Productive Therapy artfully blends two essential ingredients: empathy and confrontation.

A client once complained about me to a friend, “My therapist is hard on me; she confronts me…” to which the friend wisely replied, “She sounds like a good therapist!”  He knew that his friend needed confronting in order to grow.

              Confrontation, easily supplanted by a steady diet of empathy, is often overlooked in therapy.  Client and therapist alike may enjoy deep understanding and gratifying “aha’s” but readily avoid the more anxiety-eliciting confrontation. 

              Empathy is wonderful, healing…  absolutely necessary to growth in therapy.  For clients to dive into searing memories of shameful betrayal, overwhelming loss or terrifying assault that they’ve carefully (and sensibly) avoided all their lives, they must trust that a therapist understands them and is for them.  They must trust that they will get kindness and support, not harsh judgment.  It is legitimately difficult to trust another person with the most vulnerable moments of our lives.  Empathy and understanding are bedrock to building the trust that invites openness about our suffering.

              But confrontation is also vital to growth.  As a thoughtful mentor once put it, if all we do with our clients is empathize, then we are simply stuck in a rut with them.  We just keep saying, in essence, “poor baby,” but never help them out of the rut.   Getting out of the rut requires the added jolt of confrontation.  In confronting, we dare to introduce a perspective that counters the client’s perspective—insight they hadn’t considered, maybe didn’t want to consider, that may be a little jarring or hard to swallow.

              Such confrontation causes discomfort and anxiety.  That’s why it’s counter intuitive in therapy:  we think of therapists as soothing anxiety, not inviting it!  But right levels of anxiety can actually be quite helpful (see upcoming  blog).  They can jostle complacency and lend impetus and energy to the work of therapy. 

              Consider…  A man comes in to a session upset about mistreatment by his boss.  Wincing, I empathize with the real hurt caused by the boss’s mean-spirited words.  I linger in the hurt with the client, unpacking other memories of similar hurt, sincerely with him in protesting the pain and unfairness he’s experienced.  There’s been a lot.

 Pivot point… Do we stay stuck in the rut?  Or is there some bigger perspective I can offer that, while risking offending him, can invite him out of the rut.  Gingerly, I say, “You know, you played a role in your boss’s harshness.”   Yes, he’s offended…   but we have history together; he trusts me enough to be curious to hear more.  And we begin looking at a pattern in this man’s choices—an unconscious pattern of extreme passivity that triggers irritation and sometimes downright harshness in friends and colleagues, subtly protecting him from a closeness that terrifies him. 

But confrontation--this uncomfortable insight—is embedded in empathy.  This man is not passive because he is a jerk or lazy or manipulative.  He’s passive because precious energy and initiative were beat out of him as a child.  A desperate choice, huge withdrawal from life was the only protection he knew.  But there’s a problem in this choice:  the passivity which protected him so well as a child is costing him dearly and unnecessarily as an adult. 

And so goes the blend of empathy and confrontation that invites healing.  Deep empathy—a non-judging and comforting understanding that tells us we are not alone in our suffering--permeates good therapy; but discerning confrontation must be boldly and gently added to the mix.  Confrontation invites a shift in perspective that leads to real change—not just “feeling better”—but substantive growth which sustains well-being.  

 Lots of empathy… a well-placed confrontation… lots of empathy...    is the essential blend that works not only for therapy but also for friendship, marriage, and raising kids. 

©  6/30/15 

*Any resemblance to actual people is coincidence and our shared humanity.

High accolades for Dave Allen’s book, Getting Things Done…

best expressed by my computer assistant who, upon entering my office, uttered a stunned,  “Wow! Maribeth, what happened?!  I’ve never seen your office look this organized.  There’s no paper anywhere!!!”  Dave Allen’s Getting Things Done is what happened.

If you struggle with:

  • feeling overwhelmed by stacks, piles, and myriad things to do;

  • waking up dreading the day related to too much to do;

  • sleep loss because you’re wound up about things left undone;

  • Eeyore’ish procrastinating rather than creative initiating;

  • and feeling helpless and hopeless—a task-specific depression or despair—

          rather than energized by the work that you face…

    you may love the book,  Getting Things Done!  Dave Allen addresses our overwhelm with wise structure and tips which help in highly practical ways.  I heartily recommend his book, but here are three tips that got me started.

    1. Make a Project List, listing every project—home, work, kids, pets, gardening--every looming project that comes to mind.  (As will be seen, this is different from a to-do list.)Every time a project comes to mind, “capture” it—write it down immediately, relieving your mind from carrying around mental to-do lists.  Juggling things to-do in our minds is draining.  We then worry about remembering them (and usually don’t) in addition to worrying about getting them done.  Stress and anxiety mount!  The things-to-be-done rattle around in our minds--cluttering, distracting and exhausting us.  With all projects out of your head and onto a hard copy, the hard copy can do the taxing work of remembering for you. You’re mind is freed up to think, plan, and problem-solve.

    2.   Make a First Action List.  It was an epiphany to me to realize that we can’t do whole projects—that’s why we feel overwhelmed at times facing these projects.  We can only do the first action of the project, which is, by definition, manageable and doable.  So the First-Action List is akin to our traditional “to-do list”—but more intentional, inviting and energizing.  For example, say becoming a better cook is a project you’ve had.  But the project overwhelms you; you never get started.  A First Action might be looking on Pinterest to find a tasty recipe. You find a recipe that looks yummy and not too hard, after all.  You’re actually energized for the next First Action: buying ingredients.  Then maybe you’re actually excited about the final First Action: cooking the dish. 

    3.  Finally, Allen’s 2-minute rule:  When you’re getting ready to put a task on a list, if the task requires less than 2 minutes, just do it right then and there.  (I hadn’t realized how much procrastinating I was doing until implementing this rule!)

                            Happy Organizing: May Mastery Replace Overwhelm!