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Relationship Coaching & Therapy Skills

What is Relationship Coaching & Therapy Skills

In order to be successful in coaching others in their relationships, you yourself will have to source your own issues, so that you don’t project them onto your clients. Just like a massage therapist in training gets to have a lot of massages done to them and doing it to others, those that seek to have an effect on other’s psyches, need to be familiar with their own. The word Psyche, as defined by Freud has to do with our essence, beyond the physical, into the invisible realms, where unseen forces affect our feelings, thoughts, and behaviors. Psyche in a more religious context refers to our soul. Without knowing our deepest self we are at a loss in self-knowledge, and scripture clearly delineates that self-knowledge is the highest truth, and that truth shall set you free. So if you want to realize as a human being, you really need the whole package. Most schools of therapy and psychology today focus on manipulating the individual. Their aim is mostly to integrate them into society as a whole, very few question the axioms that the very society is running upon. It’s like the difference between Western Medicine and Eastern Medicine, or Allopathy and Homeopathy. In both examples, the former tries to palliate the symptoms of discomfort, whereas the latter aims to remove the cause of the disease… Any counseling that has an end-game purpose is bound to fail because if you don’t address the underlying issues that are affecting the relationship negatively you will only postpone the inevitable. Cognitive Therapy I believe in cognitive therapy. When you gain awareness of the root cause of the problems, you gain the ability to change, whilst you walk around in ignorance, you repeat the same patterns… In relationship coaching training we teach you to understand yourself and others, beyond the functionality of relationships, to the root core of who you are. Only when you understand yourself fully will you be able to understand others, and only when you see yourself fully will you be able to see others fully. Therapy Skills There are several important skills to gain for those that want to coach others in attaining successful relationships. Sometimes relationships are stuck, both parties are like children sparring in need of proving the other “wrong”, and they seek a therapist (parent) that will give them the reason in order to prevail against the other. This is a common pattern in couples therapy, and sometimes even a sharp therapist can get caught in this debacle, favoring one “child” over the other. These sessions are bound to fail because inevitably the unflavored “child” will quit the therapy or the relationship altogether. One of the skills that I have learned from Marshall Rosenberg calls “compassionate communication”. It’s a technique that he has successfully utilized in bridging the gap between the Arabs and the Israelis. The whole precept of compassionate communication is to re-humanize the opponent so that you can feel the similarities that unite you rather than the differences that separate you. Our minds are very adept at compartmentalizing and dividing. The military knows this, that’s why the aim is to demonize the enemy and disconnect the soldier from their own human feelings, turning them into an unfeeling, inhumane killing machine, it is no wonder that soldiers come back from battle DE-humanized and traumatized, at times even taking their own lives like they did the lives of others. Re-integrating them into society after they’ve lived the high-stress, high-octane life of a warrior on a battlefield is no small task, yet re-integrating with their own humanity and developing self-compassion is key! In the same way, after we’ve been exposed to our own mind’s reasoning for adversity against our beloved, you need a strong tool to bridge that gap! And just as the mind is most adept at creating separation, the heart is at bridging it! When we have pulled away from our natural state, there is always a part of us that doesn’t feel quite right! Conclusion:- Happiness is our natural state, and as we stray away from it, our longing increases! That’s why it’s essential that relationship coaches are in touch with their own true nature! That’s where the relationship coach training is helpful not just in counseling others, but in attaining personal goals as well…

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type of relationships are in afraid of commitment

What type of relationships are in afraid of commitment

It’s most common to have relationships where the man is afraid of commitment, but the opposite can also, be true. Generally, the fear is around money, but that need not always be the case. A woman generally looks for security in a relationship, that’s why marriage commitment is so important to her. The law stipulates certain rules of engagement that protect her assets moving forward should it ever end. Particularly if she has children, financial stability is very important. Our society tends to favor the man as the money maker. So it becomes very important for women to feel like the financial gains made during the marriage can be sustained. There are cases, however, where the woman is the main breadwinner, and these circumstances tend to threaten the man’s identity because in our society. He being the breadwinner is so installed. Often we see control dynamics associated with earnings, and these can threaten the fabric of the relationship. But money is not the only factor for security in a relationship. There are also emotional factors that can influence it. Far deeper and more hidden than financial stresses, how we view ourselves emotionally has a big charge in determining the direction of a relationship. In Feng-Shui, it is known that both parties should have night tables of similar dimensions around their matrimonial bed. Because the balance of power in a relationship is extremely important to it’s survival! Relationships, where one holds power over the other, are more power struggles than relationships, and they don’t endure. Relationships generally have three stages of growth, and power struggles are the intermediary points between them. The courting facet is the most exciting, and there are many who are perpetually stuck in that phase. Some are infatuated with the courting face to the point of being unwilling or incapable of moving beyond it. They lack the maturity to make a commitment to a serious relationship where all of their issues can be aired and healed. These people are unwilling or unable to move beyond the courting phase, and if they find themselves by accident or omittance in a committed relationship they will tend to sabotage it by having an affair. An escape where they can once again experience the thrill of courtship, albeit a fake one! Pushing someone afraid of commitment to commit to a relationship is counter-productive as you are not addressing the reasons behind the resistance, until these are healed, or the truth of the relationship is found, the relationship will fail. By nature, a healthy relationship will move past the courting phase through the power struggle into the cooperative phase. And past the power struggle again to settle into the synergy phase, where the duality of our existence fades, and we become one. Modern psychology is rather ignorant of this phase and considers it “enabling” which is a destructive judgment to place on a healthy, fulfilling relationship. Relationships born of concepts, guided by therapists who guide out of concepts are also doomed to failure because there is no actual healthy model of a true lasting relationship. Just as Hanneman had an understanding of the healthy state which guided him in his homeopathic treatment. So must a counselor have an understanding of a healthy, complete relationship from which to see what dynamics are at play with his clients.

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