 Further, moving on, talking about the guidelines for therapeutic termination, then important thing which we are going to talk about is termination due to the client's progress. Terminating therapy due to the client's progress is another way due to which we terminate. Therapy should ideally have a very specific and clear goals. Therapy could not be done into air, into isolation, into something which has no meaning. We have some goals, we have certain objectives and if we are not going to achieve them, we are not going to see any progress into therapy, the very reason of the therapeutic intervention is going to fail and we need to consider that that should be continued or that should be terminated. When a client achieves their goal, it may be appropriate to transition them to a new therapist or to terminate therapy altogether. Let's say, a target you have set is to teach a small child how to use a potage guide properly with a delayed milestone, it is a very simple thing for us but for a delayed milestone child, it may be a very difficult task and it may take two months to teach him how to feed with a spoon. Now you don't have any other thing which you can further do with that child or it will probably need a better learning skill so you have to refer that to the other therapist. Now another example, a therapist counseling a new parent with postpartum depression might mutually agree with the client to terminate therapy when depression symptoms goes into remission. So by default now we are obliged that as a therapist we understand that the symptoms are into remission so we need to go for termination. The client might stop therapy altogether or transition to a therapist with expertise in another issue. These strategies can help ease the transition and they are reflect on clients growth and how they plan to continue their growth. So we need to discuss both the pros and cons, both the merit and the demerits that our therapeutic intervention was. Now discuss any feelings of grief or anxiety about ending the treatment relationship. If you have any feelings, if the client has any feelings both are mutually set up to talk about these feelings which is going to create a disturbance in their minds and they are going to get them emotional. Talk about personal growth as an ongoing process and give the client guidelines for when it might be appropriate to return to the therapy. Leaving the door open can also be a powerful way to help clients feel secure in their decision. You are doing well, your daily functioning has been upgraded but still if you want any help you are welcome to come, the door is open, you can come anytime, you can take appointment, you can sit with me and discuss about anything which is going to create a disturbance in you. This is very natural that anyone who is going to be described that the therapy is going to be terminated. So these are the guidelines which may help and which may ease out the process of the therapeutic termination. Thank you.