“…Of course, the term impairment only captures the negative or dysfunctional aspect of woundedness, which typically plays out in the form of therapist ‘blind spots’, counterresistance, harmful countertransference enactments, boundary violations, unethical conduct and unconscious gratification of therapist needs at patients' expense. This is the reason for selection committees' careful screening of applicants' psychological fitness and the justification for excluding applicants with evidence of serious psychological disturbance (Johnson & Campbell, ; Chippindall and Watts, ). In psychodynamically oriented programmes and parts of the world where psychologists traditionally practise intensive psychotherapy, it also provides a rationale for the recommendation or requirement that trainee psychologists undergo their own personal psychotherapy as part of their professional training (Guy & Liaboe, ; G. Ivey and C. Waldeck, unpublished manuscript; Murphy, ), as initiation into clinical work is bound to catalyse trainee woundedness.…”