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| Counselor to Healer |
| Columns - First Person | ||||||||
| Monday, 31 May 1999 | ||||||||
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I was well into a busy private practice when I first read the adage, “We teach best what we most need to learn.” I was sure it did not apply to me. I had become a counselor to help others, not myself, and was trained to be objective in my work. If a disproportionate number of patients seemed to have issues with anger during a week that I was upset with my husband, it was attributed to coincidence or something in the air, or the cycle of the moon. What could my personal issues possibly have to do with the content of my clients’ counseling sessions?
Twenty-five years later, I see how my personal issues, the
development of counseling skills and trends in the field of psychotherapy have
all run parallel. Ongoing training has served as much to resolve my personal
problems as to further my career.
Eating disorders and compulsive overwork were
redefined as addictions when recovery programs became fashionable. The success
of 12-step programs and the popularity of Scott Peck’s A Road Less Traveled
spearheaded the recognition of spiritual issues in psychotherapy, so the concept
of unconditional positive regard was expanded to include a Higher Power. In the
office, guided imagery and meditative techniques helped clients access an inner
source through which to heal their wounds, decreasing their dependency. At home,
my discovery of my spiritual Self made me less dependent on my husband and I
left the marriage.
The difference between a counselor and a healer is
that a counselor is someone who teaches what he or she most needs to learn — a
healer is someone who has learned what he or she has been teaching. As a healer,
I recognize that everyone, inside and outside the office is both teacher and
student. Lisa Raphael, MS, is a licensed mental-health counselor, healer and author with more than thirty years’ experience in private practice. She gives lectures and seminars based on her book, O-Becoming One, Transformation Beyond Survival, about how her memories of childhood sexual abuse and the Holocaust were transformed using a variety of therapeutic techniques. Contact Lisa at This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it
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