Robinson EFT Autistic
Robinson EFT Autistic
Robinson EFT Autistic
Emotion-
Focused Therapy for Clients with Autistic Process. Person-Centered & Experiential
Psychotherapies. ©Routledge, 2017. This is an author final version and may not
exactly replicate the final version. It is not the copy of record.
ABSTRACT
The person-centered approach has paid little attention to persons with autistic
process, in spite of their often experiencing high levels of psychological distress. We
present the main arguments for a group therapy adaptation of Emotion-Focused
Therapy for people on the autistic spectrum (EFT-AS). The principles of this
approach are described here. A novel form of Interpersonal Process Recall (IPR) as a
process guiding method is presented. The primary change processes include
improving access to and symbolizing one’s own and others’ painful emotional
experiences. EFT-AS uses video playback of social-emotional interpersonal
reciprocity difficulty task markers to help clients activate, deepen and transform
emotions via accessing core pain and associated unmet needs, which in turn point to
adaptive emotions such as compassion for self and others. The beginning, middle and
ending phases of treatment, showing shifts in client emotion processing, are presented
with illustrative session transcripts. EFT-AS appears to be an innovative and
promising approach to working with this client population but replication and further
research are required.
Key Words: Emotion-Focused Therapy, Autism Spectrum, Autistic
Process, Emotional Processing, Interpersonal Process Recall.
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process. As such this social-emotional processing difference leads to a fragile sense
of self and lack of self-agency within interpersonal engagement leading to trauma-
related experiences (Robinson, 2014). Therefore, we argue that strengthening this
fragile sense of self and one’s self-agency within interpersonal relationships is central
for therapeutic change for clients with autistic process.
It can be argued that CBT approaches do not address core processes such as
social and emotional cognition and empathy (Target & Fonagy, 2006). An emerging
alternative that does address these core processes is humanistic-experiential
psychotherapy (HEP; Elliott et al., 2013), with a diverse evidence base. The most
central characteristic of HEP is its focus on promoting experiencing and self-empathy
within therapy. Thus, HEPs can address many core areas of difficulty for those with
autistic process, but in particular difficulties in emotional processing, self-
experiencing, empathy and interpersonal relating. Unfortunately, HEP
psychotherapists historically have rejected diagnostic formulations and therefore have
failed to adapt their approach to meet the impact of particular diagnostic groups, even
when this is called for, as is the case with clients with autistic process. Nevertheless,
there has been a recent development of interest in differential treatment within the
HEP approaches (Elliott et al., 2013).
In this article an Emotion Focused Therapy (EFT) for clients with autistic
process is described. We argue for a group treatment (which is in accordance with
NICE guidance), with the aim of creating concrete interpersonal and intersubjective
opportunities amongst clients who share a similar way of being. We differ from CBT
in that emotional processing, self-experiencing, empathy and interpersonal relating
are centrally placed within a HEP framework.
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clients to deepen their own experiences and empathic responses to others during
sessions.
The first author developed the EFT-AS protocol based on both more than 20
years of experience as a Person-Centred-Experiential therapist with clients with
autistic process and in particular through a task analytical research program (cf.
Greenberg, 2007; Pascual-Leone, Greenberg & Pascual-Leone, 2009), under the
supervision and mentorship of the second author. The therapeutic model incorporates
video-assisted Interpersonal Process Recall (IPR) and falls into three successive,
overlapping phases.
EFT-AS is a brief group treatment lasting a minimum of nine weeks, but can
be extended. All sessions are video recorded. Figure 1 provides an overview of the
structure of the EFT-AS protocol, which follows a 3-step model consisting of two
kinds of alternating sessions: 60-min group therapy session and 90-min video-assisted
IPR session.
INSERT FIGURE 1 ABOUT HERE
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navigation of sometimes idiosyncratic or challenging interactions, with the added
potential of interpersonal ruptures. Understanding autistic process is important in
supporting therapeutic alliance as it can help hold fragile interpersonal relating and
help clients feel supported by the therapist, who can respond to autistic process and
provide secure boundaries. The specific tasks of this beginning phase include:
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an emotional difficulty marker can be seen through this illustration taken from the
adult group from the first session when the therapist responds to Carla’s discourse of
an experience of being stressed:
Therapist: Carla, you just said there, ‘stress’; can you just explain what that
feels like, inside?
