EnduranceFinder
All Races
Every discipline, every distance
Marathons
26.2 miles of glory
Triathlons
Swim, bike, run
Cycling
Gran fondos & road races
Trail Running
Off-road & mountain races
Ultras
Beyond the marathon distance
Virtual Races
Race from anywhere
Popular Destinations
New YorkBostonChicagoLondonTokyoCape Town
Glossary
Endurance terms & definitions
Elite Athletes
Pro athlete profiles
Training Tips
Plans, workouts & coaching
Race Guides
Course previews & strategy
Gear Reviews
Shoes, bikes & race-day kit
Athlete Stories
Community race reports
Wisdom
Words from endurance legends
AI Discovery
How AI powers your experience
Blog
Latest from EnduranceFinder

“The miracle isn't that I finished. The miracle is that I had the courage to start.”

— John Bingham

All RacesEvery discipline, every distance
Marathons26.2 miles of glory
TriathlonsSwim, bike, run
CyclingGran fondos & road races
Trail RunningOff-road & mountain races
UltrasBeyond the marathon distance
Virtual RacesRace from anywhere
Popular Destinations
New YorkBostonChicagoLondonTokyoCape Town
GlossaryEndurance terms & definitions
Elite AthletesPro athlete profiles
Training TipsPlans, workouts & coaching
Race GuidesCourse previews & strategy
Gear ReviewsShoes, bikes & race-day kit
Athlete StoriesCommunity race reports
WisdomWords from endurance legends
AI DiscoveryHow AI powers your experience
BlogLatest from EnduranceFinder
ログイン新規登録Why EnduranceFinder?
  • Browse All Races
  • Marathons
  • Half Marathons
  • Triathlons
  • Cycling
  • Ultras
  • Trail Running
  • Swimming
  • Obstacle Races
  • All Categories →
  • Boston
  • Chicago
  • New York City
  • San Francisco
  • Los Angeles
  • Denver / Boulder
  • Austin
  • Seattle
  • Berlin
  • London
  • すべての都市 →
  • For Race Directors
  • For Timing Companies
  • For Running Clubs
  • For Cycling Organizations
  • For Triathlon Clubs
  • For Trail Race Organizers
  • For Charity Races
  • For OCR & Adventure Races
  • For Swim & Open Water
  • AI Platform
  • Pricing
  • Case Studies
  • カート放棄リカバリー
  • スマートダイナミックプライシング
  • チケットカテゴリ
  • 定期イベント
  • Custom Questions
  • アフィリエイトシステム
  • ウェイトリスト / 通知
  • チケットスキャナー
  • 埋め込みウィジェット
  • Event Syndication
  • Integrations
  • すべての機能 →
  • About EnduranceFinder
  • Blog
  • AI Discovery
  • Training Guides
  • Race Guides
  • Help Center
  • Contact Us
  • Careers
  • Press
  • 利用規約
  • プライバシーポリシー

Races

  • Browse All Races
  • Marathons
  • Half Marathons
  • Triathlons
  • Cycling
  • Ultras
  • Trail Running
  • Swimming
  • Obstacle Races
  • All Categories →

目的地

  • Boston
  • Chicago
  • New York City
  • San Francisco
  • Los Angeles
  • Denver / Boulder
  • Austin
  • Seattle
  • Berlin
  • London
  • すべての都市 →

組織向け Race directors

  • For Race Directors
  • For Timing Companies
  • For Running Clubs
  • For Cycling Organizations
  • For Triathlon Clubs
  • For Trail Race Organizers
  • For Charity Races
  • For OCR & Adventure Races
  • For Swim & Open Water
  • AI Platform
  • Pricing
  • Case Studies

機能

  • カート放棄リカバリー
  • スマートダイナミックプライシング
  • チケットカテゴリ
  • 定期イベント
  • Custom Questions
  • アフィリエイトシステム
  • ウェイトリスト / 通知
  • チケットスキャナー
  • 埋め込みウィジェット
  • Event Syndication
  • Integrations
  • すべての機能 →

会社

  • About EnduranceFinder
  • Blog
  • AI Discovery
  • Training Guides
  • Race Guides
  • Help Center
  • Contact Us
  • Careers
  • Press
  • 利用規約
  • プライバシーポリシー
EnduranceFinder
© 2026 EnduranceFinder. 全著作権所有.
Glossary›Psychotherapy

Glossary

Psychotherapy

A structured, evidence-based dialogue between a trained clinician and client aimed at alleviating psychological distress, modifying behavior, and enhancing well-being.

What is Psychotherapy?

