Clinical support
10 Gestalt therapy techniques to increase present-moment awareness
Learn how to help clients who want to increase self-awareness, overcome unwanted patterns, and improve emotional blockages with these techniques.
October 24, 2025
7 min read
As a therapist, you have the responsibility to choose from a variety of modalities and approaches that can help support your clients. For those who want to increase their present-moment awareness, overcome emotional blockages, and stop negative patterns, Gestalt therapy may be an effective approach.
The experiential framework of Gestalt therapy can help some clients, but it may not be the best fit for everyone. Below, learn more about how Gestalt therapy can support your clients, as well as techniques you can try to increase their present-moment awareness and overall well-being.
Key takeaways
- Gestalt therapy is a type of therapeutic modality focused on someone’s present experience and how they engage with their environment.
- It can be helpful for people who want to increase self-awareness, improve emotional blockages, and overcome unwanted patterns.
- Individuals with complex trauma histories or those in acute crisis may benefit from other approaches as first-line treatments.
- A common Gestalt practice is the empty chair technique, an exercise in which clients speak to an imagined person or part of themselves in an empty chair to process emotions, gain insight, and resolve inner conflicts.
Understanding the foundations of Gestalt therapy
Gestalt therapy is a type of humanistic talk therapy that focuses on a client’s present experience and how they understand and interact with their day-to-day environment. Its goal is to help people understand what is actually happening in their lives now as opposed to assumptions based on past experiences. Along with present awareness, Gestalt therapy focuses on personal responsibility and holistic integration of experiences.
The word “gestalt” stems from a German word that means “whole” or “put together.” Gestalt therapy was developed in the 1940s and 50s by psychiatrist and psychoanalyst Fritz Perls and his wife, Laura Perls. Gestalt’s foundation is based on the idea that people are more than a single trait or diagnosis, but instead a “whole” self.
By using experiential techniques like role-playing, reenactment, or creative expression, clients build awareness of their thoughts, behaviors, and patterns — so they can take responsibility, overcome blockages, and move toward greater self-understanding and growth.
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Who benefits most from Gestalt techniques?
Gestalt therapy often works best with clients seeking increased self-awareness and those struggling with unwanted patterns in relationships, emotional blockages, or difficulty expressing their feelings. It’s especially helpful for clients who want to explore the “here and now,” gain insight into how their behaviors impact others, and take responsibility for their choices. Because Gestalt therapy emphasizes experiential techniques like role-playing and creative exercises, it tends to work best for people who are open to active participation and self-exploration in therapy.
As with any other therapeutic modality, Gestalt therapy is not the best fit for every client. People in acute crisis or with complex histories of trauma may benefit from stabilization, grounding, or other therapeutic approaches before Gestalt therapy. Your intake assessment can help you determine whether Gestalt can be a supportive approach for your client.
| Client description | Good fit for Gestalt | Poor fit for Gestalt |
|---|---|---|
| Struggling with relationship issues | ✔ | |
| Seeking greater self-awareness | ✔ | |
| Experiencing emotional blockages | ✔ | |
| In acute crisis | ✔ | |
| Unresolved trauma history | ✔ |
10 powerful experiential techniques for immediate awareness
Gestalt therapy primarily uses experiential techniques to help clients improve present-moment awareness and emotional processing.
1. Talking to the empty chair
The empty chair technique is a Gestalt therapy exercise where clients speak to an imagined person or part of themselves seated across from them. By voicing unspoken thoughts and sometimes switching roles, clients can process emotions, gain perspective, and work through unresolved conflicts to foster insight and closure.
Example prompts:
- If that person were sitting here, what would you say?
- What’s it like for you to imagine their response?
2. Switching sides: The two-chair conversation
In this Gestalt exercise, clients move between two chairs to embody different parts of themselves — for example, the inner critic and the inner nurturer. By speaking from each perspective, they can externalize inner dialogue, uncover conflicts, and work toward greater self-awareness and balance.
Example prompts:
- When you’re the safe, protective part of you, what do you say?
- How does the vulnerable part respond?
3. Crank it up: The exaggeration exercise
In this Gestalt technique, clients are encouraged to amplify a gesture, movement, or tone of voice to bring hidden emotions to the surface. “Cranking up” subtle nonverbal cues helps clients gain clarity so they can recognize underlying feelings and uncover deeper meaning behind their behaviors.
Example prompts:
- Can you do that again, only bigger, louder, and more noticeable?
- What shifts inside when you make it larger than life?
4. Step into their shoes: Role-play
This Gestalt technique invites clients to embody the role of another person — such as a parent, partner, or friend — to view dynamics from a new perspective. By role-playing, clients can uncover hidden emotions, deepen empathy, and gain fresh insights into their relationships and interactions.
Example prompts:
- Try being your therapist/client/partner—what might they say?
- Now switch back. What did you feel playing their role?
