Resources From PositivePsychology.com
We have many worksheets that will help you improve understanding, empathy, communication, and emotional awareness.
Try out the following free resources with your clients and work on your (and their) validation techniques:
- Listening Accurately Worksheet
This handout presents five simple steps to facilitate accurate listening and can be used to help establish communication norms at the beginning of a therapeutic relationship.
- Assess Barriers to an Accepting Attitude
After therapy sessions, practitioners can use this worksheet to reflect on what thoughts and beliefs may have held them back from having a more accepting attitude toward their clients.
- Walking In Their Shoes
Practitioners can use this worksheet to become aware of opportunities to empathize with their clients’ experiences more fully using an internal frame of reference.
- Radical Acceptance
This worksheet can help clients recognize that they cannot control every aspect of their experience and invites them to choose mindful responses over emotionally reactive ones when faced with distressing events.
- Emotion Regulation Worksheet for Adults
This worksheet helps clients explore their emotional reactions in response to situations and consider the downstream consequences of those emotional responses.
If you’re looking for more science-based ways to help others build healthy relationships, this collection contains 17 validated positive relationships tools for practitioners. Use them to help others form healthier, more nurturing, and life-enriching relationships.
A Take-Home Message
The process and outcome of validation are valuable in any relationship, yet crucial in therapy, promoting the therapeutic alliance that ultimately predicts treatment outcome.
Validation signifies to the other person that they are heard.
In therapy, the client feels acknowledged and understood and is being shown empathy (Kocabas & Üstündağ‐Budak, 2017).
Beyond promoting relationships, validation is also a valuable method for acknowledging what is said by the client, while encouraging early clarification of misunderstandings and inaccuracies. Furthermore, the therapist can use the techniques to deescalate difficult situations and give confidence to the client that they are not being judged and have valid fears, hopes, concerns, and anxieties (Rather & Miller, 2015).
Not all validation is equal. Any response from the therapist must be seen as positive and helpful, promoting growth and learning in the client, rather limiting or damaging.
When done well and with sensitivity, validation offers valuable support during difficult life events and confirms that emotions are acceptable and make sense.
While integral to DBT, validation is crucial to all listening therapies. The therapist and therapeutic process benefit from clear and transparent communication by acknowledging what the client says.
The worksheets included in this article provide a practical way to recognize the strengths and weaknesses of existing validation approaches. We can use them to highlight opportunities for growth and improvement, ultimately benefiting the therapist, client, and overall therapeutic outcome.
We hope you enjoyed reading this article. Don’t forget to download our five positive psychology tools for free.
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I can’t find this citation Kocabas, E., & Üstündağ‐Budak, M. (2017). Validation skills in counselling and psychotherapy. International Journal of Scientific Study, 5(8), 319‐322.
Is this a correct citation?
Hi Jenny!
The citation provided is indeed accurate, and I have the complete article readily available for your reference.
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Julia | Community Manager
It’s my first time to pay attention to validation related article.i have liked the information.thanks alot
Very well presented and useful
Very useful
I have been an educator and currently working as customer service online. Some of these communication issues carry over in dealing with adults and many of the educational issues have parents debating your style of communication. It’s unfortunate that emotions run high and to reciprocate that communication in a tangible way, you’re getting beat up by misunderstandings, lies, and anger about the issues.
Your points are valid and give presidencies to the issues but it gets a little deeper when trying to decompress after the fact. My problem is not being Able to keep eye contact and smile while they are screaming then rehash the event with your boss, defending yourself in an strong yet equitable way.