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More than 40 years ago eminent psychiatrist Richard Chessick penned a classic, highly prescient psychotherapy supervision paper (that appeared in this journal) in which he identified for supervisors the crucial triad of learning difficulties that tend to confront beginning therapists in their training. These are

(a)

dealing with the anxiety attendant to the development of psychological mindedness;

(b)

developing a psychotherapist identity; and

(c)

developing conviction about the meaningfulness of psychodynamics and psychotherapy.

In this paper, I would like to revisit Chessick’s seminal contribution about the teaching and learning of psychotherapy and extrapolate his triad of learning difficulties to the process of teaching and learning supervision. The process of being and becoming a psychotherapist has been likened to a developmental journey, and similarly being and becoming a supervisor is increasingly recognized as a developmental journey that is best stimulated by means of didactic and practical experiences (i.e., supervision coursework, seminars, or workshops and the supervision of supervision). In what follows, I would like to explore how Chessick’s crucial triad of learning difficulties can be meaningfully extrapolated to and used to inform the supervision training situation. In extrapolating Chessick’s triad, beginning supervisors or supervisor trainees can be conceptualized as confronting three critical issues:

(a)

dealing with the anxiety and demoralization attendant to the development of supervisory mindedness;

(b)

developing a supervisory identity; and

(c)

developing conviction about the meaningfulness of psychotherapy supervision.

This triadic conceptualization appears to capture nicely core concerns that extend across the arc of the supervisor development process and provides a useful and usable way of thinking about supervisor training and informing it. Each component of the triadic conceptualization is described, and some supervisor education intervention possibilities are considered.