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Conflict. Grief. Recovery. Advice. Empathy. These are not the
reasons why people come to counselling. They may be five they initially want help
with and inevitably find, but there are five better, deeper reasons why I find
people come to counselling.
Firstly, whether people know it or not, they want something different; something more dynamic, even if the dynamism
offered and received actually slows things down. Counselling is a unique
relationship. You pay a counsellor to give you something no other relationship
you have can offer. One session (1 – 2 hours) is dense in two dynamics: the
level and depth of the truths you speak, and the attentive engagement you have
with your counsellor as they direct you deeper in your own pilgrimage. You
encounter in your counsellor quite a different human being in the way they
interact. It really is all about you, and it needs to be.
Secondly, people come
expecting advice and help and coaching; to be told how to fix their
problems. Many people are astounded to find that the process is far gentler and
more respectful than that. Somehow, subconsciously, people do most of all want
to be listened to. But they don’t realise this is their desire until their
either have been listened to well, or they have been ‘missed’ and the
counsellor hasn’t listened well. Again, if it’s really all about you, then
listening is primary. And listening is more a science than an art. There is no
substitute for focus and concentration and of the counsellor expending all they
have to achieve presence with you in the room. The counsellor needs to be completely
in your story.
Thirdly, people come needing their confusion allayed. They come
for peace. They come for hope. Peace is the sense of completion amid complexity.
People come with their complex lives completely askew. Therefore, people come for simplicity, or what is
termed elegant simplicity; a process
by which the complexity is dealt with so elegantly that it feels simple. A roadmap
is possible even if the way there seems utterly enigmatic. This is a mysteriously
spiritual process, but counsellors seek to give you crystal clear clarity, and
this comes through their surrender to the principles of simply serving you.
With clarity comes confidence. With confidence comes belief. With belief comes motivation.
With motivation comes action. With action comes results. It all starts with
clarity.
Fourthly, people come
because it’s almost too late. Usually it can be a last-ditch attempt. This
is not always bad news, because if there’s enough will, there’s enough hope to
work with. But people who come in this situation must recognise how forlorn
things are. Ideally, the sooner issues are addressed the easier and better the process.
But there’s a reason people come when it’s almost too late. We all believe we
can do things in our own strength and power. If only we were wisely humble
enough, however, to concede we need help earlier. And yet, there is massive
power in the rock-bottom experience. There is nothing like the power of having
your back against the wall. Many people find the reserves to fight against all
odds. They’re inspiring to work with.
Fifthly, people come
either expecting hard and finding easy or expecting easy and finding it hard.
About even numbers of both kinds of people. I like to think that counselling tackles
what is hard to make things easier. Facilitation literally means to make something easy. Counselling can
be seen as a process for helping make
your life easier. It’s very common for someone to come to counselling
feeling stressed and leave an hour or so later and feel a lot lighter. But that’s
usually because they’ve been courageous. The person counselled has trusted
their counsellor and been honest. And they receive acceptance. This always
helps. And as the counselling relationship deepens, therapeutic gains become
even more efficient and effective. The goal is to do away with the counsellor
and go it alone.
People most often come to be helped with conflict, grief, recovery,
or to receive advice or empathy. But as you see above, people actually receive
something else.
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