I agree Sandy, there's a great deal of benefit to that kind of working relationship. I have shared personal aspects of my life with clients who were going through a rough time, and been told "I'm so glad you told me that, I felt like I was the only one!"
I have clients who are students in the alternative healthcare field, and yes, I do give them advice- even when they are on the table. I have young, new mothers, and they all know that they can get an unbiased, non-family opinion from me about their kid's behavior -- because they know I was a nanny, and worked for ESD for many years. And yes, I do give them advice regarding questions to ask potential nannies or preschools, that it is perfectly normal for their 18 month old to screech like a pterodactyl, and that letting a good grandma take the 6 month old for 2 days so she can sleep, isn't going to psychologically scar him.
I have weightlifters who have injured themselves, and I advise them on what motions are likely to aggravate their injuries, and I have people with other conditions who, because they trust me, I can convince to go to a doctor and have it checked out.
My clients know, when it's appropriate, about my background and family, my husband and his resistance to change, my other hobbies and my dogs. And they tell me theirs... which is one of the ways I found out just this week that a client LOVES motorcycles and dislocated his shoulder last summer, or another client fractured one of her metatarsals hiking last year. It's how I know which clients to worry about if I don't hear from them for 3-4 weeks, and which ones will show up again when golf season starts.
I knew when I started this work that I'd never be able to do it in the fashion that advisers like Nina McIntosh recommends... not sharing information about our personal lives. In my case, while I can see the value of playing everything close to the vest, I would never last as one of those "hmmm, mmmhmmm," therapists. We chat. And sometimes we even talk about what matters, from both sides of the table.
I am careful about revealing certain things... there are personal things that are nobody's business except mine. Those stay out of the massage room entirely. I am careful about mentioning anything that happened with any other client. Even without the names or other identifiers, even if it would be helpful, I don't want the client wondering if I am then talking about them to someone else. I am very careful about complaining about a client... though I've never been a subtle person, it could be taken by the client that I am talking about them. (Early on, I made the mistake of mentioning in passing, how tired the last client made me because she was very "needy." It took a great deal of reassurance toward the person that I told, that I did not view her as "needy" also.)
I follow the laws... do not recommend medications, do not make diagnoses, although I will tell the client what they can ask their doctor about, and make sure that they know I am not trained in that field so these should just be inquiries... for instance, asking the doctor to take a look at strange lumps or asking the chiropractor to check out extremities... etc. Sometimes I know EXACTLY what is going on before I send them to the doctor, but I don't say it.
I am not social friends with my clients outside the office, I will never attend their backyard bbqs, or go out to lunch with them after their session. This is my boundary.
I'm an extreme extrovert, a science nerd, and sometimes loud, sometimes fast-talking, sometimes excitable person working in a field that is dominated by nurturing, introverted, (or maybe I should say "less extroverted,) quieter, calmer individuals.
Maybe my clients are forgiving because I do good technical work. Maybe my personality is part of what is therapeutic to them. Maybe what I'm doing is completely right for the situation, or maybe what I'm doing is completely disruptive to the therapeutic relationship.
I suspect the truth falls somewhere in the middle, and that I could be less revealing, but still quite transparent about many things, and still maintain boundaries. Some clients are forgiving, some clients come see ME because my stories make them laugh 'til they cry. Some clients might like to know less about me, and others perhaps need to know more.
Ethics are a real-world form of philosophy, and as such, ethics are choices, opinions and decisions. No two people will ever agree on every point ethically. Ethics are not "truth." They are commonsense. They are not laws, but they are boundaries. Ethics are not morals, though they often encompass them. Morals say "Lying is wrong." Ethics say "except when..."
While I believe framework is vitally important to touch therapists, I believe it is entirely appropriate for individual therapists to come up with a different picture of how to set their framework. The important thing is to make conscious decisions instead of flailing from one ethical conundrum to another and just "winging it."
What is "right" for me, may not be "right" for you.