My client hesitated at the door before leaving. “So, this is
feeling stuff is supposed to make me feel better?” she asked.
I put a hand on her shoulder and sighed. “Yes. It will.”
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Image: CarleMuseum.org |
Counseling is an art with diverging theories and myriad
techniques. (If only people knew!) And, good news, it works! (At least, most
of the time). A lot of what goes on cannot be measured. The aspects that can be
measured are occasionally not what make counseling effective, but numbers
please the funders and universities.
A universal understanding in the field is that after
developing a trusting bond, we ask a client to acknowledge and feel his/her
feelings, which ultimately helps the client process them. By feeling and
processing, emotions shift and release hold of us. But if someone is
accustomed to thinking their way through life, they will be in for a rough ride
initially. Often clients assume that in counseling we are going to spread out
their life on a table, like puzzle pieces, hold our chins and analyze it. When
they are asked to be vulnerable and stay with their heart, it is not easy. And, if I ask my clients to stay with their hearts, I have to do it too. I
have to walk the ego’s fire, trusting that my spirit will overrule.
Part of the trouble is, in terms of feelings, we are a
constipated culture. We’ll do almost anything to talk ourselves out of them. Here’s what I know about feelings: If
you ignore them, they will show up at