TRANSFORMATIONAL COUNSELING-Part One
Transformational Counseling is a process of assisting others to
transform their lives. Transformational Counseling is a process
of assisting others in their reinventing themselves, of creating
a life that they love and living it powerfully. Transformational
Counseling is a process of creating a space for others to get
present to or become aware of their self limiting belief, to
create or invent a possibility for themselves and their life
that could not have existed before and to learn how to be in
their possibilities as opposed to being that which has always
stopped them in the past.
The development of transformational counseling has been the
result of my work in counseling, psychotherapy, coaching,
hypnosis, neuro linguistic programming, the work of Louise Hay
and especially Landmark Education. To understand and be able to
utilize the technology of Transformational Counseling with
others, of being able to make a true difference in another
person's life, requires that one understand or get certain
concepts or distinctions about what it is to be a human being
and reality itself. While the distinctions of Transformational
Counseling are initially presented separately, it is in their
practice or communication with another that a true synergy is
reached and it's potential or power actualized for the client.
For the counselor as well as the client the synergistic
learnings that take place within Transformational Counseling is
nonlinear in nature.
The clients that I work with are all experiencing a loss of
power, freedom and full self-expression in one or many of the
various domains of their life. The clients that I see are all
being stopped in living a life that they love and living it
powerfully. If they continue being as they have been being
nothing will change, life will be as it has always been. They
will remain stuck and unable to reach their true potential in
life. The clients that I coach or counsel know that something
needs to be different in their life but are unsure of what that
something is all about, of what is not working, of what is
missing, of what needs to happen. It is in assisting a client to
discover or become present to that which has been causing their
depression, sadness, anger, frustration, etc. and to learn how
to create a new way of being that the work of Transformational
Counseling is all about.
One of the fundamental distinctions of Transformational
Counseling is that our thoughts are very important, if not the
most important component of what it is to be a human being. We
tend to believe that the external world, or what we commonly
believe to be reality, is that which is truly important. As a
result of such a belief, we are constantly engaged in trying to
change something in the external world, constantly believing
that this type of activity will bring us true happiness and
contentment in our life. Within Transformational Counseling, it
is our thoughts or thinking that is of immense importance to us
and our process of living. It is our thoughts and thinking
patterns that literally shape or determine our feelings,
behavior, experiences and our reality. More specifically, it is
our thoughts that we have about ourselves that tends to create
or shape our experiences, that forms the background of our life
and our sense of reality. It is from the thoughts that we
initially create about ourselves that we subsequently develop
into a belief about who we think we are, our self-image, of how
we define our very being and it is from this belief that we live
our life. A belief is merely a thought that we think is true or
real, that expresses some sense of ontology.
Inside the conversation of Transformational Counseling it is
also important to understand that we are truly responsible for
the thoughts that we have, including and especially those that
we have about ourselves. We literally invent or create all of
our thoughts including those that we have about ourselves and
with them our feelings and behaviors. To truly get our
responsibility in how we create our experiences or reality is to
also get how we create or invent all of our thoughts about
ourselves and with it our reality. Reality itself has no meaning
outside of what we give it. We are, as human beings, meaning
making machines, beings that wrap meaning around everything in
our life, including and most importantly about ourselves. Being
responsible for our thoughts, getting it that we create them, is
completely different from the experience of guilt or blame. It
is not that we are to blame for our experiences but merely that
we do create what we think about ourselves, who we think we are,
how we feel about ourselves and how the world appears to us.
There is a distinction between responsibility and blame or
guilt.
What we tend to think about ourselves has at its core what can
be referred to as our self-limiting belief. The self-limiting
belief is a thought that we have about who we think we are, that
defines our identity at its core, a belief that was developed
between the ages of three to six approximately. During this time
frame in our journey through life something happened, an event
took place and it is from that event that we developed or
created a thought or belief about ourselves. The original event
is not so much of importance as the fact that we created a
belief about ourselves, a belief that has actually limited us in
life. The self-limiting belief is a sense of inadequacy, an idea
or thought that something is wrong with us, that something is
broken. Once this self-limiting belief is created or invented we
tend to live our lives as if it were true. Our self-limiting
belief is a fundamental, core belief that we have about
ourselves, about who we think we are, that creates our feelings
about ourselves, affects our behavior and determines our
experiences.
Our self-limiting belief affects our behavior in that we are
constantly trying to fix it. For example, if ones self-limiting
belief is that the individual is "not enough", that person will
constantly try to be "enough", constantly be doing things to
compensate for what or who they think they are. While an
individual is constantly attempting to fix it, the self-limiting
belief is also in the process of fulfilling upon itself, of
becoming a self-fulfilling prophecy, of causing the person to be
"not enough." Given the fact that ones self-limiting belief is
hidden from them, from their view, we are not aware of its
existence or its affect on our life, of its influence or impact
on our life. Even though it is not true, not real, we believe it
to be so and as a result the self limiting belief is that which
keeps us stuck, keeps us living in the past, prevents us from
living a life that we love and living it powerfully. Our
self-limiting belief is in a very real sense our personal
affirmation, an affirmation that is embedded in our "self talk",
an affirmation that determines how we tend to feel about
ourselves, an affirmation that guides and determines our
behavior in life, that defines our very way of being and how we
appear to the world.
Harry Henshaw, Ed.D., LMHC http://www.enhancedhealing.com