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David Baxter PhD

Late Founder
Seven Questions for David D. Burns
By Ryan Howes, Ph.D., Psychology Today
January 07, 2009

The author of the "most prescribed self-help book" has a lot to say about the Seven Questions. Brace yourself, he doesn't pull any punches. The intent of this project is illumination of the diverse theories, techniques and personalities influencing contemporary psychotherapy. Today the outspoken Dr. Burns imparts his knowledgeable, provocative and substantial opinions.

David D. Burns (M.D., Stanford University, 1970), is an Adjunct Clinical Professor of Psychiatry Emeritus at the Stanford University School of Medicine and has served as visiting scholar at Harvard Medical School. His Feeling Good has sold over 4 million copies and is the book most often recommended for individuals suffering from depression by American and Canadian mental health professionals. I've even prescribed it, and I'm a psychodynamic therapist.

I'd refer to Dr. Burns as a central figure in the development of Cognitive Therapy, but in his response to Question 3 he opposes joining schools of psychotherapy. Instead I'll just say this highly respected clinician and author has penned 11 books, most of which are found in the Cognitive Therapy section of your bookstore. His latest debuted only last week, with the following press release:

Based on 25 years of clinical experience and groundbreaking research involving more than 1,000 individuals, Feeling Good Together: The Secret to Making Troubled Relationships Work makes a case against the current popular theories about why we can't seem to get along (e.g., Men are from Mars, Women are from Venus), and offers a radically different approach for solving virtually any kind of relationship conflict. Dr. Burns provides numerous helpful examples and powerful, user-friendly tools for developing more loving and satisfying relationships with anyone.

I was thrilled and overwhelmed by Dr. Burns' elaborate and thoughtful answers. His illustrations, both clinical and personal, help me understand why he is such a popular writer and lecturer. Enjoy his generous response and feel free to comment if his words compel you.

Seven Questions for David D. Burns:

1. How would you respond to a new client who asks: "What should I talk about?"
Therapy is not to "talk about" things, but to change the person's life, and to relieve suffering, such as depression, anxiety, or relationship problems. Of course, empathy and skillful listening are important at the start of each session, but they are simply not sufficient to change the patient's life. You can talk until you're blue in the face, and therapists can nod and mutter, "tell me more," but you'll still be suffering from PTSD, or OCD, or depression, or lousy relationships with other people, or whatever the problem is.

After a period of empathy and listening, I will ask the question, "I would like to offer you something more than just support and listening, although that's obviously of great importance. I'm wonder if there's something you want help with in today's session? You've mentioned a lot of heartbreaking issues today-your brother's heroin addiction and suicide, they way your ex-wife has been abusing you, your problems with your son, and your social anxiety. I have many powerful tools to help you deal with these problems, and I'm wondering if this would be a good time for us to roll up our sleeves and get to work. Or, if you need more time to talk and vent, that's okay too. I don't want to jump in prematurely, before you're ready."

This gives the patient three messages: 1. I'm here to support you, although that's obviously of great importance; 2. I have much more to offer you than just listening, and more will be necessary if you really want to change your life; 3. Change is possible if we work together as a team.

Once the patient has described the problem, I conceptualize the nature of the problem and explore the likely reasons for resisting change in a kindly way, so as to reverse resistance, using paradoxical techniques. I also begin to think about the techniques that will be most likely to help the patient. I use approximately 50 techniques, such as the Interpersonal Downward Arrow, the Paradoxical Cost-Benefit Analysis, the Daily Mood Log, the Externalization of Voices, the Acceptance Paradox, and more. Some techniques are exceptionally powerful for depression; some work well for the anxiety disorders; some are helpful for relationship problems; and some are great for habits and addictions. There's no one panacea that works for everything.

2. What do clients find most difficult about the therapeutic process?
There is no standard "therapeutic process," since there are so many different schools of therapy. I tend to think in terms of "Outcome Resistance" and "Process Resistance." Here's how to think about Outcome Resistance. Imagine that there's were a magic button on this desk, and if you push it, all of your symptoms (such as depression, or panic attacks, a troubled marriage, or a bad habit or addiction) will instantly disappear, with no effort, and you'll go out of today's session in a state of euphoria. Will you push that button?

As it turns out, many people will NOT push the button, or would be highly ambivalent about it. For each person, the reasons will be different, but they are generally overpowering. Furthermore, Outcome Resistance is radically different for each of the four common targets: depression, anxiety, a relationship conflict, or habits and addictions). So there are four common, but distinct, types of Outcome Resistance.