Carla: [pause] No, because it hasn’t happened for a few days. It’s hard because
I haven’t been stressed for days. Because I've had my friend over for a few
days, no I can't, it’s hard.
Identifying AS process markers for therapeutic focus. The second therapist
response to markers is more systematic, where the therapist, through video analysis,
identifies markers that signal difficulties arising from autistic process. These markers
are selected to set up self and interpersonal therapy work in the subsequent session.
For example, when the therapist identifies a marker, such as difficulty in recalling
emotions or misses reading someone else’s emotion, this can act as a marker for
further work on emotional processing. The therapist can use this marker to set up
therapeutic work across treatment. Following the first session the therapist conducts a
microanalysis of the full therapy session to identify markers that have the potential to
be used as processing proposals (Sachse, 1992) during the next recall session. For
example, the illustration below is an extract from a larger IPR Clip taken from the
first session of the adolescent group. It contains multiple markers for multiple
members. However, the main marker is an interpersonal rupture between two group
members. An illustration of such a marker is shown below where Natalie has been
speaking of her damaged self-conception when Jane tries to reassure her through a
gentle challenge, which results in an interpersonal rupture:
Natalie: The way I’m acting now is not how normal people act.
Jane: But you are normal.
Natalie: No, I’m not.
Jane: You are.
Natalie: Not.
Jane: Just because you have problems doesn’t mean that you’re not normal.
Natalie: I was born weird” [silence] yes, yes, no! [grunts].
This interpersonal rupture signaled a marker for both self and interpersonal therapy
work and was edited for playback in the subsequent session. This task marker, when it
was played back in session 2 using IPR, offered group members multiple
opportunities to explore how they mentalized self and others. For example, in the
next session the sharing client (Natalie) can explore or deepen their emotional
experiencing to self, whilst giving observing clients an opportunity to experience the
missed emotion of the other, sensing how they may have been experienced
emotionally within the interpersonal exchange or how they themselves experienced a
conflict reaction during the session (Natalie and Jane). Thus, within EFT-AS, IPR
offers group members multiple mentalization (self-and-other) task potentials.
IPR as a process-guiding method: An adaptation to meet clients with autistic
process in order to make psychotherapy accessible within EFT-AS is the use of
Interpersonal Process Recall (IPR; Kagan, 1975). IPR is useful for helping researchers
to elicit covert processes from therapist and client (Elliott, 1986). In EFT-AS, the
first author adapted IPR as a clinical process-guiding method, where the therapist
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conducts a microanalysis of the therapy session to identify significant moments in
therapy that are connected to the autistic process in relation to self and other relating.
The therapist analyses the therapy session to select AS task markers which are
contained within IPR clips to offer as processing proposals to clients to deepen self-
and interpersonal experiencing. In EFT-AS three key segments are selected and edited
to play in the following IPR session, each setting up the potential for therapeutic
work. This clinical application of IPR thus differs from its more generic uses such as
those developed by Kagan (1975) or Elliott and Shapiro (1988); here IPR has been
adapted specifically to respond to the autistic process.
In this beginning phase the therapist supports exploration of autistic process
through group cohesion, safety and the identification of task markers that point to
areas for potential therapeutic work. These markers can then be selected and played
back to the group as processing proposals (Sachse, 1992). In EFT-AS the therapist
identifies these autistic process marker video segments and offers them in the IPR
recall session. This identification of AS marker segments provides a therapeutic focus
for setting up therapeutic tasks across treatment.
Structuring the IPR task environment: Clients with autistic process can become
highly anxious when there is little structure, if expectations are not clear, or if they are
given through language alone. Therefore, visually adapted environments (e.g.,
TEACCH, Schopler & Mesibov, 1983) have been widely adopted within school and
work settings. During the beginning phase of EFT-AS the therapist creates safety by
structure through an initial cycle or two of therapy followed by IPR sessions.
Robinson (2014) has developed a set of therapist principles for setting up the
therapeutic environment for the use of IPR within group EFT-AS. These include how
to introduce and structure the use of IPR in the recall session, but also how to use IPR
to guide client emotion processing, including a range of therapeutic tasks. An
example taken from the second session of the adult group illustrates how the therapist
sets up the therapeutic task environment by creating an opportunity for group
members to bring up any unresolved issues from the previous session (a form of
interpersonal clearing a space) and introducing the first IPR clip:
The therapist begins by introducing the concept of setting up therapeutic task:
Therapist: This is our second week together. I've taken a couple of clips from
our last session that I'm going to play now and give you all an opportunity to
comment and we’ll see where that leads us to, alright! [pause]
This provides time for clients with autism to process the therapeutic task expectation.
