"I'm not afraid of counseling!"
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My Psychic Therapist and Other Myths
Credits
We All Have Our Stuff
By: Suzanne LaCombe Ed.D, R. Psych. June 8, 2006.
It is impossible to get through life without bumping up against our insecurities, our issues…our "stuff". We are all the same in this respect.
MyShrink has a few things to say on the matter.
You don’t have to be crazy, maladjusted, weird or uncool to go to counseling.
You go because you want to get more fun out of life, understand yourself better, feel more in tune with yourself and others, be more spiritual, or feel more connected to your community.
Keep in mind that our "stuff" may be a little off-putting or strange to others. We might even find it a bit too much to bear at times ourselves. (I certainly know I have.) Ironically, once we accept our "stuff" (which doesn't mean we have to like it) tomorrow may appear lighter and more hopeful.
Many people can benefit from counseling, not because they are "abnormal", but because no one grows up without some developmental gaps.
No one has ever had, nor ever will have, perfect parents.
A good chunk of our "stuff" comes from what happened, or didn't happen, between us and our parents especially in the early, formative years.
Mom or dad could not always be there for us, even when they wanted to. Remember: they had “imperfect” parents too. This emotional debt gets carried forward. That's how they got their "stuff"!
These experiences created gaps in our development that showed up later as ‘character flaws’. They cause problems in our relationships and rigidity in our response to life.
We're responsible for our "stuff" but we don't have to own it.
People often take their "stuff" to be part of who they are--as if the unwanted behaviour, feeling, or thought is fixed in their personality. Only when the offensive aspect disappears do we realize that it was "just part of my stuff" all along.
Most of us try to deny or hide our "stuff". Ordinarily we just want to stay connected with others, and figure that our "stuff" will only get in the way. "We're more human than otherwise," as Harry Stack Sullivan was known to say.
I like the no nonsense, practical approach Leah McLaren, a journalist with the national Canadian newspaper The Globe and Mail (Feb. 26, 2005), takes in describing our responsiblity:
"Screwed-up-ness, after all, is not something to be afraid of, but rather to be grudgingly accepted and dealt with, like a mess of dishes after a pleasant meal. It happens.
The important thing is to not let it sit there and rot."
Each of us faces this challenge: how do I resolve the emotional (and perhaps spiritual) conflicts underlying my "stuff"?
Neuroscience is blurring the line between "normal" and "abnormal".
Have you ever met a "normal" person? Has anyone ever found that person?
As we wait for the search parties to return...let's consider the following facts:
The nervous system is constantly adapting to our environment. Patterns of response that had functional significance early on (i.e. developmentally) or in reaction to an overwhelming occurrence (i.e. during a traumatic event) get imprinted into the nervous system.
These automatic or procedural patterns are resistant to conscious or intentional modification. In other words, we can't change them by wishing them away or thinking differently. The nervous system works this way because it is an energy efficient organism and because it evolved when survival depended on instant, predetermined reactions.
Without providing the nervous system with an opportunity to reset itself (and this is where counseling comes in) these once optimal adaptations become less so in later years or in different circumstances. What was once functional no longer fits and may appear somewhat "abnormal" in a new context.
Even therapists have their "stuff"!
That's right! Therapists are human and have their "stuff" too. Good therapists recognize this and understand that continuing to work on their "stuff" in their own therapy will make them better therapists.
So, to reiterate:
- Your neighbor has "stuff".
- So does your family doctor.
- Even your yoga teacher has "stuff".
- And we know our political leaders have their "stuff"!
So I humbly suggest that we all stop pretending to have it all together…because we all have our "stuff".
Related Topics
External Resource
A saucy, to the point kind of blog with great content.
Ken Pope's Survey of Therapists seeing Therapists
On Being Sane in Insane Places
8 "sane" folks entered psychiatric centers complaining of hearing voices. Their story is revealing about what we consider "normal".
"That's me in a nutshell. ...Could somebody help me outta here?"




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