The therapeutic alliance is widely recognized as a central mechanism of change in psychotherapy; however, much existing research risks reifying it as a measurable and static construct, obscuring its fluid, co-constructed nature and the ways it is shaped by power, identity, and social context. This study aimed to explore how psychotherapists understand, construct, and enact the therapeutic alliance in their everyday practice, with particular attention to diversity, anxiety, rupture, and the reciprocal impact of the therapeutic relationship on the therapist. Using a qualitative design, semi-structured interviews were conducted with 14 psychotherapists primarily working in private practice, and the data were analyzed using reflexive thematic analysis. Six interrelated themes were identified: moving from technique to relational presence; diversity as relational negotiation; anxiety as a co-created relational process; rupture as inevitable and generative; therapist transformation through the therapeutic relationship; and navigating professional role and human authenticity. The findings suggest that effective therapeutic work relies less on rigid adherence to technique and more on reflexivity, emotional attunement, and a willingness to engage with discomfort, difference, and relational rupture. The study highlights the need for psychotherapy training to prioritize relational, ethical, and reflexive capacities alongside technical skills, and contributes a more process-oriented understanding of the therapeutic alliance from therapists’ lived perspectives.
Heath-Watt et al. (Fri,) studied this question.