THE CONVERSATION OF RECOVERY-Part One
Transformational Counseling is all about assisting another human
being to live a life that they love and to live it powerfully.
Transformational Counseling is about creating a space for others
to learn how to transform their lives, to live a life
differently from how it was in the past, to truly create what
they desire. Transformational Counseling is about assisting
others in their getting and utilizing a powerful technology that
will enable them to make a true difference in their life and in
the lives of others. Transformational Counseling is about
assisting another to become present to how they have stopped
themselves in their life and in the process transform their way
of being in the world. While comprised of a variety of
distinctions that are important for understanding the process of
transformation, the utilization of Transformational Counseling
has five interrelated components that are crucial to its
successful use with others and even with oneself.
While this article will outline the basic principles and
components of Transformational Counseling for assisting others,
it will also explore its use with those who are experiencing
drug and alcohol dependency problems. Transformational
Counseling makes available a very powerful technology for anyone
who would like to create new possibilities for themselves
including those who are in and struggling with recovery. The
primary reason for such application rests with the fact that we
are all human beings, regardless of whether or not we are
experiencing addiction oriented issues. Given our sense of
relatedness as human beings, our fundamental process for how we
go about creating our world and what occurs there for us is the
same. Those who are in the process of entering the recovery
process have merely chosen to use alcohol or drugs or both in
the past to manage the pain and negative emotions generated from
their self-limiting belief and in the process to take themselves
out of the Conversation of life. The use of alcohol and drug is
merely a way to numb the intense pain generated by being their
ego, who they think they are, their self-limiting belief.
Transformational Counseling fully acknowledges the power of the
human mind, of thought itself. The thoughts that we have are
very important, if not the most important component of what it
is to be a human being in that our thoughts are truly creative
in nature. We are thinking beings that create initially from our
thoughts. Everything that we do or take on in life first began
as a thought or idea. It is very familiar for us to believe that
the external world is that which is reality and that our
thoughts are merely the effect or product of such a world. From
such a belief we tend to give little or no real credence to our
thoughts and thinking patterns as being the fundamental cause in
the matter. As a result we commonly believe that in order for us
to be truly happy we must manipulate or change something about
the external world, other people, circumstances and situations.
However, within the conversation of Transformational Counseling
it is our thoughts that shape or determine our experiences, our
feelings and behavior and our very sense of reality.
Furthermore, it is the thought that we have or create about
ourselves that forms the background of our life, the context
from which we experience life itself, how the worlds occurs for
us.
Transformational Counseling also acknowledges that we are
totally responsible for creating our thoughts and most
importantly for that which we have about ourselves. Our thoughts
are not the result of things happening to us, either from
circumstance, situations or the behavior of others but rather it
is the interpretation or meaning that we give to the events that
happen that makes them appear to us as they do. Events do happen
including those involving others but fundamental to
understanding our natural, creative process is that it is about
what we do with the events, what meaning we give or make them
out to be about that determines our experience. We are meaning
making machines in a sense, constantly wrapping meaning around
everything in life, people, places and things and most
importantly about ourselves. The meaning that we give or create
with respect to an event will determine the experience that we
have as a human being and with it how we feel, the emotions that
we have, and also the behavior that will eventually result.
Every emotion that we experience and behavior that we cause is
the result of thoughts that we create. As mentioned above, the
most important thought that we create is that which is about us,
the definition that we give ourselves and it is that which
determines or defines our self-image, who we think we are in the
world.
The recognition that their own thinking may be that which is
generating their negative experiences and dependency upon
alcohol or drugs or both does not exist for individuals in
recovery especially while they are actively using substances.
The difficulties that they are having are believed by them to
have been caused by something external, their circumstance, life
situations or even other people in their life. As they continue
to stay focused on that which is external in their attempt to
cope with life or even to heal through recovery they are
actually continuing to create the same type of experiences and
life that originally brought them into recovery. Associated with
this way of being is that the individual will tend to assume
little if any responsibility for himself. What tends to get
created is either blame or even guilt for what the individual is
experiencing. Without the recognition or acknowledgement of the
true source of their experience and substance use the individual
will continue to create the same type of experiences that they
are having. Unable to access their natural ability and power to
transform their life will leave them having and being more of
their past, the probable almost certain future. Unfortunately,
such a missing is not only present with the one suffering from
dependency issues but also for the majority of the counselors
attempting to assist those in recovery. Most of the counselors
working with those in recovery do not truly get the creative
power of our thoughts or that we are completely responsible for
creating them.