Before introducing the therapeutic task the therapist provides an opportunity for
clearing a space:
Therapist: Before we see the clips, is anything left over from the last session?
[pauses for feedback] Are there any issues left over from our last session?
[repeat opportunity in clearing a space] Did anyone think of anything when
they went away, anything that upset anybody, or annoyed anyone? [rephrasing
with additional prompts for clearing a space]
This repeating and rephrasing provides an opportunity to process the verbal
information and is intended to slow communication and therapeutic task demands
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down making therapy more accessible. The therapist then returns to setting up the IPR
task directly before playing the IPR clip:
Therapist: […] So, I’ll start with the first clip. […] I've got three clips. I'm
going to play them twice [pause]. Once I've played it, I want you to look at it
and try to be able to talk about how you feel [pause] Does that make sense?
[pause then plays the first IPR clip]
Further, clear, simple and direct language is given to set up the expectations of the
therapeutic task. This structuring is important in helping reduce anxiety and providing
time to process verbal communication.
Similarly, near the end of each session the therapist introduces the concept of
ending and then conducts an end of session state check with the group members, as
with the example taken from the third session of the adult group shown below:
Therapist: Ok, we’re going to leave it there because we are running out of
time.
Martin: I'm sorry I got here late as I missed the train. […]
Therapist: How does everybody feel after that? Is there anything that any of
you want to talk about before we end?
Carla: I think that we’re getting more relaxed with each other aren’t we? [Matt
“yes”] [Carla looks at Martin] Do you not think so? [Martin nods] there's more
smiles, there's not the tense, you don't sit like this all the time [demonstrates
head down and shoulders down] do you know what I mean? Everybody’s
lightening. I feel as if I'm going down and you two are coming up.
For clients with autistic process this structure through repetition starts to build a level
of trust by creating clear beginning and ending indicators that provide the sequential
steps for the therapy sessions overall. The beginning phase of EFT-AS identifies task
markers and builds trust and alliance through structure. The following middle and
ending phases of therapy involves the use of IPR assisted therapy tasks to deepen self
and interpersonal experiencing.
MIDDLE PHASE: Evocation and Exploration (Sessions 4 – 8)
The middle phase of treatment is aimed at helping clients deepen their
experiencing. In both regular and IPR sessions, the therapist sets up therapeutic tasks
that evocatively unfold and support client encoding and symbolizing of experience.
The specific aims of this middle phase include:
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⎯ Evoking emotional responses to self
⎯ Exploring self and interpersonal affective understandings
Process-Guiding Using IPR. After selecting and editing each marker segment,
the therapist plays it in the following recall session. Each marker segment provides
concrete, visual therapeutic potential for the group. Clients with autistic process can
find social communicative exchanges particularly challenging, and thus have a
preference for visual and single channel processing or what has been referred to as
monotropism (Murray, Lesser & Lawson, 2005). In the recall session, before each
clip is played the therapist guides clients to focus on how they feel, on how their body
responds when viewing self and others in the clip. After viewing the IPR clip
exploratory questions guide clients to access, symbolize and express their felt sense of
what occurred during recall. If clients are able to access, symbolise and express their
emotional response then emotional deepening will continue. However, this often
presents a challenge to clients with autistic process. The therapist guides each client to
reflect on their immediate emotional response when viewing self and to symbolise
and verbally express their experience.
Self-insight into autistic process. Being drawn to reflect upon our experiences
and attribute emotional meaning forms the basis of our engagement with the social
world. Emotionally tinged experiences, when embedded into memory, form an
emotional evaluation that shapes our view of self, other and our relationships with
others (Harter, 1999). Being out of touch with inner experiencing and having limited
capacity to register emotionally tinged experiences is a common occurrence for
clients with autistic process. Specifically, alexithymia is commonly associated with
autism (Hill & Berthoz, 2006) and is proposed as coexisting in up to 85% of people
with autistic process. Therefore, in EFT-AS experiential deepening becomes a main
focus across treatment and from session to session.
