Clients‟ experience of counselling within a narrative framework
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Beauty and the Beast ( PDFDrive )
5.5.1 Containment
I understand containment as a concept which defines the client‟s search for a safe internal and external environment, in which s/he may be enabled to: 1. think his/her own thoughts, in a place where thought can be contained 2. play with notions, in a contained environment 3. experience feeling, in the safety of a non judgemental relationship 132 5.5.2 Freedom I understand freedom as a concept which defines the client‟s search for an infinite space in which s/he may: 1. think her/his own thoughts, in a place where thought can be set free 2. play with notions, in a free environment 3. experience feeling, in the space of a non judgemental relationship The above concepts of containment and freedom appear to offer identical opportunities for the client, yet never the less this study suggests that the client perceives and experiences these opportunities differently. It feels hard to hold this split between containment and freedom yet experience informs me that when freedom has been too terrifying to explore, then containment offered by the counsellor is essential to progress and if containment is not felt then exploration may be held up. This does not mean that containment was not offered or present but simply not felt due to the impact of the client‟s previous history (Etherington 2000). In these moments where emotional movement appears to be obliterated by previous experience what becomes important is the continued emotional presence of the counsellor. This is perhaps when, without the client being aware of it the counsellor holds what cannot be held or tolerated by the client. So in a sense it is the client‟s immobilised state which is contained (or freed) and which in being contained, frees the client to experience themselves (Klein 1995). In this way the client‟s own affects which have not before been brought into awareness may be experienced. As feelings are brought into awareness the client is enabled to move or remain stuck as opposition is either worked with or denied. However, even when opposition is denied and the client seems stuck 133 there remains the opportunity to examine this stuck position and from it view their internal world. The split between containment and freedom perhaps helps the client organise experience (Godwin 1994) so that some order begins to be created out of the chaos of their unaware unconscious. The overall structure of containment-freedom appears to hold both the stuck position of the client and various forms of movement which emerge in the following categories. 5.5.3 Uncontained-unfree This polarity, like the overall polarity is also a paradox in that it is a polarity without movement which may be termed stagnant opposition because of the lack of movement. Perhaps it could be compared to being frozen with fear, or even an emotional paralysis that binds the client in the trauma of a past event, just as I was stuck in shock. In considering the existence of psychic energy Jung (1969) seems to describe this stuck position: “ in the stoppage of libido that occurs when progress has become impossible, positive and negative no longer unite in co-ordinated action, because both have attained an equal value which keeps the scales balanced” (33). It may be understood as no movement in that scales do not move when equally balanced. It also may be understood as „no feeling‟ in that when feeling is cut off or denied it is not experienced or is outside of awareness. In this way uncontained-unfree may be seen as the axis, or centre point of the containment-freedom polarity. Uncontained could be understood as having the same meaning as freedom but the apparent similarity between uncontained and freedom is not so simple. Freedom, by its very nature 134 suggests choice, but in an unfree place there is no choice in that choice cannot be experienced when the individual is stuck. Uncontained is a place of no movement, for there is neither containment nor freedom at this fixed point where nothing shifts. However if this stuck place can be brought into awareness through the containment and freedom provided by the counselling, then movement becomes a possibility as freedom, the possibility of choice comes into focus. Unfree is the fixed polarity of uncontained. Each, exist together in the same place both superimposed and in opposition which is the bind that holds the client in a place of no reflections, and no movement. But again if this fixed point can be experienced and brought into awareness it becomes a place from where movement may be viewed and tested. It is perhaps somewhere along the continuum of this polarity that the capacity to be alone begins its growth within the individual. Aloneness may be experienced as a negative or unwanted state (Jacobs 1986). But as the experience of aloneness or isolation is felt within the therapeutic relationship it can be examined within the containment and freedom provided by the counsellor. Here, aloneness may be discovered in altered form as it comes to be realised in conscious knowing (Etherington 2000). This category appears in participants‟ journals as a stuck place where they feel trapped or caught and unable to move towards change. But it is also a place where they appear to look around and examine where they are in their internal world. This example from the main study shows an entry that has been categorized as uncontained-unfree: 135 Extract 10. Entry from WAI journal W22.to show the category uncontained-unfree Line 1. Feeling disappointed with self Line 2. stuck + expecting to feel better. Line 3. Removing myself from situations Line 4. making others responsible for own mess. Line 5. Not allowing self to be dragged in Line 6. - do it differently + not explain how or why. Line 7. Keep asking as „just in case‟ Line 8. stop asking + see what happens. Line 9. leave the load, relieve stuckness. Line 10. Accepting + respecting the others Line 11. paralysing fear. The words used that suggest this category are; „stuck‟ and „paralysing fear„. However the full context of the journal also contributed to this construct being chosen. What can be seen is that the participant looks around to see what she does and she makes this clear in lines 3 and 4 where she suggests that she makes others responsible for what belongs to her. It is as if this understanding has only just come into conscious knowing. Download 1.47 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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