The first distinction necessary for one to begin to transform
their life has to do with the existence of the self-limiting
belief. Becoming present to the self-limiting belief is a
process of getting what has truly stopped a person in his life,
has stopped him from living a life that he loves and living it
powerfully. Once there is the distinction or awareness of the
self-limiting belief, of what has been driving a person's bus,
possibly for the first time in that individual's life the
opportunity or space has been created for them to begin to
create themselves anew, to reinvent themselves, to be
differently in the world. This creative act takes place with the
inventing of possibilities. It is by taking on creating and
living into a person's possibilities that the individual begins
to create a life much differently than how it once was before a
Conversation of transformation. Once possibilities have been
created a person next learns how to consistently be or live
inside his possibilities by learning the process of enrollment.
Once the technology of enrollment is gotten and one begins to
consistently apply it in his life, it is by engaging in the
development of a Daily Plan and staying in the Conversation with
others that the technology of transformation becomes fully
realized and lived for the person. This powerful technology is
applicable to both the one being assisted and the person doing
the assisting and can only be fully realized when both are
involved in the Conversation.
The self-limiting belief is a belief that we have about
ourselves, about who we think we are in the world. The
self-limiting belief is a belief that has affected if not
determined our life in the past, is shaping what we think, say,
feel, and do in the present and will generate our future. Within
the Conversation of Transformational Counseling, the
self-limiting belief is a thought or idea that has its genesis
between the ages of three and six. An event took place in the
individual's life, an event that the child believes should not
have happened as it did and as a child the individual made a
judgment or gave the event meaning. Given that for a child
everything is about them, it is from this event and the meaning
that they invented about it that the child also created an idea
about itself, about who they think they are in the world as a
result of the event. The child next converts the idea into a
belief, a belief that is all about their sense of adequacy,
value or worth as person. A sense of something is wrong or not
being enough about the self is created. Getting the distinction
of the self-limiting belief is crucial to the individual's
personal growth and continued development. If the individual
does not get the distinction of the self limiting belief, if it
stays hidden from them, of who they have been being, their life
will remain as it has always been, as they will continue to be
the person they think they truly are. Such a distinction can be
gotten several ways. One way, for example, is to have a person
begin to monitor their spoken word. Becoming present to what
they actually say will eventually reveal the self-limiting
belief. Another way to get the distinction of our self-limiting
belief is to monitor our self-talk. The self-limiting belief
actually exists inside our everyday language, in the words that
we say especially when reference is made about the self and
inside our inner voice. Even though its genesis is from the
past, the self-limiting belief exists in our real time play,
self Conversation in the present.
For the individual who is experiencing the pain of alcohol and
drug dependency, getting this distinction is crucial to their
transformation and also for them to be successful in their
recovery. While a Conversation about the existence of the
self-limiting belief is very unfamiliar to anyone, there will
also be a tendency for the addicted individual to not want to
discover it. Common to all human beings, we tend to want to keep
our self-limiting belief hidden from ourselves and especially
from others. No individual, at least initially, wants to share
with another their sense of inadequacy but rather is caught up
in looking good or not looking bad to others. We generate a
great deal of energy in our attempt to repress its existence,
energy that will eventually have a very negative consequence for
our way of being or existence in the world. The very process of
engaging in a Conversation about the self-limiting belief will
eventually recreate the negative emotions associated with the
cravings for substances. To become present to the self-limiting
belief will necessitate that the individual experience that
which is hidden in their fundamental way of being inauthentic in
life. Once gotten the individual will also experience the
negative emotions that the self-limiting belief generates and it
is inside the emotional state that gets created that the
addicted individual will have a tendency to want to fix by
returning to very familiar ways, to using drugs and alcohol.
However, unless the self-limiting belief is gotten life will
tend to be as it has been in the past resulting in a probable
almost certain future.
The second component of this process is that of creating
possibilities for oneself. Creating possibilities is the process
of redefining or reinventing oneself, of actually creating new
language and words from which to begin to develop a new and more
powerful, self-expressed individual. Once the individual becomes
present to who they have been being in the world, to their
self-limiting belief and the impact that it has had in his life,
both on himself and others, a space is now created or opened up
for them to literally say or declare who they will now be for
themselves, others and the world. Such a process of redefining
oneself is as simple as initially creating new words from which
to begin to speak or refer to oneself as being. For example, if
an individual's self limiting belief is that he is "not enough,"
he could begin to redefine or invent himself as the
possibilities of "acceptance", "creativity" and "leadership"
merely by declaring and intentioning himself to be these
possibilities in his spoken word. Creating such new language
from which to refer to oneself will become for that person his
new self-affirmation. Committing such a self-created affirmation
to ones spoken word will create a space from which the
individual will have the opportunity to experience life
differently, a life of power, freedom and full self-expression.
Such a declaration is not merely linguistical but will begin to
call forth action. Who we are, who we say we are, will
eventually determine what we do and have in life.
Harry Henshaw, Ed.D., LMHC http://www.enhancedhealing.com