Here's a brief example of Outcome Resistance for depression. A 37 year-old Catholic woman from San Francisco came to me for treatment after ten years of intractable, severe depression following an abortion. She'd had psychotherapy from numerous therapists and a multitude of antidepressants, but nothing had helped. The thought that was creating her intense pain and self-loathing was: "I deserve to suffer forever because I murdered my baby."

Will she press the Magic Button? Obviously not, and there are many possible reasons. First, she appears to see her suffering as a spiritual necessity, and her depression allows her to attain a kind of moral purity. She is playing many roles-judge, jury, and executioner, as well as the role of the convicted felon who is depressed and suffering. She thinks she MUST suffer in this way.

In addition, in her mind, her baby probably hasn't really died yet. She is keeping him alive with her depression, thinking about him every day. Her depression is her tribute to her baby. If she overcomes the depression, she may have to grieve, let go, and move forward with her life. And there are several other powerful issues that keep her stuck as well. If the therapist does not take these motivational factors into account, and deal with them with compassion and skill, she will simply resist-which is exactly what had been happening for the previous eight years.

Process Resistance is quite different from Outcome Resistance. Process Resistance means that you might WANT to change, but you don't want to pay the price of change. And unfortunately, there is no Magic Button. For example, let's assume that you're suffering from some type of anxiety, such as the fear of heights. I have described 40 powerful new treatment techniques for all the anxiety disorders in my latest book, When Panic Attacks, and you never know what method is going to work for which person, so some trial and error is always necessary. But we can say for certain that some type of exposure will be mandatory if you want to defeat the fear of heights, or any other type of anxiety disorder, for that matter.

I had the fear of heights when I was young, along with many other fears and phobias, including the fear of dogs, bees, horses, and blood. When I was in high school, I wanted to be on the stage crew for the play Brigadoon, but the drama teacher, Mr. Bishop, told me that he couldn't accept any students with the fear of heights, since the stage crew had to work up near the ceiling, with the lights and curtains and such. I told him I had the fear of heights. He said I couldn't be on the stage crew, unless. . . I was willing to get over my fear.

I said I was very willing, but didn't know how. He said it was easy, and he'd show me right then and there if I wanted. I said, "Great, let's do it."

He brought me into the theatre, and set up a 12 foot ladder in the middle of the stage, so it wasn't close to anything. He said, "All you have to do is get up on the top rung of that ladder and stand there." I asked, "Is that all you have to do?" He said "Yes, that's how you do it."

I was young and na?ve, so I bravely started climbing up that ladder. By the time I reached the top, my fear was 100 on a scale of 0 to 100. In fact, I was terrified, and there wasn't anything to hold onto. He was way below, standing next to the ladder. I said, "What should I do now, Mr. Bishop?" He said, "Nothing, just stand there until you're cured." I said, "But isn't there something I'm supposed to do?" He said, "No, just stand there."

Fifteen minutes went by and my fear level was still 100. I said, "I'm still anxious." He said, "That's okay, just wait it out.'

Another five minutes went by, and my fear suddenly started to disappear. It took about five seconds, and suddenly it had vanished entirely. I wasn't afraid. I said, "I think I'm cured now, Mr. Bishop."

"That's great," he said. "You can come down now and you can be on the stage crew of Brigadoon." After that, I LOVED heights. I always wanted to be the one to go way up to the ceiling and work the highest lights. I couldn't even remember what it was like to have the fear of heights. In fact, sometimes, when you defeat a fear, the thing you feared so intensely becomes a source of great pleasure. But there was a price to pay. You can't defeat any type of anxiety simply by lying on the couch and talking about the past while the therapist mumbles, "Tell me more."

Process Resistance also differs radically for each of the four common targets: depression, anxiety, a relationship conflict, or habits and addictions. This means that there are eight common types of resistance-there are four types of Outcome Resistance, and four types of Process Resistance. Clients will sometimes have several forms of resistance operating all at once. That's because they may be depressed and anxious at the same time, and may also be struggling with loneliness or troubled personal relationships.

My colleagues and I have developed powerful new techniques that allow therapists to pinpoint and reverse each patient's resistance before using any techniques to solve the specific problem. The integration of these motivational techniques into the therapy has led to tremendous breakthroughs in our treatment, and we are now seeing extremely rapid recovery in a high percentage of the patients who come to use for treatment.

