Existential therapy is a different way of style that therapy has to put emphasis on the condition that a person has as a whole, it uses a positive approach that gives humans a satisfaction within themselves while also maintain a perception that is a limit of the being, spirit, and mind. It was developed by Friedrich Nietzsche and a host of other therapists including Irvin Yalom. It also shares many of its characteristics with humanistic psychology, experiential psychotherapy, depth psychotherapy, and relational psychotherapy. According to Goldenberg and Goldenberg, people define themselves through their current choices and decisions. The key to understanding existentialist is focusing on the actions in the present and not reflecting on the past. Corey (p.145) says that the current focus of existential approach is a client’s experience in being in the world alone and facing their anxiety of the isolation. There are six main concepts of existential therapy, Corey describes them as propositions. Proposition one is the capacity for self-awareness, their freedom and responsibility, striving for an identity and to have a relationship with others, searching for a meaning, living with anxiety as a condition, and becoming aware of death and nonbeing. The foundations of self-awareness is freedom, choice, and responsibility. According to Schneider (2008) core existential position is what frees our creative and social constraints. It is our choice rather we choose to expand our consciousness or restrict it. Corey (2013) states that the decision is to expand the fundamental of human growth because self-awareness is at the root of the other human capacities. In the year of 2010 Schneider along with Krug wrote that there are three values that embraces the existential therapy; the freedom to become close to the context of your natural self along with the limitations that is self-imposed, having the capacity to reflect on the meaning of the choices