My daughter sent me to see you and, because I am a good mother, I had to do as she asked me to and I requested an appointment. You are highly recommended, but you should know that I have had a lot of therapy in my life!” This is how Catalina, a 59-year-old Chilean woman, introduced her problem in the first session at the Brief Therapy Center of the Mental Research Institute (MRI) in Palo Alto, California. “My daughter believes – and I agree with her – that I am in an abusive relationship. I walk on eggshells around my husband because if I happen to say something that he doesn’t like – and I never know what that might be – he yells at me, becomes threatening and abusive. He has never hit me but I am nervous, insecure, and feel vulnerable.”
Karin ascertained that Catalina was out of physical danger, at least for the immediate future. Catalina said she had a place to go if she felt threatened, ad confided in people around her, and it was clear that when these arguments took place, she felt confident enough to stand up to her husband. Her actions, however, just made the situation more inflammatory and prone to escalation.
How does the MRI Problem-Solving Brief Therapy (PSBT) model organize this information and frame the rest of treatment?
BTC Workshop: Life Changing: All-Access Pass | Join our LIVE workshops | 📅Aug 2025 – July 2026
Register Now
00
Days
:
00
Hours
:
00
Minutes
:
00
Seconds