What is Counselling? (Photo source: Pixabay) |
The question I face most often is: why do you need a counsellor when
you have family and friends you can speak to? Coming from people raised in a culture
of close-knit social contact, it’s a pretty valid query. However, it is this very
nature of our society that makes counselling – in its real sense – a necessity.
In my understanding, counselling is a relationship, a space that is
defined as being safe and confidential, where the boundaries are well defined. Most
importantly, the counsellor – being an objective stranger – does not feel
pressurised to “fix things” or “make it better”. This might seem like a trivial
thing, or even a negative point to some of you. Believe me, it isn’t. I, for
one, have been more frustrated about my problems after talking about it than I
was before, on more than one occasion. Quite naturally, if I’m miserable, the
people who care for me want my misery to end. So instead of just hearing me
out…instead of letting me vent, I find them joining in my rant. I empathise
with that need to support by joining; I do it myself so often!
Your counsellor is not your friend. He or she is a professional
whose job is to facilitate you to find a way through your mess. And in doing
so, they extend an unconditional acceptance of you as a person. They may
challenge your habits and behaviours, but never doubt the person you are. They
believe in your potential to excel, and communicate it too.
I can’t begin to describe how liberating it is to speak your mind
without trying to mould it to suit the listener. For me, the most important
thing about counselling is this opportunity to say out loud, things you are
scared of even saying in your head. It is the first step to finding your way
out (or ‘in’…whichever it is that you are looking for)…a pre-requisite to
recovery.
Counselling is for everyone. And I don’t mean it in a
marketing-sorta-way. Everybody faces emotional turmoil at various times in his
or her life. A lot of times, you feel equipped to handle it yourself. There may
even be times when you feel too overwhelmed to cope. The latter might require
you to experience a longer-term, more intense counselling relationship, but in
both instances, counselling will prove to be useful.
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