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Marriage Advice…
Before You Begin Marriage Counseling,
Ask This Question
by Nancy Wasson, Ph.D.
There’s an important question that you need to ask the marriage
counselor you and your spouse are considering using. The question itself
may surprise you, as well as the answer your potential counselor gives.
It’s an often-overlooked question that hardly anyone ever talks about.
Therapists don’t include it in articles they write about how to select a
good counselor, so you’re unlikely to read about it. I’ve never heard of
the topic being discussed on the popular daytime television shows that
delve into so many varied subjects.
But the answer to this important question could save you time, money,
and energy spent with the wrong therapist. It’s a good question to use
as a deciding factor if you narrow your search for a marriage counselor
down to two or three possibilities, and all look fairly equal in
education, training, and experience.
What is the question I consider so important that it could be the
“deciding vote” in selecting a therapist for marriage counseling? Here
it is. Ask the potential marriage counselor(s): “Have you ever
participated in extensive personal therapy yourself?”
Then watch the therapist’s reaction and listen carefully to what he or
she says. Also pay attention to the emotional tone in the response.
These Answers Will Pinpoint Counselors to Avoid
Consider the following responses to the suggested question. My remarks
are in italics in the parenthesis:
- “No, I’ve never had to go to counseling.”
(Never “had” to go? Do you mean that you’re “above” having to go to
counseling? That only people who aren’t as emotionally stable as you are
“have” to go? How will you even know what it’s like to go to an
unfamiliar office and tell a stranger the most intimate details about
your life?)
- “Yes, I went once for several times when my father died.”
(That’s slightly better, but what about all that self-growth work
counselors are always advocating other people do? Don’t you take your
own advice?)
- “No.”
(That’s odd. Why the one-word answer? It’s a logical question to ask.
Why would I entrust you with my vulnerability and something as important
as my marriage if you’ve never been to counseling yourself? Why haven’t
you been? Don’t you believe in what you’re offering?)
- “I took part in some counseling when I took my courses for my
degree.”
(You mean you role played with other students in some of your counseling
classes—that doesn’t count. You weren’t in a real counseling situation
and were probably focused on what your classmates and professor thought
of your role-playing. That’s totally different from participating in
therapy to look closely at your own real issues.)
- “Yes, I have. I’ve had several years of intensive personal
counseling, and I still see a counselor when things come up that I need
to process. I know how much courage and commitment it takes to confront
personal issues, avoid blaming others, and take responsibility for the
quality of one’s life.”
(Yes, this is the one! He (or she) has gone through the counseling
process himself. He won’t be just talking about something he has never
experienced, and he doesn’t sound ashamed that he’s had counseling.
Instead, he sounds proud of himself for making that choice. I like that
he “practices what he preaches” about counseling. He must believe that
it helps in some way or he wouldn’t have spent so much time and money
getting counseling himself.) Are you surprised to learn that many counselors have never participated
in counseling as clients and have never faced their own individual or
relationship issues? That they could get their advanced degree and
become licensed without having participated in personal growth
counseling? It is shocking to think that could happen, but it does—quite
often.Just think about it—would you want to go to a therapist who recommends
counseling to others but has never taken her (or his) own advice? Who
hasn’t dealt with her own personal past and present issues that could
impact the recommendations she makes to you? Who doesn’t really know how
vulnerable you feel as a client and how much courage it takes to make an
appointment, sit in the waiting room, and then talk openly to someone
you’ve never seen before?
I can unequivocally say that you should steer clear of counselors who
haven’t done their own work in counseling—either in individual
counseling, relationship or marriage counseling, or both. There’s a
saying that you can’t take other people any further than you’ve been
yourself.
That’s certainly true when it comes to counseling. The counselor needs
to be very familiar with the terrain—not from only textbook knowledge
but from personal experience, also. He (or she) also needs to be able to
help you without getting your issues all tangled up in his own
unresolved issues—something personal counseling helps a counselor to do
more effectively.
So before you sign on with a marriage counselor, ask the important
question, “Have you ever participated in extensive personal therapy
yourself?” and be sure that the counselor you select knows the
advantages of personal counseling first-hand.
* * * *
**
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