| |
New
Hope CE Notes
January 2000
Dr.
Bill Gaultiere
(714)
971-4213
drbill@CrystalCathedral.org
This
is the complete notes from class everything but
jokes and stories! Remember to complete the attached exam, either
for the fun and challenge of it or to get New Hope CE credit.
- Helpful
vs. UN-helpful Counseling
- The key
to helpful New Hope counseling is a balance of grace (care
and compassion) and truth (honesty and feedback) over time.
Caller and counselor must join hearts and hands to help the
caller.
- In counseling
calls that usually works out in a process that includes: (1)
Active, caring listening, (2) Focusing on an example the callers
problem or need, and (3) Brainstorming with the caller to
set goals or action steps (which may include a referral to
a support group or source of information).
- 10
Common UN-helpful Helping Methods to Avoid
- Know-it-all:
"I know how to help people. Ive learned all I need
to know."
- This
is one mistake that youre not making because youre
reading your CE Notes!
- If
youre not still learning and growing as a counselor
and as a person then youre forgetting and degenerating.
You cant stand still. Find and use opportunities to
learn.
- Its
imperative that you approach every call like a student.
Put yourself in the callers shoes and listen well
and youll start to get a sense of what the caller
needs and how you can help.
- Example:
A man calls and says, "I havent been able to
get out of bed for two days. I just dont feel like
doing anything. I lost my job last week and dont know
what to do. Ive been depressed on and off all my life."
- You
might be a 10-year vet on the phones and have a strategy
for helping people with chronic depression that gist of
which is "You need to do something positive for yourself
today."
- This
can be a helpful approach, but not the place to start.
Instead you might go through steps like these first:
- "It
sounds like its real hard on you to have lost
your job."
- "Whats
it like for you when youre depression?"
- "Whats
helped you with your depression in the past?"
- "Let
the wise listen and add to their learning, and let the discerning
get guidance." (Proverbs 1:5)
- Bible
Answer Man: "The Bible says
"
- Dont
try to fix peoples problems or feelings with Bible
verses! In relational contexts like counseling (as compared
to teaching for instance) you want to become an application
of the Bible by the way that you care.
- The
problems with Bible Answer Man counseling are many: intellectualizing,
simplifying, judmentalism, and misuse of Scripture.
- Ironically,
this strategy misunderstands Scripture itself! For instance,
Job, the psalms of David, and Jesus response to people
each model that help comes through caring and honest relationships
over time.
- Sometimes
in New Hope Counseling it is appropriate to refer to a Bible
verse or passage. When do, be compassionate and be careful
not to overload the caller with too much information.
- "Therefore,
as Gods chosen people, holy and dearly loved, clothe
yourselves with compassion, kindness, humility, gentleness,
and patience." (Colossians 3:12)
- Soap
Box: "You shouldnt do that!"
- Dont
"should" on people. It hurts. It isnt New
Hope counseling. And it doesnt help.
- Callers
dont need your opinions, morals, ideals, or expectations.
Instead, express understanding and care for their real problems
and needs. They dont need you to look down on them.
They need you to be with them on their level and in their
pain.
- Example:
You remember the kid across the street who keeps parking
right in front of my house? And the kids next door who instead
of taking their dog for a walk let him poop in my yard?
Well now one of them had a bunch of friends over while we
were gone and they left broken beer bottles in front of
my driveway and on my sidewalk. Now what if I call New Hope
and the counselor says to me: "You shouldnt be
angry at them. The Bible says you should love your neighbor."
Ouch! I need someone to listen and to empathize with my
angry feelings and then to brainstorm with me about what
to do about this predicament.
- "Do
not judge and you will not be judged. Do not condemn, and
you will not be condemned. Forgive, and you will be forgiven.
Give, and it will be given to you." Luke 6:37
- Fixer:
"Just do it!"
- Offering
advice, trying to "fix" someones problem,
coming to the rescue (due to "Messiah Complex")
is hurtful and ineffective.
- Oversimplifies
complex emotional and relational problems and lacks in caring
connection.
- Fixers
take responsibility for callers problems, undermining
the helping process.
- Example:
Counselor says to a Battered wife, "I think you should
leave him. He keeps mistreating you and it just isnt
safe for you to live with him."
- Even
if youre partially correct, is the caller ready to
take this big step? Has she thought out how shed leave,
where shed go, how shell feel when shes
gone, how hell react and how shell feel about
that, and under what circumstances shed come back?
- Its
up to her to decide. Shes the one who is liable to
either live with more mistreatment and fear OR leave and
feel lonely and struggle to manage on her own OR struggle
though trying to find a way to set some boundaries within
her relationship.
- As
a counselor you need to "be with her" as she sorts
through these feelings and issues.
- "Everyone
should be quick to listen, slow to speak
" (James
1:19)
- Reassurance:
"Itll be okay."
- Examples
include cheerleading, trying to "make" them feel
better, and telling them that things that dont feel
OK will be OK.
- Reassurance
is a short-cut way to try to "help" people
to feel better - the insecure to feel secure, the sad to
feel glad, the fearful to feel peace, the guilty to feel
absolved, the rejected to feel accepted. It doesnt
do the real work of connecting with the true pain.
- Heres
an illustration from a Mom with a sense of humor: Several
years ago, my 5-year-old son came running into the house
with a small scratch. As I reached for the first-aid kit,
he stopped me, saying, "Im not hurt bad enough
for first aid just give me some second aid instead."
