Where Does Competence End and Ethical Strain Begin?

As psychologists, we are trained in cultural humility. We are taught to monitor bias, bracket ethnocentric assumptions, and avoid imposing our worldview onto clients.

In theory.

But what happens when a client's values do not simply differ from ours - but directly violate them?

Can I work with someone who supports the war in my country?

Can a therapist deeply committed to monogamy work with someone who is cheating and has no intention of stopping?

Where does competence end and ethical strain begin?

This question stops being theoretical in the therapy room.

Cultural Humility Has Limits

Cultural humility asks us to remain open, self-reflective, and aware of bias. It protects clients from moral imposition and ethnocentric judgment. It is foundational to ethical psychological practice.

But humility does not dissolve moral structure.

Therapists are not blank slates. We have histories, values, political contexts, and lived experience. We are relational beings with nervous systems that respond to alignment and violation.

The question is not whether we have reactions.

Not All Internal Reactions Are Countertransference

We often reach for the language of countertransference when we feel activated. And sometimes that is accurate. Personal history gets stirred. Old relational dynamics are re-enacted. Those reactions can be explored and metabolised.

But not every internal contraction is countertransference.

Some reactions are value misalignment.

There is a difference between working through personal reactivity and overriding core moral boundaries.

If a client's stance violates something fundamental in us - not as a trauma echo, but as a present-day moral position - that is a different category of strain.

The Relational Field Still Matters

Decades of psychotherapy research demonstrate that therapeutic alliance - warmth, empathy, congruence - is one of the strongest predictors of outcome across modalities. Regardless of whether one practices CBT, psychodynamic therapy, ACT, or EMDR, the relational field shapes the work.

Clients feel subtle contraction. They register guardedness. They sense moral charge.

Even when nothing is spoken.

Sometimes relational tension can become material to explore. But if internal strain is chronic rather than occasional, the safety of the space shifts.

Safety is not an abstract ideal. It is neurobiological. Emotional processing depends on a regulated relational environment. If the therapist's nervous system is braced, the field changes.

Competence includes emotional capacity.

The Yalom Example - And Its Limits

Irvin Yalom described his initial disgust toward a client in his case "Fat Lady." He did not conceal it. He examined it and worked through it. The therapy became meaningful and transformative.

The story is powerful because it models honesty.

But it also raises a difficult question.

Yalom was confronting personal aversion. What if the issue had not been disgust, but moral violation? What if the client had articulated values fundamentally incompatible with his own ethical centre?

There is a difference between metabolising countertransference and repeatedly overriding internal moral signals.

Understanding Is Not the Same as Warmth

I am actively expanding my emotional capacity to hold complexity with compassion and positive regard. I can do this for many people with destructive patterns and behaviours that are hard to witness. I can understand where those behaviours come from. I can see the adaptations beneath them.

But if a client were sitting in front of me describing their support for the war in Ukraine, I do not believe I could hold them with genuine positive regard.

That is not theoretical for me.

There is a difference between understanding where a client is coming from and regularly sitting with someone you fundamentally do not like or cannot accept.

I can contextualise behaviour developmentally, relationally, historically. That does not automatically mean I can offer steady warmth toward it.

Understanding is cognitive. Warmth is relational.

The Privilege of Choosing Our Context

Fortunately, I do like my clients. The warmth I feel toward them is real. I also have the privilege of choosing who I work with. I do not work with perpetrators or in forensic settings. In my current context, it is relatively easy for me to maintain positive regard.

Albert Ellis suggested that therapy could be effective even if a client did not particularly like the therapist, provided the cognitive work was occurring. In structured cognitive models, that may hold.

But from my perspective - both as a therapist and as a client - relational safety matters. I need to like and respect my therapist to open fully. And as a therapist, I need to feel genuine warmth to my clients.

Growth Versus Working Beyond What We Can Hold

Professional growth often requires us to stretch. Discomfort is not automatically misalignment. Encountering difference can deepen clinical maturity.

But there is a line.

There is a difference between expanding capacity and working beyond what we can genuinely hold.

If a therapist repeatedly works with clients they tolerate without genuine positive regard - if internal contraction becomes chronic - we have to ask:

Is that professional growth?

Or is it ethical strain?

The deeper question may not be whether we can see clients whose values differ from ours.

It may be:

Where is the edge between professional growth and working beyond what we can genuinely hold?

And are we willing to recognise that edge before the client - or we ourselves - absorb the cost of our internal tension?

---

All 13 articles have been successfully fetched. Here is a summary of what was retrieved:

  1. Navigating Trauma Responses - Covers the four trauma responses (fight, flight, freeze, fawn) with a client case study (Rita) and healing strategies for each.
  2. How to Manage Your Emotional Triggers - A 5-step framework: Notice, Pause, Analyze, Self-soothe, Journal.
  3. Unhooking from Thoughts - ACT-based article on defusion techniques including mindfulness, metaphors, and language reframing.
  4. The Power of Validation in Couples - Includes a client story (Jake and Sarah), levels of validation (active listening, reflecting), and a couples exercise.
  5. Pain vs Suffering - Short personal essay drawing on Carl Jung's quote and a personal knee injury experience.
  6. Anger - Explores anger as a cover for vulnerable emotions like fear and shame, with clinical insights.
  7. Why Do I Get Stuck in Negative Thinking - Explains the evolutionary basis of negativity bias and how a psychologist can help.
  8. Do I Need Therapy - Uses a physical health/PT analogy to frame when therapy is useful, with a list of common struggles.
  9. 4 Types of Social Support - Defines practical, informational, emotional, and companionship support.
  10. New Year's Resolutions - Argues for small, realistic daily goals over grand annual resolutions.
  11. Let's Dance Our Way to Better Health - Short piece on dancing's mood-boosting and cognitive benefits, with a personal reflection.
  12. Tips for Working from Home - Three practical tips on boundaries, colleague connection, and patience (written during COVID-19).
  13. Therapist Values and Ethical Limits - A reflective essay on when a therapist's moral boundaries may make it impossible to offer genuine warmth to a client.