By Judy Harrow
So, counseling is based on the very Wiccan-compatible faith that each human
being has within themself the full capacity to make and implement appropriate decisions
concerning their own life. By that faith, the counselor's only role is to help the
client to make such decisions, not to tell the client what to do, and certainly never
to try to run their life for them. But, just what do counselors do? How exactly do
they help clients? The core technique, the art, the spiritual practice of counseling
is the process of active listening.
The easiest way I've found to explain
active listening is to say that it has three main components:
1.Listen.
2.Let them know you're listening.
3.Ground.
Just like the Wiccan
Rede, this is the kind of profoundly true statement that I can say while standing
on one foot -- but will have to spend a long time figuring out how to apply to real
life. So, let's slow it down.
Listen
-- Most of the time, most of
us listen with only part of our attention. While the other person is still speaking,
we are thinking about what we want to say next. Or, sometimes, we are thinking of
something entirely unrelated ... "I think I'll paint the kitchen green."
When we are listening to emotionally intense stories, the kind we often hear in counseling
sessions, we can get caught up in our own emotional reactions, how we would feel
if we were in a similar situation, based on all those experiences that formed us,
instead of on the experiences that formed the speaker. Remember always that the client
is the world's greatest expert on their own experiences and feelings.
To
listen empathically (watch for that word, we'll revisit it later), setting aside
as much as we can of our own "stuff" and entering as deeply as possible
the perceptual world of the speaker, is actually a form of meditation.
And
here's a great secret: the same kinds of techniques that you use in learning to listen
to the Gods are equally helpful in learning to listen to people -- and vice versa.
Let them know you're listening
-- listening is absolutely necessary
for counseling, but not sufficient. I could listen intently and openly -- and invisibly
-- from the other side of a one-way mirror. That might well be instructive for me,
but not helpful for the client. What the client needs is to know that they are being
heard. This evidence that they are valued as a human being and supported in working
through their issues creates the sense of safe space for their deeper internal explorations.
While open, active listening may be a spiritual practice, we let them know
we're listening by a series of fairly simple skills. Look at the person, make eye
contact, give the occasional encouraging nod. I sometimes joke that my whole first
year of graduate school consisted of learning to say "uh-huh" at appropriately
random intervals.
More important: occasionally repeat back what you have
heard. Through this "reflection," they get to hear what they've figured
out so far. State your perceptions always a little tentatively. Accept their corrections.
As you build trust, besides telling them what you're hearing, you can very gently
and tentatively describe to them the emotions that you seem to be perceiving from
their tone of voice, body language, etc. Be even more ready to accept their corrections
about these inferences. They will come to understand their own feelings by explaining
those feelings to you. That's the best of what counselors do for clients.
Ground
--
this is what Witches know that is not generally taught in graduate schools. As a
counselor, you will hear a lot of stress, pain and grief. In offering the other person
the comfort of being heard, in opening yourself to them, you are also absorbing energies
that nobody needs to retain. Unless you discharge these energies, you risk "burnout,"
a condition in which the counselor just can't hear anymore. Burned out counselors
may cease counseling activity or, worse, they may stay on the job but "shut
down" emotionally, becoming the stereotypical bureaucratic social worker type.
You deserve to take care of yourself, and if you're serious about being in
this for the long haul, you need to take care of yourself. Do whatever you need to
do after each counseling session to let the energy go, clearing the slate for the
next counseling session, or for other parts of your life. Whatever works for you:
bathe in salt water, hug a tree, play tennis.
And also do whatever maintains
your health and energy. Eat well, exercise, get enough rest. Through ritual, meditation
or simply being in nature, connect with Mother Earth, who will support you as you
work for the comfort and growth of Her children.
Copyright © 1996 by Judith
Harrow.
Lat updated June 26, 1998