Development Theories In Counseling — Lenses Applying Lifespan
When you do, you stop treating symptoms—and start honoring stories.
Here’s how to apply four major developmental lenses in your daily practice. Erik Erikson believed we navigate eight stages of psychosocial conflict. A client’s presenting problem is often a symptom of an unresolved crisis. Lenses Applying Lifespan Development Theories In Counseling
As a counselor, you are never just treating a symptom. You are treating a life —a person navigating a specific chapter of a much longer story. Lifespan development theories are the lenses that bring that story into focus. Without them, a client’s behavior can seem puzzling, irrational, or even pathological. With them, behavior becomes understandable, predictable, and, most importantly, addressable. When you do, you stop treating symptoms—and start
Apply these lenses not as rigid formulas, but as compassionate questions: Where is this client on their journey? What does this life chapter demand? And how can I meet them exactly there? A client’s presenting problem is often a symptom