Tuesday 28 February 2017

The Alzheimer’s Defense Program Results

What's not so good: These couples are depicted in a negative light as mostly arguing with each other, and showing their relationships as being stuck in some instances of destructive behaviors despite genuinely loving each other. Hope Springs: Kay (Meryl Streep) and Arnold (Tommy Lee Jones) are a couple, who decide to reconnect and spice up their marriage by seeing a couple's specialist, played by Steve Carell. There is plenty of humor in seeing the couple lose their hang-ups and re-ignite the spark that caused them to fall in love. What's The Alzheimer’s Defense Program good: Steve Carell plays Dr. Feld as calm and compassionate in helping the frustrated couple. Carell portrays Dr. Feld as a therapist who is non-judgmental and earnest in creating a safe environment for the couple to open up about their relationship. In an interview Carell stated that he spoke to counselors to learn about their approach as a guy who isn't there to solve your problems, but to help open lines of communication in a non-judgmental way.

What's not so good: The movie has the couple going for a week of intensive therapy, but realistically marriage counseling isn't something that can be condensed in the span of a week, which makes it all the more uncomfortable when Dr. Feld asks deeply personal questions about Kay and Arnold's marriage, and sex life. Effective and lasting in depth work with couples is something that takes more time than what is shown onscreen. Adam (Joseph Gordon-Levitt) is a twenty something guy who learns he has a rare and serious form of cancer. Adam gets support from his best friend and a therapist (Ana Kendrick) who help him come to grip with being sick in his young adulthood.

What's good: This film is funny and heart-warming, and there are moments in the film when Adam and his therapist have good rapport, and address his fear about dying. There is some humor about her being a young and inexperienced, but competent therapist. What's not so good: This movie is described as being based on a true story, but there is not a shred of truth about how the relationship between him and his therapist is portrayed. For starters, his therapist crosses several boundaries that include her giving him a ride home, her breaking confidentiality by telling his family who she is, and lastly by being his love interest. In many television shows and film therapists always seem to be crossing the line by sleeping with their client, becoming too involved, or talking about their clients outside of the therapy session.

http://www.nomorefakereviews.com/alzheimers-defense-program-review/

This almost never happens in real life, but for the sake of entertainment is a common occurrence. It seems that most shows miss showing the skill, expertise, and the ethics of being a therapist. The portrayals of people in therapy can be skewed as deeply flawed and unbalanced, which can lead people to regard anyone seeking therapy to be crazy. Therapists are as prone to having emotional issues as anyone else however, ethical codes of conduct and having professional boundaries is what makes entering a working relationship with your therapist safe. By shining a light on the fact and fiction of what therapy is and isn't, we can help create an awareness in which people can feel more comfortable and safe about mental health issues, therapists, and counseling.

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