That time of day…
Where my legs give out and walking is near impossible. Thank you, Zappy The Wonder Walker, for being by my side while I'm on campus…'cause otherwise I'd be stuck here.
Where my legs give out and walking is near impossible. Thank you, Zappy The Wonder Walker, for being by my side while I'm on campus…'cause otherwise I'd be stuck here.
Time for some more caffeine…then cutting back on wordsge…and then laundry.
I believe that one of the mistakes that those in the various and affiliated helping professions can find themselves making is falling into is the trap of giving advice (speaking of, this post isn’t advice to anyone: it’s just my beliefs. Take it, leave it, modify it…the choice is entirely yours).
I am of the very strong belief that the only ones who should ever be giving out advice professionally are consultants which is a very different role (and one I’ve often held as a business consultant) than the roles held in the helping professions.
Consulting is a very different practice than working in the helping professions. In consulting I am being paid to provide professional advice based upon very specialized knowledge I have, within the scope of my education, training, and experience. In the helping professions, we are paid to help our clients elicit the answers that exist within themselves, and to be a guiding light, and a reflection board for them, so that they can make their own decisions.
The Problems With Giving Advice
There are two main problems I see with giving advice (and you can read this in a plethora of text books, conference proceedings, and on more blogs than this one. This idea is not unique and it’s certainly not originally mine):
Advice giving isn’t the only, or main problem though.
I have worked with a number of various helping professionals who will agree with what I wrote above in its entirety…and yet, when it comes time to write a client’s goals and service plan, will then let their pen fly across the paper: using their words, their thoughts, their beliefs of what their client’s goals are, instead of the client’s words, the client’s thoughts, the client’s beliefs, the client’s goals.
The exact same problems exist here/with this as they do in the section above.
When I studied Motivational Interviewing is when I learned what – for me – is the ideal in goal setting, and it looks a little like this: Instead of making goal suggestions, or asking a client “what are your goals?” I ask a client a scaling question:
“On a scale from 1-10, with 1 being the farthest away from being where you want to be, and 10 being you’re exactly where you want to be, and everything in life is near perfect, and unicorns are dancing around you as we speak, where are you right now?”
Then the client will respond, and say they say something like:
“Well, right now I’m at a 4.5”
And then I might say:
“Wow, a 4.5! Okay, how do you know you’re at a 4.5, and not a 4?”
And I will then, in the words of one of my many incredible teachers and mentors, Mr. Sobota: “shut up and stare at them.” while I reflectively listen.
When the client is done, I will generally use an affirmation, or a reflective statement based on what they said. And then I’ll say:
“So, on that same scale, if you were to take the leap from 4.5 to 5, what would be different? What would being at a 5 look like?”
I then shut up and stare at them again. When they’re finished, I then go:
“So what would you need to do, to get from a 4.5 to a 5?”
And here’s where it gets totally critical: you shut up and stare at them again. As soon as they start telling you what it will take for them to get from a 4.5 to a 5 you start writing as fast as you can, because what they’re telling you is their entire goal list and service plan…literally, they’re telling you everything they need to do to get to the next step closer to where they want to be, so take good and detailed notes.
After this, at least for this session, it’s generally smooth sailing: you should have a lot of:
“So what I hear you saying is…[read back what you wrote down as reflective statements/affirmations]…so if I understood you correctly, you would like to work on [goal] and you believe that you can accomplish this goal by [action]…”
You can then take all of those (now confirmed/adjusted and then re-confirmed) notes, and transpose them to whatever agency goal/service plan forms you’re forced to work with.
Guess what’s missing from here? Any of my interests, any of my biases…any of me determining what I think my client wants…and since it all came from my client they are the one who bears responsibility if their plan doesn’t work (and then you can help the tweak their plan, if that’s the case, or work through roadblocks int he exact same way)…but they client is also the one who gets to claim victory when their plan DOES work! THEY did it! CHEERLEAD THE HECK OUT OF THEM!
