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Re: A Practical Integral PsychotherapyClare said Sep 25, 2007, 6:31 AM: |
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Hear Hear William, |
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Empathy and Challengekatherine said Sep 25, 2007, 3:18 PM: |
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Hi WH and hi Clare too, |
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Re: Empathy and ChallengeWH said Sep 25, 2007, 6:56 PM: |
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Hi Katherine, I hear your concerns about the challenge of going from the 50,000 feet of integral theory to the 5 feet of therapist and client. I think many of us who are interested in integral theory have struggled with this. I agree that Wilber does include the full spectrum of developmental models, and hence an equally large number of possibilities for how a therapist relates to the client. I think this is one of the most useful (for me) elements of his work. And I also think it addresses the Rollo May quote you offered. The “mirroring” that May witnessed is appropriate to a whole other level of wounding than May's existential approach. Mirroring, as far as I can tell, is most appropriate with clients who have a fragile self-sense and never received the essential mirroring they needed from the parents. I've seen this among my personal training clients that had abusive childhoods (I learn more about my clients in the training session than even their spouses know sometimes), and consequently have low self-esteem and a too-permeable self. May's existential approach would seem more suited to those with healthy egos but who are seeking some deeper relationship with self and world. So to him, the session he witnessed would look “wrong.” Clients with early developmental stage wounding might, however, initially need that entangled relationship with the therapist in order to build a more solid ego structure. In regard to your questions about empathy and knowing when to challenge, I think these are important questions for all of us. There has recently (among integral bloggers) been some backlash against KW and II, a sense that it has become cultish (I have no idea if there is any foundation for this), and it has caused a lot of people to take a step back from KW's work, which I think is useful. Too many of us were simply blown away by the beauty of it that we didn't ask any validity questions – I think that is changing. Related to your thoughts, I wonder if there is a spectrum of empathy (a developmental line?), from mirroring all the way up to true compassion (in the Buddhist sense), which includes empathy, but can, as part of its “skillful means,” also be challenging. I can only think about this as theory, since I am not a therapist, but it seems this might be one way to look at which form of interaction with clients might best serve their needs. I agree completely with what say about the power of ego being shattered, how freeing that can be. But as you suggest, it's a fine line. The client would need to have a healthy enough ego to withstand such an experience. [One of the issues I have with Mark Epstein is that he doesn't make that distinction in his books – all clients are candidates to have their egos dissolved.] Thanks for the tip on the Willow Pearson article – I downloaded it today. I hope to hear what others hear think on these topics as well. Peace, Bill |
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