Psychotherapy is a collaborative treatment process in which a licensed mental health professional uses scientifically validated procedures to help individuals, couples, families, or groups develop healthier and more effective patterns of thinking, feeling, and behaving. Unlike casual conversation or spiritual counsel, psychotherapy is characterized by a defined therapeutic frame—including confidentiality, structured sessions, and treatment goals—and draws on empirically tested theories of human psychology. Sessions typically occur weekly or biweekly and range from short-term interventions (8-20 sessions) to open-ended long-term work spanning years.

Origins & Lineage

Modern psychotherapy emerged in late 19th-century Europe as physicians and philosophers sought systematic approaches to mental suffering. Sigmund Freud’s publication of Studies on Hysteria (1895, co-authored with Josef Breuer) established psychoanalysis as the first formal psychotherapy, using free association and dream interpretation to access unconscious material. Carl Jung broke from Freud in 1913 to develop analytical psychology, emphasizing archetypes and individuation. Concurrently, Pierre Janet in France explored dissociation and trauma, while Alfred Adler founded individual psychology.

The 20th century saw rapid diversification. Carl Rogers introduced client-centered therapy in the 1940s, emphasizing unconditional positive regard and empathy. Aaron Beck developed cognitive therapy in the 1960s after observing that changing thought patterns reduced depression. Behaviorists like Joseph Wolpe and B.F. Skinner applied learning theory to treat phobias and anxiety. By the 1970s, family systems therapy (Salvador Minuchin, Murray Bowen) shifted focus from individuals to relational patterns. The integration movement of the 1980s acknowledged that no single school held complete answers, spurring evidence-based practice and treatment manuals.

How It’s Practiced

Psychotherapy unfolds in a confidential setting—typically an office, though teletherapy has become standard since 2020. Sessions last 45-60 minutes. The therapist listens actively, asks clarifying questions, reflects patterns, and may assign between-session practices (journaling, exposure exercises, mindfulness). Modalities vary widely: psychodynamic therapists explore childhood experiences and transference; cognitive-behavioral therapists challenge distorted beliefs and track thought records; somatic therapists attend to bodily sensations and nervous system regulation; gestalt therapists use role-play and present-moment awareness.

Group therapy involves 6-12 participants and a facilitator, allowing members to practice interpersonal skills and receive peer feedback. Couples therapy addresses communication breakdowns and attachment injuries. The therapeutic relationship itself—termed the “alliance”—is consistently the strongest predictor of outcome across modalities, more so than specific techniques.

Psychotherapy Today

Contemporary seekers access psychotherapy through private practices, community mental health centers, university counseling services, and online platforms like BetterHelp or Talkspace. Many practitioners integrate mindfulness, Internal Family Systems (Richard Schwartz), EMDR for trauma (Francine Shapiro), or Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (Steven Hayes). Psychedelic-assisted psychotherapy—using MDMA or psilocybin under clinical supervision—is undergoing FDA trials and represents a convergence of ancient healing traditions and modern neuroscience.

Retreat centers increasingly offer intensive therapy weeks, combining daily sessions with somatic practices and nature immersion. Insurance coverage varies widely; sliding-scale clinics and training clinics affiliated with graduate programs provide lower-cost access. Licensing requirements differ by jurisdiction, but credentialed psychotherapists typically hold master’s or doctoral degrees and complete 2,000-4,000 hours of supervised practice.

Common Misconceptions

Psychotherapy is not advice-giving; therapists rarely tell clients what decisions to make. It is not exclusively for severe mental illness—many clients seek support for life transitions, relationship issues, or personal growth. It is not interchangeable with coaching; coaches focus on goal attainment and do not treat diagnosed mental disorders. Psychotherapy is not a quick fix; meaningful change typically requires months of consistent work. It is not passive; clients must actively engage between sessions and tolerate discomfort. Finally, psychotherapy is not spiritually neutral but does not prescribe a particular cosmology—secular, Buddhist, Christian, and Jungian practitioners all exist, each integrating different metaphysical assumptions.

How to Begin

Start by identifying your primary concern: anxiety, depression, relationship conflict, trauma, identity questions. Psychology Today’s therapist directory allows filtering by specialty, modality, insurance, and identity. Schedule consultations with 2-3 therapists to assess rapport. Ask about their training, theoretical orientation, and experience with your presenting issue. If cost is prohibitive, contact local graduate training programs; supervised trainees offer reduced fees. For self-education, Irvin Yalom’s The Gift of Therapy and Nancy McWilliams’ Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy provide clinician perspectives, while Maybe You Should Talk to Someone by Lori Gottlieb offers an accessible narrative introduction. Expect the first 3-5 sessions to feel exploratory; deeper work unfolds as trust builds.

Related terms

shadow workmindfulnesssomatic therapyinner child healingbreathworkjungian psychology
All termsDiscover