“…Some authors limit the notion of self-disclosure to verbal acts and differentiate types, such as facts, feelings, insight, strategy, reassurance/ support, challenge and immediacy (Knox & Hill, 2003). Zur, Williams, Lehavot, and Knapp (2009) concentrate less on the verbal content but view self-disclosure as the totality of information clients gain in contact with their therapists. These authors describe additional aspects: whether selfdisclosure was deliberate (therapist intentionally telling or showing something to a client), avoidable or not (some information is impossible or difficult to hide, e.g., therapist's age, disabilities or emotional expressions), or accidental (self-disclosures resulting from meeting a therapist in his daily life -in a cinema with his family, at a concert or a church).…”