Counselling Psychology is a distinct applied psychological discipline grounded in a holistic and contextual understanding of human experience, emphasizing meaning-making, relational processes, and developmental change across the lifespan. Rooted in humanistic, existential, and contextual traditions, the field attends not only to the alleviation of distress but also to how individuals construct identity, negotiate transitions, and integrate lived experience within social and cultural contexts. This paper introduces a Special Issue that brings together conceptually coherent and methodologically diverse contributions at the intersection of Positive and Counselling Psychology. While Positive Psychology has traditionally emphasized optimal functioning and strengths, the present discussion adopts a Counselling Psychology lens, foregrounding processes of interpretation, narrative continuity, relational embeddedness, and developmental transformation. Across diverse populations, life stages, and psychosocial contexts, the contributions highlight psychological well-being as a dynamic, context-sensitive process shaped through relationships, values, and meaning-making rather than as a static outcome or purely intrapsychic state. This Special Issue illustrates how individuals actively negotiate adversity, vulnerability, and change within their everyday worlds, mobilizing psychological resources while sustaining continuity of the self. By integrating empirical research with lived experience, the collection advances Counselling Psychology as a discipline uniquely positioned to bridge theory and practice, honor human fragility alongside resilience, and inform ethically grounded, relational, and developmentally sensitive approaches to psychological well-being.
Eirini Karakasidou (Wed,) studied this question.
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