What Is Focusing and Focusing Oriented Psychotherapy? by James E. Strohl

Focusing is an innovative technique developed by Eugene Gendlin in the 1960’s. The
 earliest origins of Focusing are found in Gendlin’s collaborative relationship in the
1950’s with Carl Rogers, the Founder of Client-Centered Psychotherapy. By 1970 
Gendlin was recognized by the American Psychological Association as the 
Distinguished Professional Psychologist of the Year for his contribution to experiential
psychotherapy.

Early on, Gendlin and his colleagues studied why some clients succeeded in therapy and
 many others did not. They found that improvement in therapy had very little to do with 
a therapist’s therapeutic orientation, specific techniques, or with the type of problem 
being addressed. Instead, the important element of positive change had to do with 
“how” clients processed their experiences internally.

With further study, Gendlin eventually identified the specific internal activities that
facilitate successful problem resolution and positive change. Gendlin also discovered
that these internal processing skills were teachable. Over many years, Gendlin refined
the specific instructions needed to teach people to perform the crucial components of
this natural, effective method of internal processing (Gendlin, 1982). Because this 
process allows one to bring an unclear, vague, inner sense of a problem or situation into
 clearer focus, Gendlin named it Focusing. Focusing is then a way of approaching a
 problem or situation with a special internal processing strategy that increases the
 chances of a positive outcome.

Focusing allows access to deeper levels of awareness, wisdom, and self-guidance that 
reside inside each of us. Through an easily learned, step-by step process, Focusing 
teaches how to turn our attention inside our bodies where we carry all our personal
 experiences, memories, sensations, emotions and feelings. This place of refined mindbody 
awareness contains an unlimited source of knowledge that provides us with the
capacity to solve problems and achieve personal fulfillment. Simply stated, Focusing 
allows us conscious access to that which often remains unconscious or subconscious, 
due to the fact that most people do not know how to access it.

Focusing principles and strategies have been successfully incorporated into the
counseling and psychotherapy fields (Gendlin, 1996). One of the greatest strengths of
Focusing is the ease with which it can be integrated with other therapeutic approaches.
Focusing does not supplant any established therapeutic methods but instead serves as a
crucial supplemental element for other approaches to improve their effectiveness. The
Focusing process can be implemented as a formalized, step-by-step, stand-alone
 approach. It can also be implemented more informally as a focusing-oriented,
integrative approach whose interventions flows naturally from the emerging client’s
experience, therapeutic framework, and relational interaction.

There is ample research suggesting that the strongest predictors of positive outcome in
therapy are (1) the quality of the therapist-client relationship, (2) the personal
characteristics of the therapist, and (3) the resources the client brings to therapy
(Hubble, Duncan, Miller, 1999; Wampold, 2001). “Client feedback” has been
specifically identified as the most important relationship factor for decreasing dropout
rates and improving therapeutic outcomes (Miller, 2004; Miller, Duncan, & Hubble,
2004). An exceptional feature of Focusing is it’s elaborate methods for routinely
“checking in” with a client. Furthermore, as a client-informed therapy, Focusing 
incorporates sophisticated means for helping clients identify, honor, and express their 
personal realities and inner truths. Focusing-Oriented Psychotherapy assists one in 
removing the judgments, doubts, and fears that block one’s access to their innate
 wisdom and self-understanding.

Since Focusing-Oriented Psychotherapy comes out of the Client-Centered tradition,
Focusing therapists can be expected to create a safe, supportive environment; and to 
listen in a patient, non-judgmental, refined manner with deep respect for the competence
and full potential of each individual. The Focusing therapist’s expertise at contacting 
their own inner senses and processes will assist them in helping others find their own 
creative ways of tapping into deeper levels of awareness and wisdom, and achieving 
greater happiness.