Clients‟ experience of counselling within a narrative framework
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Beauty and the Beast ( PDFDrive )
5.5.5 Fighting containment-freedom
Fighting and avoiding containment-freedom seems to be both a fight to change and not to change. To give up familiar and known ways of being the self for an unknown, different and individual way of being, tends to cause battles. This is a place that could be described as not knowing where or how to be, as the fear of losing familiar ways of being, encroaches on the desire to be dependent on the counsellor. The part of the client which needs care chooses to come for counselling, but the independent part of the client is threatened by the possibility of becoming reliant on the counsellor. Fighting or avoiding containment seems to be a necessary aspect of the process of movement. It is rather like the bad tempered baby who needs the reassurance of mother‟s presence, even as he tries to hit her. If containment has not been experienced, except for example as an unknown absence then perhaps the avoidance of containment is a fight against the unknown. The containment offered by the counsellor may also feel intrusive (Stern 1985) as if the counsellor is breaking through the client‟s defences. Fighting the containment of the counsellor may be part of the process of experiencing containment which develops the awareness of the self (Carstairs 1992) that enables the client to move towards separation from others as opposed to merger with others. The freedom to be an individual, separate from others (as opposed to merged), is an isolating, and frightening way to be when first experienced. Just the separateness of the counsellor may highlight a sense of this aloneness for the client. The counsellor may seem distant, deaf or 139 emotionally absent to the client because of the counsellor‟s capacity to be separate. Freedom may be experienced as loss or emptiness inside, in that to think one‟s own thoughts without relying on previously learned beliefs or attitudes may feel very isolating. Fighting or avoiding freedom can be the intense reaction to the fear of being different from others, but the movement created by that fear has a volatile intensity which may enable growth. As with the other categories, fighting and avoiding containment-freedom is a necessary part of the client‟s journey. The fight may be passive and/or aggressive, but if a client wishes to change, then this upheaval of movement may provide the friction necessary to engender that new life. Examples of this category appear to be expressed in the journals as a desire to end the counselling, being late for sessions or an inability to be dependent on the counsellor. It may also be present in words that express opposition and anger that may feel impossible to express. In the pilot study a section of one entry seems to show this category clearly: Extract 12. Entry from a pilot study journal to show fighting containment-freedom Line 1. Feel “nothing” towards Line 2. her. Want her to Line 3. be a “non entity” Line 4. Do not want to Line 5. connect with her. Line 6. Don‟t care what Line 7. she thinks of Line 8. me - I don‟t want Line 9. to know. Line 10. Don‟t want to know Line 11. what I think of Line 12. her. Don‟t want to Line 13. “love” her because Line 14. its not forever. 140 The participant seems to demonstrate her distrust towards the counsellor by feeling nothing (line 1) towards her and wanting her to be a non entity (line 3). It is as if she cannot face the possibility of feeling love (line 13) towards the counsellor, for if she did she might feel dependent on her. It seems there is a fight to stay as she is, distrusting the counsellor but also a fight to love her. There seems to be a fear of love because it would not be forever (line 14). This suggests that the client has lost someone she loves and dare not love again. It is as if she regresses to an earlier time where she has suffered loss and she feels young and vulnerable in a place where she appears to have lost her balance. Her thoughts towards the counsellor may be seen as exaggerated as if there is no room for the other side of her feelings, no room for the poles of opposition. According to Jung (1969) it is the working together of the inner polarities that: “makes possible the balanced regularity of these processes which without this inner polarity would become one sided and unreasonable. We are therefore justified in regarding all extravagant and exaggerated behaviour as a loss of balance because the co-ordinating effect of the opposite impulse is obviously lacking” (32-33). The opposing feelings of the participant‟s desire to love seem to be hidden in lines 10 - 12 for she does not want to know what she thinks of the counsellor as if she is defending herself against her own feelings. In this sense there is a fight to stay the same and be independent and a fight to change by risking „love‟, and becoming dependent on the counsellor. It is as if the tension between these opposing desires leads to „a loss of balance‟ that the participant consciously experiences in the session. |
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