Context and focusThis paper argues that counselling psychology has been shaped by the philosophical and cultural value of individualism. Counselling psychology’s reliance on individual therapy models hinders its potential to actively address social issues that cause or exacerbate many mental health problems. The history and role of UK state-funded individual therapy markets, which employ a significant proportion of counselling psychologists, is examined. Some origins and consequences of counselling psychology’s individualistic ideals are explored. The professionalisation of personal therapy in the UK is traced to the USA and the development of humanistic psychology in the mid-20th century. Humanistic ideals are traced back further, to the 18th and 19th century rhetoric of New World democracy. Some undesirable social consequences of individualism are highlighted. In comparison the paper looks at potentially ‘post-individualistic’ therapeutic philosophies, including feminist and social constructionist approaches but finds that, in practice, they also tend to operate as individual therapy models.ConclusionsIndividual therapy approaches help people cope with conditions arising from the socioeconomic status quo, but don’t necessarily challenge it. Evolving counselling psychology research and practice into more demonstrably socially transformative ways of working would require substantive, and probably unpopular, changes in training, regulation, career pathways and professional identity.
Two particularly engaging and thought-provoking articles in the September 2013 edition ofCounselling Psychology Reviewhave inspired me to respond: Terry Hanley’s editorial entitled ‘On becoming an urban spaceman’ and Hamilton Fairfax’s essay, ‘Where will counselling psychology be in the next 30 years?’ I write as a psychological therapy service provider (and trainee counselling psychologist). The themes in these articles are deeply interconnected.
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