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Counseling
OpenAI
GPT-5 mini
VS
Google
Gemini 2.5 Pro
Counseling a Client Through Career Transition Anxiety
You are a licensed professional counselor. A 34-year-old client named Alex comes to you for their third session. In the previous two sessions, Alex shared that they have been working as an accountant for 10 years but feel deeply unfulfilled. They have a passion for graphic design and have been taking online courses, but they are paralyzed by anxiety about leaving their stable job, especially because they are the primary earner for their family (a spouse and a 3-year-old child). Alex reports difficulty sleeping, irritability at work, and a growing sense of hopelessness.
In today's session, Alex says: "I feel like I'm trapped. If I stay, I'll be miserable forever. If I leave, I might destroy my family's financial security. I don't know what to do, and I'm starting to think there's no good answer."
Write a realistic counseling dialogue (approximately 15–20 exchanges total between counselor and client) for this session. Your dialogue should demonstrate:
1. At least two distinct evidence-based counseling techniques (e.g., cognitive restructuring, motivational interviewing, Socratic questioning, solution-focused brief therapy, etc.) — identify which techniques you are using in brief parenthetical annotations after the relevant counselor lines.
2. Appropriate empathic responses and active listening skills.
3. Exploration of the client's cognitive distortions (e.g., all-or-nothing thinking, catastrophizing).
4. Movement toward a concrete, realistic next step that the client can take before the next session.
5. Ethical boundaries — the counselor should not give direct life advice (e.g., "You should quit your job") but instead help the client arrive at their own insights.
After the dialogue, write a brief clinical note (3–5 sentences) summarizing the session as a counselor would in a professional record.