1. Next, the therapist
forms a hypothesis about the problem and solution making up the client's
symptom-requiring schema or pro-symptom position.
You answered TRUE.
Actually, that is incorrect. In Coherence Therapy, the therapist does not rely on
"figuring out" the client's symptom-requiring schema, but elicits it experientially
and learns from the client what it is. If a
hypothesis happens to occur to the therapist, she/he is free to use it
as a tentative guide for the experiential discovery work, but such hypotheses
are not needed because techniques of discovery are effective at eliciting
schemas even if applied "blind," with no prior notion of schema content.