Abstract
Some of the difficulties, dilemmas and opportunities afforded by working within a time-limited counselling framework are explored. The author's range of work, and the relative importance of time-limited work in it, are briefly described. A brief outline of the change process is then given, which includes a discussion of the author's ‘philosophy of the person’—i.e. our fundamental beliefs and assumptions about what we believe a ‘person’ to be (for example, a mechanistic, soul-less collection of matter, or an indissolubly whole organism with a ‘soul’ or ‘spirit’). This discussion provides the backdrop for some reflections on the extent to which time-limited working is consistent with, and adaptable to, a humanistic-dynamic conception of the person, and on the nature of the ‘therapeutic’ change process.