Reassurance is "second aid."
- Instead
accept, validate, and care for the reality of what people
are feeling and struggling with. Thats first aid.
- Example
1: To the man who lost his job and is depressed the
counselor says, "Oh, itll be OK. Youll
get another job just like you did before. Dont be
discouraged."
- Better:
"You sound discouraged. You really need a job
.
Do you have any ideas on how to get started looking for
a job?"
- Example
2: To an agoraphobic woman is scared to leave her house
and go to the grocery store the counselor says, "You
dont need to be afraid. The store is just down the
street from your house. You can do it."
- Better:
"Im hearing that you are very frightened. You
never know when you might have a panic attack and this would
feel embarrassing to you." Then explore treatment
options, support, little steps for big feet.
- All
Ears, No Voice (Passive Listening): "Mm-hm."
- Listening
is the most important thing we do at New Hope, but it must
be active. Active listening means using your heart
and your voice along with your ears. By verbalizing what
were hearing and what the caller is feeling or struggling
with we offer understanding, validation, and an opportunity
for the caller to clarify or elaborate. We also are gently
giving the callers concern back to him or her.
- Active
listening also helps us to focus on the callers main
problem and sets the stage for offering a helping hand through
brainstorming, prayer, referrals, and other counseling techniques.
- Its
an idealistic view of human nature and the helping process
to think that if we only listen to people talk that
theyll feel cared for, get help, and make changes.
There are some callers who are highly motivated and engaging
who need very little other than to just talk, but most need
caring interaction and sometimes some feedback and directive
help.
- Example:
Mrs. Rambler on the other end of the phone isnt listening
to herself, let alone you! Dont let yourself be suffocated.
Put words to her feelings and struggles and try to build
a caring connection. Try to help her focus on whats
most important and whats realistic. If she fights
you then talk to her about this.
- Ephesians
4:15: "Speak the truth in love."
- Focusing
on Facts: "Just the facts please."
- Facts
are important. Thats why one of the counseling
techniques I emphasize is to ask callers for an example
of their concern. But the heart of the issue are the feelings.
- Focusing
on facts at the expense of feelings leads to conversations
that are incidental, trivial, detached, obsessive, or argumentative
about "what really happened." This is not good
help.
- Callers
feelings can be messy and painful. To listen and care on
this level means temporarily feeling confusion, pain, and
helplessness to fix things.
- Example:
A woman is lonely because her husband of 30 years is away
on a business trip. What if you say, "Oh, he is? Where
did he go? Why did he go there?" These are incidental
facts that sidetrack the conversation from her loneliness.
- Better:
"It sounds like you miss him. What do you miss the
most? Tell me more about what its like for you when
hes gone."
- Sharing
your own Story: "Thats what I went through
"
- Dont
overidentify with callers. Dont say, "I understand."
Dont jump in and share your story. Dont be too
quick to tell callers personal anecdotes. Your story may
be similar, but the caller has his or her own unique, personal
feelings and struggles and needs to share this.
- Most
of the words in a counseling conversation should come from
the caller. And most of your words should be empathy-based
(focused on the callers feelings, experiences, or
needs.
- Your
life experiences are certainly invaluable resources in New
Hope Counseling. Not because you can share them, but because
they can help you to better understand callers struggles
and how they can be helped.
- If
you self-disclose do so only: (1) On an issue youre
pretty resolved on, (2) After caller has shared, (3) Briefly,
(4) And then get focus back to caller.
- "Praise
be to
God
, who comforts us in all our troubles,
so that we can comfort those in any trouble with the comfort
we ourselves have received from God." (2 Cor. 1:3-4)
- Pollyanna:
"Just focus on the positive."
- The
real Pollyanna in the Disney movie is a delightful
girl and a true possibility thinker who is as honest and
genuine as she is positive and enthusiastic.
- True
possibility thinking is as realistic as it is optimistic.
It faces struggles and works them through with a positive
attitude.
- Example:
Suicidal caller. We teach you to reinforce the callers
positive reasons to live. But we dont start there.
We start with staying calm, establishing rapport, reflecting
feelings, and assessing dangerousness. Then we look for
and reinforce reasons for the caller to choose life.
- Also,
in counseling calls to affirm callers strengths, motivation,
and gifts is helpful. To focus on the positive or to affirm/praise
without listening and expressing care for the callers
true struggle misses the heart of helping.
- Clown:
"Laugh your pain away."
- A mother
shared, My husbands dad, a godly man who loved to
joke and be silly, died suddenly. At the mortuary, our 10-year-old
son, Nate, had some questions. As I answered him, I pointed
to the casket and told Nate that the body in the casket
was Grandpas shell he was really up in heaven
in the arms of Jesus. There was a pause. Nate pointed to
the casket and said, "Theres the shelll, and
the nut is up there," as he pointed up to heaven. Grandpa
would have loved this!"
- If
this grieving woman called New Hope and you or I said this
to her it wouldve been hurtful and unhelpful.
- Humor
is powerful. It can hurt as well as heal. Timing and tone
are key. Improperly used humor can invalidate/deny feelings
as well as reveal truth. Even if callers want this it is
not helpful.
- "Even
in laughter the heart may ache." (Proverbs 14:3)
|
|