The Role of the Counsellor in the Person-Centred Approach

client and therapist having a warm, open conversation

In person-centred therapy (PCA), the counsellor does not diagnose, direct, advise, or “fix” the client. This is not because the counsellor is passive or lacking skill, but because the therapeutic relationship itself is understood to be the primary agent of change. The counsellor’s role is to create and sustain the relational conditions that allow the […]

Misunderstandings of the Person-Centred Approach

person centred counselling

The person-centred approach (PCA) is often described as simple, non-directive, or “just listening”. Those descriptions sound harmless — until they start shaping poor practice. For students and trainees, misunderstandings of PCA often stem from learning the labels without fully understanding the underlying theory. While PCA is often criticised, many of these criticisms are based on misunderstandings. When […]

“Benefits of Person-Centred Therapy: Does It Actually Work?”

carl rogers person centered counselling

Person-centred counselling is a widely used therapeutic approach valued for its simplicity, depth, and respect for the individual. Rather than focusing on diagnosis, advice-giving, or techniques, it prioritises the therapeutic relationship itself as the agent of change. This page explores the core benefits of person-centred counselling, why it remains influential in modern therapy, and who […]

Conditions of Worth

woman breaking free

Conditions of worth are a core concept in person-centred therapy and are essential for understanding how self-concept, self-esteem, and emotional distress develop. This guide is written for students who want a clear, theory-led explanation that stays grounded in clinical reality, without drifting into exam language or self-help simplifications. Conditions of worth explain how people learn […]

Core Conditions Explained: Why They Matter in Counselling

The core conditions sit at the heart of the person-centred approach. They are not techniques, skills to be applied, or attitudes to be switched on and off. They describe the relational climate required for psychological growth. Developed by Carl Rogers, the core conditions explain why therapy works when it works — and why change struggles […]

The 19 Propositions in Person-Centred Theory

The 19 propositions form the theoretical foundation of person-centred therapy. Developed by Carl Rogers, they describe how individuals experience the world, how the self develops, how psychological distress arises, and how growth becomes possible within facilitative relational conditions. While the core conditions describe what needs to be present in the therapeutic relationship, the propositions explain […]

Congruence in Person-Centred Counselling

Congruence is one of those counselling words that sounds simple—almost obvious—until you try to live it in the therapy room. Then it becomes clear why Carl Rogers treated it as foundational rather than optional. In person-centred counselling, congruence refers to the therapist’s genuineness. Not a performance. Not a polished professional mask. But a real human […]

The Orgasmic Self in Person Centred Theory

Organismic Self vs Self-Concept (Person-Centred Therapy) In person-centred theory, one of the most important — and most misunderstood — ideas is the difference between the organismic self and the self-concept. Students often confuse these terms or treat them as abstract philosophy. In practice, they explain why people feel anxious, inauthentic, or stuck, and why therapy […]

The Locus of Evaluation: Understanding Where Your Sense of Worth Comes From

locus of evaluation

In the person-centred approach, Carl Rogers introduced the locus of evaluation—a simple yet powerful way to understand how we judge our own worth, make decisions, and understand ourselves. Put plainly, it’s about whether you look inside yourself or outside yourself to know what feels right. Internal vs External Locus An internal locus of evaluation means you […]

Growth Through the 7 Stages of Process in Person-Centred Therapy

The Seven Stages of Process The Seven Stages of Process describe how people gradually change over the course of therapy, particularly in the person-centred approach. Rather than being a set of steps that clients move through in a linear way, the stages reflect shifts in how individuals experience, express, and relate to their inner world […]