lowing wrote:
[You are right, the problem here is not experience, it is you bring nothing to the table to "share", you have nothing on which to build TRUE emotion or feeling. Notice I said TRUE, not the hat you put on when talking to a patient, but the honest truth of the emotion. anything less than honest emotion from real experiences is nothing more than acting the part.
For you perhaps. It's really not that simple, but you can continue to believe it is so if you wish.
I say this because when your session is over, you go partying or whatever and the patient is still left empty, you have changed hats while he is stuck wearing his. This is not honest emotion. IMO
And you know these things because of... how exactly? How do you know the benefit of simple conversation, really deep, honest and empowering conversation can have upon someone?
As one example, a guest at my work was suicidal last year. After much conversation about her intent to complete suicide and engaging her own empathy about how her own daughter would feel about her by getting her to think about how she feels about her best friend and then turning it around to understand how her daughter feels about her. She then followed up with further conversation with my senior support support worker the following day, she left on the weekend. Before the conversation she was at real risk of suicide within a week, she had planned it out and had the means and had made a serious attempt a few months prior. She contacted us two weeks later to thank us, and said we had saved her life. To this day she's still around and managing the best she can.
Point I'm making here is that the so called "cheap talk" when I haven't lived her experiences can actually be very effective, because I understood her feelings and emotions, communicated back my understanding to her (in short, I empathised) and helped her get herself back on track.
anyway I appreciate your approach on this, better than your usual approach. I know not to get used to it though.
This is my usual approach, it's your stubbornness to recognise anyone else as having a valid point and a few snide comments here and there that makes people react so. If you're going to "leave the bark on" in conversations you got to expect some back.
Last edited by Jaekus (2010-05-26 22:20:54)