The Delve Podcast
==Media Links== Website: delvepsych.com Instagram: @delvepsychchicago YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@DelvePsych20 [https://www.youtube.com/@DelvePsych20] Substack: https://delvepsych.substack.com/ [https://delvepsych.substack.com/] ==Participants== Ali McGarel Adam W. Fominaya ==Overview of Big Ideas== * The 50th episode opens with Ali and Adam reflecting on the podcast itself: the pleasure of dialogue, public thinking, and watching ideas become sharper over time. * The central claim: insight does not automatically require change. Understanding why you do something does not mean you must stop doing it. * Psychodynamic work can reveal how childhood strategies were adaptive in their original context, even if they now create friction. * Change and non-change both carry consequences. The question is not “What is the correct choice?” but “Which consequences are you willing to live with?” * Client autonomy matters. Therapists can notice, question, and challenge, but they should not coerce clients into the therapist’s preferred values. * A therapist can “fight” for a client’s stated goals, but that is different from imposing goals the client has not chosen. * In relationships, repeatedly asking someone to change may eventually require accepting that they have declined. Then the question becomes what you will do with that reality. ==Breakdown of Segments== * 50th episode reflection: Ali and Adam exchange appreciation, discuss the podcast’s growth, and reflect on dialogue as a way to build clearer ideas. * Why insight is not the same as change: Adam distinguishes psychodynamic awareness from behavioral change; Ali names the missing step of choosing whether to act. * Childhood adaptation and adult context: emotional guardedness may have once helped someone survive their family system, while later frustrating a romantic partner. * The right to remain the same: the hosts explore a person who understands their emotional avoidance but still chooses not to become highly emotionally expressive. * Consequences either way: changing can cost something; not changing can cost something; neither path is consequence-free. * Autonomy in therapy: a testing anecdote illustrates that clients can stop, refuse, or choose against the clinician’s preference. * When challenge is ethical: Adam describes challenging clients when their behavior conflicts with goals they have clearly stated. * Fighting for the client’s values: the therapist’s pressure is framed as legitimate only when it serves the client’s own chosen direction. * Relationship impasse: the closing quote turns the theme outward: if someone keeps declining your request that they change, your remaining task is deciding what you will do. ==AI Recommended References== Deci, E. L., & Ryan, R. M. (1985). Intrinsic motivation and self-determination in human behavior. Plenum. Miller, W. R., & Rollnick, S. (2013). Motivational interviewing: Helping people change (3rd ed.). Guilford Press. Prochaska, J. O., Norcross, J. C., & DiClemente, C. C. (1994). Changing for good. William Morrow.
54 episodios
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