3. What mistakes do therapists make that hinder the therapeutic process?
This is related to the previous answer. Nearly all therapeutic failure results from what I call "Agenda Setting errors," or the complete failure of the therapist to set the agenda. Most therapists do not appear to know how to pinpoint and reverse therapeutic resistance-to head it off at the pass. Instead, they try to persuade the patient to change, or to do the psychotherapy homework, while the patient resists and yes-butts the therapist. The therapist ends up feeling frustrated and resentful, and doing all the work.

Most therapists wrongly believe they understand Agenda Setting, but they don't. It appears easy, but it is the most sophisticated and difficult therapeutic skill of all. The paradoxical Agenda Setting techniques my colleagues and I have developed represent, we believe, a major advance in therapy.

A second mistake is to join a school of therapy, such as psychodynamic therapy, or cognitive therapy, or EMDR, or ACT, or TFT, or whatever happens to be in vogue. I'm all for TOOLS, not SCHOOLS, of therapy. To me, the schools of therapy compete much like religions, or even cults, all claiming to know the cause and to have the best method for treating people. And new schools of therapy seem to get created almost every week, always with a guru and always with enthusiastic followers who are sure they've found "the answer.'

The third big error is the failure to measure symptoms and the alliance. My formal and informal research at Stanford has revealed that therapists' perceptions of how patients feel-how depressed or suicidal they are, how anxious they are, or how angry they are-are poorly correlated, and often entirely uncorrelated, with how patients actually feel. But therapists, including psychiatrists and psychologists alike, don't realize this, and wrongly believe that they ARE reasonably sensitive, when they really aren't. In fact, that's one of the most common causes of suicide-the therapist didn't realize just how depressed and despondent the patient was.

To solve this problem, I've created brief, highly accurate scales that measure depression, suicidal urges, anxiety, anger, and relationship satisfaction, just prior to, and after, every single therapy session. Patients complete the scales based on how they're feeling right now, at this exact moment. So therapists can see, for the first time, not only how their patients actually feel, but how much they've improved, or failed to improve, at every single therapy session. Patients complete these scales in the waiting room just prior to, and after, every session, so it actually doesn't take any time from the therapy session. Patients leave the completed inventories for the therapist before they go home. This only takes a minute. They also rate the therapist on warmth, understanding, helpfulness, and write down what they liked the least and most about the session.

This practice, perhaps more than anything else, has led to a revolution in how we do therapy. Our patients have become our greatest teachers, because they tell us what's working and what's not working for them. This practice has made patients and therapists far more accountable. I can't imagine doing effective therapy without these assessments. But it requires courage, because you often discover that things weren't the way you thought. And patients can be surprisingly honest and critical of therapists-far more so than in actual sessions. For some reason, they feel far more open and candid when completing these therapy session evaluations.

Narcissistic therapists-and there are some-cannot tolerate the assessments, because the patient feedback is too devastating to their sense of self-esteem.

4. In your opinion, what is the ultimate goal of therapy?
There is no "ultimate goal of therapy." Thinking there is some ultimate or universal goal of therapy is one of the most fundamental errors of our field. To me, that concept is rather arrogant, as if therapists were some kind of spiritual experts who knew what human beings are supposed to be like.

Instead, I ask patients to describe a specific moment when they felt upset, a moment they want help with. It can any moment, and any type of problem, but it has to be real and specific as to person, place, and time. A vague complaint, like the young woman who said, "Life stinks," isn't very useful. I might have to ask, "Where were you when you noticed the smell? What was going on?"

The problem the patient wants help with could be a moment of depression, or a recent panic attack, or an argument with his or her spouse, for example. Then I explore motivational issues, taking into account Outcome Resistance and Process Resistance. Once the resistance has been overcome, I use a wide variety of techniques to help the patient solve the problem. The techniques that are the most effective will differ for different types of problems. In other words, the techniques that are the most helpful for depression, anxiety, anger / relationship problems, or addictions are quite different from each other.

I see my role as a hired helper, and the patient is my boss. The patient describes the problem she or he wants help with. But when the patient really comprehends what was going on at that moment in his or her life, and suddenly learns how to turn that problem around, they often experience a kind of enlightenment, and all their problems will fall apart at that moment, much like a house of cards. The depression suddenly gets transformed into joy and laughter, for example. This is a tremendous event to observe and participate in, and it is part of what makes therapy such a joyous and amazing experience for me.

