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The purpose of this study is to understand the experiences and meanings of what counselors experienced in-depth and how they coped with changes in the counseling field in the process of converting face-to-face counseling, which was routinely conducted before the COVID-19 situation, to non-face-to-face counseling. For this purpose, this study recruited people having worked as a counselor for at least 3 years, and having had at least 10 sessions with clients through non face-to-face approaches, but never having had non face-to-face counseling sessions. As a result of in-dept interviews with a total 11 counselors, 5 components, 19 sub-components, 64 compromised meaning were derived. 5 components are as follows; ¡®entering the world of non-face-to-face counseling¡¯, ¡®unexpected positive experience in non-face-to-face counseling¡¯, ¡®unfamiliar discomfort encounted in non-face-to-face counseling¡¯, ¡®in a non-face-to-face environment, concerns about the nature of counseling deepen¡¯, 'efforts to adapt to the prolonged non-face-to-face situation'. Based on the results of this study, theoretical and practical implications and recommendations were presented for further studies.