What if my client is making the wrong choices? Selecting the wrong goals? What if what they’re choosing will get them sent back to jail or won’t help them reach recovery?
Generally speaking, it doesn’t matter a lick if you agree with your client’s goals or not. There are, of course, exceptions: if those goals are robbing a bank, or injuring themselves or someone else, or anything similar to any of these situations…then what you think becomes very important and safety is paramount (codes of ethics, and laws almost everywhere support this).
That said, even in a drug treatment program the client may not have a goal of entering into recovery…and that’s okay: the consequences are theirs, not yours. A client who may need to see a job coach as part of their probation may not want to engage in services. That’s okay too: you’re not the parole officer. You’re merely presenting the client with an opportunity to engage in work or not and informing them of what the consequences might be if they engage, or if they choose not to engage. What they choose to do with that opportunity (and the consequences: positive, negative, or neutral) are their’s to bear alone.
What our job is, as workers, as helpers, is to help our clients enumerate what their goals are, to help them elicit from within themselves the way in which they believe they will best be able to reach those goals, and if the client’s goals aren’t safe, or may have devastating consequences it is our job to help them understand what those potential consequences might be, to work with them to ensure that they (and others are safe), and to help them see alternatives.
However, at the end of the day, our clients must be the ones to develop their goals, to develop their own service and care plans, and to make their own choices. Sometimes those choices are incredible and beautiful to behold. Sometimes those choices will land them back in jail, which can be terribly painful to watch…but that’s okay too: they have every right to make that choice, especially if they’ve worked with you to examine all of their potential options, and all of the potential consequences that can be foreseen, based upon their goals and interests.
Like…no energy…getting food, and then sleeping a bit more #MaybeThatWillWork
Today is a very hungry day…and it involves much writing, and a brief stop for physical therapy…and then more food and more writing…
“We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. That to secure these rights, governments are instituted among men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed. That whenever any form of government becomes destructive to these ends, it is the right of the people to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their safety and happiness. Prudence, indeed, will dictate that governments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes; and accordingly all experience hath shown that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed. But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such government, and to provide new guards for their future security.” – From the United States Declaration of Independence, July 4, 1776; Emphasis Mine.
This has been a hard year for Lady Liberty. It’s also been a hard year for Lady Justice. It’s been a hard year for me. It’s probably been a hard year for you. It’s been a hard year for all of us. But we’re going to continue to resist. We will obstruct.
So my America is a thousand languages, it’s multiple shades of skin color. It’s amazingly different foods from different countries from my incredible neighbors who – like my family – immigrated here, and like my family, many as refugees.
Either you understand that America isn’t white and Christian, or you don’t understand history: where we’ve come from, and where we’re going.
People fly the confederate flag and raise the Nazi salute as if they’re free speech issues, instead of a continuation of a war. But we’re going to move forward. We’re going to drag this country forward. We’ll punch Nazis and Fascists if we have to…but we’re going to get there.
Because this is an incredibly beautiful country, built on genocide, slavery, and the bloodshed of a revolutionary and civil war, and while we haven’t known peace
Popcorn, Nap, and then more writing…I am a very hungry hippo today.
So I worked until about 2:30, 3am this morning, and didn’t fall asleep until 4pm 4am (I’ve had a weird sleep cycle recently between leg/body pain, fireworks, and Fibrofatigue, among others). So I’m almost ready to get back to writing…I need more food before that can happen though.
I’m also almost entirely done with my TEDx speech (so that’s cool). I hope to have my draft speech recorded tonight so my two coaches can look at it this week.
Anyway, in the next few hours I’ll have almost all of the coursework done for my Adult Interventions course, and then I can do readings for my addictions course, since I have a video conference for that this Thursday.
Cannot wait for this semester to end…so glad to be getting work done today!
#medical
Okay, about to start my Adult Interventions Papers, and then will go back to my Trauma & Human Rights Draft…and then maybe this evening I’ll get started on the two presentations I need to write…and I need to check my Addictions & The Family syllabi to see if there’s a final paper…almost there!