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Counselling Tutor podcast

026 – Using Social Media as a Counsellor – The Oedipus Complex – Paid Media – Personal Development Groups

Counselling Tutor podcast

Kenneth Kelly

Education

4.8657 Ratings

🗓️ 26 November 2016

⏱️ 45 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In episode 26 of the Counselling Tutor Podcast, Rory Lees-Oakes and Ken Kelly discuss your personal use of social media as a counsellor. 'Theory with Rory' examines the Oedipus complex, and the final episode of 'Person-Centred Business' looks at paid media (advertising). Last, the presenters discuss personal development (PD) groups. Using Social Media as a Counsellor Ken and Rory discuss how careful we must be as counsellors about what and how much we show of ourselves on social media, e.g. Facebook, Instagram and Twitter. Whatever we write there may be recorded for ever - even if you subsequently delete a post, it could already have been captured as a screenshot. Nowadays, potential employers often look at job applicants' social media profiles as part of assessing their suitability, as do potential clients seeking a private-practice therapist. Counselling is a profession, and we are expected to behave in a professional manner, reflecting the good standing of the role. The Oedipus Complex This is a key part of Sigmund Freud's ideas on child development. He first set out this concept in his book The Interpretation of Dreams. It is based on the Greek myth of Oedipus, told in a trilogy of plays by Sophocles. Tragic hero Oedipus was said to have accidentally killed his father and married his mother, so bringing disaster to his city and family. According to Freud, boys aged three to five years develop a sexual desire for their mothers and see their fathers as rivals for the mothers' attention. Freud terms this the phallic stage, and believes it is important in developing sexual identity. These days, the Oedipus conflict may seem uncomfortable and confusing to us, but we may nonetheless be able to spot some elements of truth in it. For example, we might hear a young boy say, "I'm going to marry Mummy when I grow up." And many youngsters like to sleep between their parents in bed, so literally coming between them. In another example, some adult women may feel they are expected to mother their male partners. It is important to remember that Freud lived in very different times, when gender roles were rigidly enforced. Nowadays, mother figures are not always female, and father figures are not always male. In fact, Carl Jung, who worked with Freud, claimed that there is a similar relationship between young girls and their fathers; he called this the Electra complex. Paid Media Podcasts 24 and 25 described how to build a website. To drive traffic to your website, it can be useful to use paid media (i.e. any online advertising that you pay for to bring in enquiries). Common examples of this include: Facebook adverts - these target people of certain profiles, also using their browsing history. Ken feels this type of advertising can be quite invasive, as other people might see the person's profile and so find out that the person has been looking for counselling. Google AdWords ­(pay-per-click adverts) - if you do a Google search, the first few results that appear will be paid-for adverts (shown by 'Ad' appearing to the left of the website address in the search-results list). If you advertise using Google AdWords, you specify the relevant keywords, and then you are charged each time someone clicks on your listing. Entries in counselling directories - you tend to pay a yearly fee to appear in these. Ken provides the following top tips on using paid media: As you'll have a limited number of words to promote your service, hone your elevator pitch. Be specific in the geographical area you target (thinking of how far people might reasonably be willing to travel to get to you) - this is particularly important in Google AdWords, where you might otherwise be paying for clicks by people who are too far away to use your service. Make sure the 'landing page' on your website (i.e. the page where the link you provide goes to - you can choose which page this is) is an effective one -...

Transcript

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0:00.0

Welcome to the Counseling Tutor Podcast. The must listen to podcast for students of counseling and

0:09.0

psychotherapy. Here are your hosts, Rory Lee's Oaks and Ken Kelly. Hello and welcome to episode

0:17.8

26 of the counseling tutor podcast with me, Rory Lee's Oaks.

0:23.1

And as always with me is my fellow practitioner and journeyman in the world of counselling and psychotherapy.

0:29.5

Mr. Ken, Kelly, how are you, Ken?

0:31.3

I am very well as we go into this autumn season here in the United Kingdom.

0:35.9

Things are just beautiful.

0:37.0

The leaves are changing. The floor

0:38.5

is just a carpet of colour. It's a really positive time of year and I saw a program recently

0:44.0

called Autumn Watch on television where they referred to it as a time of plenty. And I've never

0:48.4

really thought of autumn as a time of plenty, but I guess it is with all the berries and the nuts

0:52.1

for the squirrels. So a time of plenty.

0:54.4

And again, it comes down to that through the eyes of the beholder.

0:57.7

Frame of reference.

0:58.5

I always thought it as a time of sparseness.

1:01.1

Interesting.

1:01.7

But glad to be here.

1:03.4

Yeah, yeah.

1:04.7

And of course we're coming up, certainly in the UK, to bonfire night.

1:08.7

That peculiar British custom and pastime of setting fireworks off

1:13.1

and remembering a man not too fondly who tried to blow up the houses of Parliament.

1:19.9

Yes, or as we and our family call them, we don't call them fireworks, we call them animal scerers.

...

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