannot occur without limits” (p. 257). o What do limits provide children? Opportunity to learn self-control Fact that they have choices Experience of what making choices feels like How responsibility feels o Therapist should believe that the child will choose positive cooperative behavior o Limits should be minimal and enforceable
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The establishment of total limits rather than conditional limits is more effective Focus and emphasis are always on the child to convey where responsibility lies Children should be allowed to be separate (no plural pronouns)
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When to present limits o Present a limit only when it is needed o Self-control is learned only when the opportunity occurs Rationale for therapeutic limits o Limits facilitate the attainment of accepted psychological principles of growth o The child’s desire to break the limit has greater therapeutic significance than the exhibited behavior o All feelings, desires, and wishes are accepted, but not all behaviors are accepted
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Seven principles of limit setting o Limits provide physical and emotional security and safety for children o Limits protect the physical well-being of the therapist and facilitate acceptance of the child o Limits facilitate the development of decision-making, self-control, and self-responsibility of children o Limits anchor the session to reality and emphasize the here and now o Limits promote consistency in the playroom environment, which in turn promotes Predictability Security o Limits preserve the professional, ethical, and socially acceptable relationship o Limits protect the play therapy materials and room
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Procedures in the therapeutic setting o Objective – to facilitate the expression of the motivating feeling, want, or need in a more acceptable manner, not to stop the behavior o Steps in the therapeutic limit-setting process Acknowledge the child’s feelings, wishes, and wants (A) Communicate the limit (C) Target acceptable alternatives (T) o Example: A: “I know you want to paint on the wall, but” C: “The wall is not for painting on.” T: “The easel paper or the block of wood is for painting on.”
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When limits are broken o The child needs understanding and acceptance o Repeat ACT at least three times – patience, calmness, and firmness o State the final choice – last resort “If you choose to do X, you choose not to play with X for the rest of our time in the playroom today.” “If you choose to do X, you choose to leave the playroom for the rest of our time together.”
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Situational limits o Taking toys or materials from the playroom – not allowed Emphasis is on emotional sharing, not material sharing Budgetary limits Taking other children’s words and depriving them of freedom of expression Retrieval of borrowed toy o Leaving the playroom Children need to learn not to run away from responsibility Limit trips outside playroom o Time limits 5 minutes, then 1 minute Stand up to give visual cue Gradually step toward door
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Limiting noise – necessary in clinics and schools Personal items are not for playing Limiting water in the sandbox o Takes a lot of time to drain o Ruins experience for subsequent children Urinating in the playroom
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The child is silent o Respond verbally to what the child is doing in the moment o Therapist needs to feel comfortable with the child’s silence o Don’t comment on every little thing The child wants to bring toys or food into the playroom o Child’s desire to take a special toy to the playroom should be recognized and accepted unless Electronic toys Favorite books o Snacks should be prohibited because of the distraction
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The child is overly dependent o Return responsibility to the child o Facilitate self-reliance The child persists in seeking praise o Harmful consequences of praise Directs behavior Restricts freedom Creates dependency Fosters external motivation o “What is important is what you think about your picture.” o “You worked hard on that.” o “It can be whatever you want it to be.”
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The child says, “You talk weird” o Parroting can be irritating o Goal is to convey understanding, not simply reporting o “I sound different than other people to you.” o “You don’t like the way I talk.” The child wants the therapist to play a guessing game o Child can guess for therapist o “You have something in mind.” o “You can tell me.” The child asks for expressions of affection o Children develop strong emotional bonds with therapists o “You are special to me, and this is a special time together.”
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The child wants to hug or sit in the therapist’s lap o Has this child been sexually abused? o Has this child been taught to connect liking with seductive behavior? o Is this child merely expressing an unconscious desire to re- experience being a baby? o Is the child simply being spontaneous or free? The child tries to steal a toy o Be straightforward, understanding, and firm o Follow ACT
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The child refuses to leave the playroom o Therapist must manage a process that allows the child to take themselves out of the playroom o Through this process, the child is developing enough self-control to stop, to say no to desires The therapist unexpectedly cannot keep an appointment o Tell child at beginning and end of session o Child will be able to return in two weeks o Reason can also be given to prevent child from thinking he or she has pushed you away
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