Well, this is the final entry for my reflective journal before I submit it for examination.
In finishing off transactional analysis and Egan stage III on Tuesday I took note of the comment, “The instinctive pull is often the wrong one.” This takes me back to discussions I’ve been having with others online over the past week about the limitations of purely intuition based approaches in local mission. An interesting synchronicity. Maybe what I need to work on developing is more of a reverse intuition; a sense for what feels wrong in a right kind of way.
This transactional analysis approach speaks to me on so many levels cause I can now see the dynamics in so many of my personal relationships. Putting it into practice, not reacting to the transition crosses, is the hard part.
So, now were on to some alternative models for facilitating change: attachment theory and development theory. I haven’t finished reading all the handouts yet but so far am finding them equally fascinating. Attachment theory has some really wonderful things to say about the healing power of relationships, of just providing warmth and contact and companionship. Of course it also has some pretty horrible things to say about the trauma ripping those things apart causes, but the thing that has struck me is how just bonding with others is inherently healing. It causes me to pause and reflect: how deeply do I truly understand my relationships? There’s a magic in them that transcends understanding. It’s like a Mandelbrot set, the more I look, the more I find.
Note: This thread, College Reflections, is to be submitted for assessment as part of my coursework in The Foundations of Christian Counseling at Morling College at the end of Semester 1, 2007. If you would like to speak to me about issues I raise in this thread, but are concerned about privacy, please email me privately instead of leaving a public comment.







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