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⎯ Validating new feelings and insights that support emerging sense of self
⎯ Scaffolding new and potential interpersonal connections
In the ending phase of therapy the therapist acts like a conductor reinforcing
meaning creation for each individual client, but also for the group process, so that
both individual therapeutic goals and group goals are achieved through interpersonal
processes during treatment. Greenberg (2002) states that the ending phase and
termination in EFT is conducted as a phase of a human relationship that involves two
people who have developed a bond and are saying goodbye and separating. For EFT-
AS this separation and loss extends to each group member. Over the course of
therapy, focusing on relational tasks has encompassed a journey from unsynchronized
connections, to interpersonal ruptures, to relational repair work creating enhanced
relationships. However, for clients with autistic process, ending therapy can present a
major challenge if therapists fail to recognise the impact that both large and small
transitions can have. It is well documented that autistic process often involves
impairments in cognitive flexibility and the ability to shift attentional focus (Hill,
2008). Therefore, scaffolding the ending therapy as a process of change should be
clear and reinforced to allow time to process the meaning of this. Reflecting on
changes across therapy can support clients in symbolising experiences and relational
encounters.
Interpersonal scaffolding to facilitate potential post group therapy
opportunities is another important end phase task. EFT-AS provides the potential for
an isolated population to form connections following treatment and this can be a task
for the ending session. All adults in the pilot study formed post treatment connections
through social media, whilst the following example shows how the adolescents
worked in the final session to form possible post treatment contacts:
Therapist: So, is anyone wanting to keep in touch?
Natalie: Yes, but I'm just not good at having conversations with phone calls.
Therapist: Ok, so you don’t like the phone, so maybe email.
Natalie: How can I contact people?
Jane: I like the phone.
Jack: I'm comfortable with both the phone and emails.
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opposed to a specific therapeutic aim, shown here by Carla: “Relationships is a big
thing, the right conversation skills is another, and emotions is another.”
AS Task Marker: Misempathy (Emotion Misunderstanding). A defining
feature of the EFT approach is that therapeutic interventions are marker guided
(Elliott et al, 2004; Goldman & Greenberg, 2015). As such, therapists should be
attuned to key repeating markers of client problematic process that point to the
underlying determinants of their difficulties. In reviewing the recording, the therapist
identified the most common triggers that brought the client to therapy. These triggers
were interpersonal conflicts focused around professional meetings and her role of
parental advocate.
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empathic responses; instead, Carla responds with solution-focused or cognitive
formulation responses. The therapist selects this to play in the following IPR session:
Martin: I felt that there was something not right about me. Something wrong.
I just didn’t think there was anything to do and that there was no point in
trying anymore, so I became more isolated and stuck in my flat on my own.
Therapist: It sounds quite lonely being isolated and lonely.
Carla: Do you tell people that you’ve got Asperger's?
These misempathy occurrences are selected by the therapist to set up a relational
processing of the misempathy using IPR in the following session. The therapist plays
the segment, which appears to facilitate awareness of and insight into self-agency of
misempathy, as shown here:
Carla: … When you were talking about University. You were relaxed, but sad
about that, the day you were telling us that I didn’t read the body language.
But on watching that and having experienced it with you when you were
talking about it and looking back I can actually [makes ‘roar’ sound and
clenches her hands]. You know, what that is about? That's it dawning on me;
I don’t read body language.
Using IPR to Guide the Other phase of the Misempathy. The extract presented
earlier indicated that the selection of such material for IPR acts initially to deepen the
emotional experience of the sharing client (Martin), but also allows an observing
client to identify incidents in which they missed the pain expressed by another. The
first processing of such material helped Carla to literally see how she had missed the
pain expressed by Martin, for example:
Carla: Very much so, did you not notice the pause, when Martin said that it
was not what he was feeling, I paused and went, “Hold on here, I'm going on
the wrong track”.
Clients are able to achieve partial resolution (Step 4) when they symbolize their
insight and reorient their thinking to reflect understanding of the mental
differentiation of their experiences from others.
Task Resolution: Emotion Transformation
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Carla: [wiping her eyes] I think that’s the strongest feeling for me, I feel
desperately helpless and frustrated. Frustration and mostly helplessness.
She was able to express her underlying core painful feelings of complete helplessness
and her deepest core pain, which was centred on a profound sense of failure as a
mother:
Carla: As a mum, if your kids want something, maternally you want to give
them that something. [pause] I’ll never be able to give Donald his wish. I’ll
never be able to give Donald the insight into normality. I’ll never be able to
tell my neurotypical daughter what it was to be like to be a normal mum, so
when she falls pregnant with her first child, I can’t even tell her what it’s like
to be normal.
