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Based on a qualitative study interviewing clients of African,Latino, Asian, and Native American heritage, this work examinestheir perceptions, representations and understandings of therelationship in counseling. These participant narratives respond toand navigate social identity constructions of race and ethnicity,gender, class, age, sexual orientation and disability of boththemselves and the counselors they met with. It seems to be adynamic, shifting, and context-dependent process that cannot becodified into absolute prescriptions. Perceptions of sharedsociopolitical experience appears amuch stronger bond incounseling than shared similarity on any dimension, and clientsnegotiated differences in identity between themselves and theircounselors in flexible ways depending on their needs. Clients alsoused culture and language in counseling fluidly to developpreferred representations of self. Based on these themes,implications for counseling theory and practice arediscussed.