Billy : Peacemaker

Re: The Translucent Revolution

Billy said Dec 10, 2006, 8:14 AM:

 

I wrote:  “More to come later on the three possibilities that can open up with a translucent approach to therapy…”

Finally, here is the “more” that I promised.  Sorry it took me so long.  I have been focused on other things lately (like The School for The Work).  I am going to try and be more involved with my two pods and get some discussions going.

As far as the “more”:

On pages 350 - 351 in The Translucent RevolutionJohn Prendergast shares the three possibilities that open up with a non-dual or translucent approach to therapy.  You might also call these three roles or responsibilities of the non-dual therapist.  Those three are:

1)  To facilitate our clients coming more into the fabric of now.  He states, “I invite a client to be very intimate with their immediate experience, with their body sensations, and to be as close to that as possible.”  He calls this “truth” with a small “t.”  Becoming aware of what their actual experience is in the present moment.

2)  Then comes the possibility of becoming more aware of who is experiencing this moment.  He calls this “capital 'T' Truth.”  The client begins to “witness” their present thoughts and feelings.  The question asked at this point is “Who is witnessing this?”  Our responsibility as therapists is to return people to the real Self.

3)  Finally, the role of the therapist is to help the client to question and dissolve beliefs that keep reality locked onto a certain gestalt or world-view.  This is where we ask such questions as “Is it true?”  He calls this a “deconstructive movement.”

These three roles or movements – bringing our clients more fully into the present moment of lived experience, bringing in spacious awareness / being / witnessing / Self, and deconstructing the thought-forms that block this awareness – seem to summarize very well the approach to therapy that is called non-dual.