Meeting the Unmet Need – Interpersonal Work. In EFT, once the core pain is
reached clients have the potential to move on from this pain by identifying primary
adaptive emotions associated with the unmet need (Timulak, 2015). EFT-AS provides
the potential to meet an unmet need by offering Empathy work. IPR provides an
opportunity for the client to engage in a process of emotion activation of self or other.
It is claimed that autistic people learn through the concrete experience whether
physical or visual (Schopler & Mesibov, 1983). This next step in the resolution stage
(Stage 5) of the Resolving Misempathy task stemmed from activating Carla’s
emotional response to the second IPR clip, which demonstrated a moment of
psychological connection between her and Martin. This evoked emotional resonance
response offered more opportunities for exploration:
Therapist: Where were the tears coming from Carla?
Carla: His smile. That's the first time you've smiled. [points to the screen]
Carla was able to recognise her own self-agency:
Therapist: What about you Carla? You seemed really touched there
Carla: I am chuffed when I see someone is happy, overcomes “a tightness”
[gesture], overcomes a lack of confidence.
Therapist: What about yourself?
Carla: That's what I felt. My feeling would have been a bit of achievement I
suppose.
Carla was able to emotionally respond to herself responding to Martin. This evoking
of an immediate emotional resonance to shared affect acts as a scaffold for the next
part of the Misempathy task.
Empathically Responding to Other’s Pain: Following on from this the final
part of the Misempathy task involved Carla’s empathic response to viewing the next
IPR clip involving discourse about shared painful/trauma experiences: Thus, when
Martin shares his painful experiences of being bullied at work, Carla demonstrates an
affective response to Martin’s pain, which she has a desire to alleviate.
Carla: But at the same time I feel as if I want to give Martin a hug.
Therapist: It’s triggered from Martin?
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Carla: I think so, yeah. Because at the moment I’m toying with my own
feelings, my own past, but my maternal instincts kick in, I feel it maternally.
Self-Agency within Compassionate Responding. The final part of the
Misempathy task (Stage 6) is the symbolization of the client’s own self-agency within
the compassionate response. The core pain, fear of being a failure as a mum, has been
brought into awareness, processed and symbolized. The unmet need or assertive
compassionate action tendency has been evoked:
Therapist: So you’re not sure where that feeling has been triggered from, so it
could be a range of different things. It’s just a feeling that’s come up.
Carla: It’s a protective feeling, it’s a protective feeling that I’ve got [pause] I
want to protect [looks towards Martin]
She is able to symbolize and experience her compassionate maternal response to
Martin. The client can then recognise this maternal action tendency and experience
this within the interpersonal exchange. Carla’s discourse indicated her action
tendency in response to Martin describing his hurt and trauma through a need to
respond, soothe and comfort Martin. Carla’s action response was a need to alleviate
the pain described by Martin, with a need to protect. Through treatment Carla moved
from projecting her own solution-focused thoughts onto Martin to being empathically
in tune with his pain. McNally, Timulak, and Greenberg (2014) have observed that
once self-compassion and assertive anger are generated and expressed without
reservation, a grieving process begins. Additionally to this, for the autistic client an
experiential affirmation of her protective instincts were required. Through this
process, she was able to move from a reactive anger based on fear to loving soothing
strength.
Conclusion
To the best of our knowledge this is the first report of the application of
Emotion Focused Therapy for people on the Autism Spectrum. In this paper we have
focused on the main arguments for an adapted EFT, the main relational and task-
oriented work across the phases of therapy. The authors acknowledge that for classic
PC therapists the process of selecting relational moments to deepen self and other
relational experience may feel too directional. However, we maintain that visually
concretizing conversational and relational exchanges can scaffold psychotherapy,
making it more accessible to many clients with an autistic process.
Finally, in connection to both relational and task-oriented treatment principles,
it is emphasized that the therapist wishing to offer EFT-AS should have solid training
in both person-centered empathic work and also EFT process guiding generally, as
well as specialist training and ongoing supervised practice in working with
individuals on the autistic spectrum and in the IPR-assisted group therapy approach
described here. To this end, further research on training with supervised practice in
EFT-AS is currently in process to replicate our promising initial results.
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