5. What is the toughest part of being a therapist?
Skillful, state-of-the-art therapy requires constant practice and training. For the past eight years, I have been running a weekly psychotherapy training and development group at Stanford as part of my volunteer teaching for the Department of Psychiatry. The group now meets at my home, and is open to therapists in the community, as well as Stanford students. The group is a very rewarding experience. In fact, it's the highlight of my week. But it's not always easy. The therapists who attend have to practice, using role-playing techniques in a variety of challenging scenarios. They get graded immediately, and have to face their failures in order to grow. If you can check your ego at the door, this is tremendous fun and a terrific learning experience. But if your ego gets involved, it can be rather intimidating to have to fail in front of colleagues you respect and admire.

The same thing happens in therapy. As I mentioned above, I've developed extremely sensitive scales that patients fill out in the waiting room after every single therapy session. They rate their therapists (including me) in a variety of dimensions, such as Empathy, Helpfulness, Satisfaction with the session, Negative Feelings during the session, and other variables. Although most therapists believe that they are warm, caring, and effective, most are shocked to discover that they get failing grades from practically every patient at every session when they first begin using these scales. This is extremely shocking to novice as well as advanced therapists. However, with training, therapists can learn to transform those therapeutic failures into tremendous breakthroughs, and over time, their ratings begin to soar.

Learning to accept failure on multiple levels is, to my way of thinking, the key to become a world-class therapist. But that means humility, and setting your ego aside, while you develop superb new technical skills.

6. What is the most enjoyable or rewarding part of being a therapist?
Seeing people change-the sudden transformation of depression, hopelessness, and worthlessness into joy and self-esteem. Or suddenly defeating a fear. Or suddenly learning to let go of anger, blame, and resentment. Those experiences of sudden and profound change always blow my mind. I love that experience, and it happens often. This is the true gift of a career as a therapist.

7. What is one pearl of wisdom you would offer clients about therapy?
We are seeing high speed changes in patients now, true rapid recovery. Many patients are now showing dramatic gains, or complete recovery, in just a handful of sessions, often one or two, using the powerful new methods we have been developing.

What saddens me is seeing patients who have been going to therapy for years and years with no change, but they keep going to the same therapist. To me, that's not right. And what also saddens me is that so many people don't have access to good therapy, either because they can't afford it, or because they've had trouble finding someone they can work with effectively.

I think our field has a lot of room for growth, and for catching up with the other more basic sciences, such as biology, chemistry, or physics. That's the goal that my colleagues and I have been aiming for in our work developing a new a more powerful model of therapy.
 

Jazzey

Account Closed
Member
I loved every bit of this article. Particularly the point about using a variety of tools in therapy.

One question that arose for me was this idea that, as a patient, it's difficult at times to gain perspective and see whether the therapy is helping. Particularly during the tougher times. Even more difficult to assess whether you get a particular benefit out of your particular illness - which is why, as a patient, we rely so heavily on the therapist.

Finally, another point that the article didn't address for me was the following: it's an arduous process to engage in therapy. And changing psychologist, while on the surface may seem easy, is very difficult - it's having to confide in yet another person, a stranger, and hope that this time it'll work.
 

Daniel E.

daniel@psychlinks.ca
Administrator
Finally, another point that the article didn't address for me was the following: it's an arduous process to engage in therapy. And changing psychologist, while on the surface may seem easy, is very difficult - it's having to confide in yet another person, a stranger, and hope that this time it'll work.

But, in the spirit of the article, the fact it isn't easy may be a sign that it can be more therapeutic, as can be the case with retelling traumatic events or imagined fears to benefit from such cognitive exposure. And, of course, each therapist provides at least a slightly different perspective, which can easily be beneficial.
 

Jazzey

Account Closed
Member
But, in the spirit of the article, the fact it isn't easy may be a sign that it can be more therapeutic, as can be the case with retelling traumatic events or imagined fears to benefit from such cognitive exposure. And, of course, each therapist provides at least a slightly different perspective, which can easily be beneficial.

I like your perspective :) ; I hadn't looked at it that way. When I posted my message, in my mind at least, I was linking this idea with the previous one. Basically, that at low points the insecurities are so strong that you don't know if you're being fair, logical, rational, and your scared of making a mistake. But I recognize that it could be therapeutic. So maybe it doesn't matter if you goof. :)
 
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