5. Vision check-in: Guided imagery
In this Gestalt approach, clients are gently invited to visualize a scene, memory, or future outcome. Through guided imagery, they can explore emotions, reconnect with unfinished business, and gain deeper awareness of how their inner experiences shape present feelings, offering new clarity and possibilities for growth.
Example prompts:
- Close your eyes. What do you notice in that place?
- What feelings come up as you picture this moment?
6. Feel it here, now: Staying with emotion
This Gestalt technique encourages clients to pause and fully experience their emotions in the present moment rather than pushing them away. By staying with feelings as they arise, clients can uncover their meaning, build tolerance, and discover the insights or needs those emotions may be signaling.
Example prompts:
- What’s that feeling like in your body right now?
- If this emotion had a voice, what would it say to you?
7. Try the opposite: Reversal technique
In this Gestalt method, clients are invited to act out behaviors they usually avoid — for instance, a timid person practicing boldness. By exploring the opposite role, clients uncover hidden parts of themselves, challenge limiting patterns, and open the door to new, previously unlived possibilities for growth.
Example prompts:
- Show me what it looks like to be the opposite of how you feel right now.
- How did that feel — strange, freeing, surprising?
8. Have a conversation with what’s showing up
This Gestalt technique invites clients to dialogue with whatever arises — whether a symptom like anxiety, a physical sensation, or even an imagined image. By giving these things a voice and responding in turn, clients can uncover their meaning, explore underlying needs, and gain greater self-awareness and clarity.
Example prompts:
- If your anxiety could talk, what would it say?
- What might this (object/feeling) want you to know?
9. Tune into the present: Here-and-now awareness
This Gestalt practice grounds clients in their immediate experience by focusing on what’s happening in the moment, both internally and in their surroundings. By noticing their sensations, emotions, and environment, clients can build awareness, reduce avoidance, and connect more deeply with themselves and their present reality.
Example prompts:
- Right now, what do you feel under your feet or in your chest?
- What’s showing up for you at this moment?
10. Bring your dream to life: Gestalt dream work
In this technique, clients act out different parts of a dream, such as objects, people, or settings, as expressions of the self. By embodying each element, they uncover hidden meanings, explore unresolved conflicts, and gain deeper insight into the personal messages their dreams may carry.
Example prompts:
- Act out what the tree/storm/river in your dream might say.
- Which part of you might that dream figure represent?
Integrating Gestalt techniques into your treatment plans
The right treatment for your client depends on their diagnosis, current symptoms, and your training and expertise as a therapist. When you create a client treatment plan, detailed documentation is key for insurance reimbursement. To be paid for the therapy sessions you do with clients, you’ll need to clearly highlight the client’s diagnosis and symptoms to back up the chosen treatment modality.
Headway can help you create and update treatment plans based on client symptoms and diagnosis, so you can iterate techniques like Gestalt therapy into your practice.
Understanding limitations of Gestalt therapy
Many clinicians find Gestalt techniques clinically useful, but keep in mind the empirical base is smaller and less standardized than for approaches like CBT or exposure-based treatments. Studies vary in quality and protocol consistency, making it harder to compare outcomes or identify which components of Gestalt therapy drive change.
Implementation of Gestalt therapy can also be challenging. Because Gestalt methods emphasize immediacy, embodiment, and experiential work, sessions may evoke strong responses. Some clients resist role-playing, fear “performing,” or feel overwhelmed by the emotional intensity of Gestalt therapy. Your role as a therapist is to pace sessions carefully and build psychological safety every step of the way.
Gestalt therapy isn’t a fit for everyone. Clients in acute crisis, with active psychosis, severe dissociation, unstable substance use, or poorly managed PTSD symptoms may require stabilization, skills training, or alternative frameworks before engaging in emotionally activating exercises.
Gestalt requires therapeutic training, comfort with the here-and-now process, and strong attunement to transference and countertransference. Finally, keep in mind documentation and progress measures can be less straightforward with experiential methods. It can help to clearly outline treatment goals, informed consent language, and outcome tracking.
Headway streamlines your practice so you can be present for your clients
Gestalt therapy invites clients to explore the whole of who they are — not just symptoms or labels — to uncover new insights, resolve inner conflicts, and move toward growth. For therapists, integrating Gestalt techniques can expand your toolkit and meet clients where they are in the present moment. Providing this level of care also means balancing clinical work with the realities of billing, credentialing, and insurance. That’s where Headway can help. By streamlining administrative tasks and simplifying client access to care, Headway frees you to focus on what matters most: helping your clients achieve meaningful, lasting change.
This content is for general informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute clinical, legal, financial, or professional advice. All decisions should be made at the discretion of the individual or organization, in consultation with qualified clinical, legal, or other appropriate professionals.
© 2025 Therapymatch, Inc. dba Headway. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced without permission.
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