Authentic Communication, In Praise of Intimate
Relationships, CRAM Publishers
Originally published as
Relation d’aide et amour de soi
© 1990 Les Éditions du CRAM Inc.
English translation
Diana Halfpenny
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Patrick Viens
Correction
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Introduction
Chapter 1: The Creative Non-Directive Approach
A. The nondirectivity phenomenon in Quebec
B. Rogerian non-directivity
C. The Creative Non-Directive Approach
D. The directivity/non-directive dialectic
1. Non-directivity according to the CNDA
a. The importance of the helping relationship
b. Attitude
c. The nature of a human being
d. Power
e. Conditions for developing a creative non-directive attitude
Responsibility
Acceptance
Love
2. Directivity according to the CNDA
a. The container concept
b. The container according to the CNDA
c. Positive features of container-directivity
The foundation of the CNDA
Chapter 2: Respect for the way the brain functions
A. Lozanov and Suggestology
B. The brain
1. The horizontal structure of the brain
a. The left hemisphere
b. The right hemisphere
2. The vertical structure of the brain
a. The hindbrain
b. The midbrain
c. The forebrain
Chapter 3: Respect for the way the psyche functions
A. The life of the psyche
1. The psyche
2. The conscious mind
a. The imbalanced conscious mind
The overexploitation of rationality
The underexploitation of rationality
b. The conscious mind in balance
3. The unconscious mind
a. The unconscious and intuition
b. The unconscious and affectivity
c. The unconscious and influence
B. Psychic functioning
1. Psychic (emotional) needs
a. The need for love
b. The need for security
c. The need to be heard
d. The need for acknowledgment
e. The need to assert oneself
Power
Authority
Transference and counter-transference
f. The need for freedom
g. The need for creativity
2. Psychic needs and the emotions: An unsatisfactory mental process
C. Emotion
D. Complexes
1. The abandonment complex
2. The sibling rivalry complex
3. The insecurity complex
4. The castration complex
5. The guilt complex
6. The inferiority complex
E. Defense mechanisms
1. Repression
2. Introjection
3. Escape and avoidance
4. Rationalization
5. Confluence
6. Self-punishment
7. Projection
8. The adoption of a persona
F. Patterns
1. The bully and the victim
2. The deserter and the abandonee
3. The invader and the invadee
4. The judge and the offender
5. The missionary and the disciple
6. The saviour and the protégé
7. The superior and the inferior
8. The dominator and the submissive
9. The manipulator and the manipulatee
Chapter 4: Respect for the process of liberation and change
A. Self-knowledge
B. Acceptance
C. Responsibility
D. Expression
E. Observation
F. The choice of protective mechanisms
1. The explicit request
2. Verification
3. The choice of entourage and environment
4. Territory and limits
a. Invasion
b. Life goals
c. Priorities
d. Organization and self-discipline
5. New life experiences
6. The transformation of expectations into goals
G. Taking creative action
Chapter 5: Respect for different types of intelligence
A. Discovering of different types of intelligence
1. The lack of love
2. The lack of motivation
B. Types of intelligence
C. Rationalists
1. Intellectual characteristics
2. Affective characteristics
3. Relational characteristics
4. Reference points
5. Skills
6. Difficulties
7. Ways of perceiving and learning
8. Therapeutic case study
9. Educational case study
D. Pragmatists
1. Intellectual characteristics
2. Affective characteristics
3. Relational characteristics
4. Reference points
5. Difficulties
6. Ways of perceiving and learning
7. Therapeutic case study
8. Educational case study
9. Personal experience
E. Esthetes
1. Intellectual characteristics
2. Affective characteristics
3. Relational characteristics
4. Reference points
5. Skills
6. Difficulties
7. Ways of seeing and learning
8. Therapeutic case study
9. Educational case study
Chapter 6: The paramount importance of the helper
A. The teacher as helper
1. Teachers, the lifeblood of the education system
2. Teacher-training programs
a. Teacher-focused training
b. Training focused on inner work
B. The role of therapy and inner work in the training of helpers
1. Training for self-knowledge
2. Training in a multidimensional approach
C. The helper and therapy
1. Training for creative non-directive relationship therapists
a. Competence
b. Letting go
c. Self-discipline
d. Pleasure
2. Stages in training
a. Stage 1
b. Stage 2
c. Stage 3
3. Course methodology
4. Trainers
Conclusion
Bibliography
To Nelson and to François,
for loving me
and believing in me.
There is nothing miraculous about the approach outlined in this book; it is, rather, the result of many years of inner work. It could, in a way, be seen as the subjective synthesis of my personal and professional experience on the one hand, and my theoretical training on the other. As the approach evolved, bore the imprint of the suffering that was responsible for bringing me to my true self. This suffering, in which fear, anguish, sorrow and repressed anger all had a part, was what, in the end, made me into a happy person. It was the school in which I learned how to be a mother, wife, teacher, relationship therapist and instructor of the approach I advocate. In my suffering I felt solitude, abandonment and rejection; I suffered from lack of love and recognition, from fear of loss, of not pleasing, of disappointing; I suffered from guilt and shame; I suffered from feelings of invasion, doubt and powerlessness; I suffered from my dependence, my fragility, my vulnerability – in short, I suffered from life. For a long time I wanted to pull the suffering out by its roots: simply extract it, as you would a bad tooth. I wanted to deny it, ignore it, destroy it, but in spite of my efforts it grew stronger. Then, finally, I came to the realization that it had something to say to me, and that I needed to listen to it, as I would listen to a sad child. Over the years of inner work, I learned that I had to welcome it, accept it and listen to what it wanted to teach me. By accepting suffering, I discovered happiness and the joy of living, inner peace and the ability to love myself. Similarly, I discovered that embracing suffering was – and still is – the best way of learning how to help others and myself. It taught me that, if all I used were ready-made theories and techniques, I wouldn’t be of much use to anyone. My therapy-directed inner work, and the resulting personal growth, brought me to the realization that I bore the inescapable responsibility for the success or failure of all my relationships.
This lengthy journey toward self-discovery, during which I spent many days studying, analyzing, researching, and thinking, was responsible for my ever-increasing interest interest in all things related to people and their relationships, and particularly in counseling, which is often referred to in this book as a “helping relationship.” Over the years, as I became better acquainted with the subject, I realized that counseling was not the sole prerogative of psychologists and psychotherapists. In fact, it is accessible to all who are involved in a relationship in which one of the protagonists is helping the other deal with an emotional or relationship problem. There are many people who claim – and with good cause – that they are “involved” in this sort of helping relationship: the nurse who takes a personal interest in her patients’ problems, the teacher who helps one of his students through an emotionally-troubled period, and the father who stands by his son when the latter is having difficulty in school are all giving important emotional support. Not to mention all the people who volunteer their time just to listen to those in less fortunate circumstances. In all their various situations, these people are legitimately acting to help others.
The term “counseling” can be applied or defined in many different ways. In the following pages, I have tried to elaborate on the emotional support aspects of counseling, which I define as an approach that aims to prevent and to help an individual better deal with their emotional and relationship difficulties. A fairly large section of the book will be devoted to education, because of the primarily “preventive” role I ascribe to the educational sciences.
There are many different schools of thought within the field of psychology, just as there are many different psychological theories. The approach defined in this book is one that I developed, and which arose out of my years of experience with therapy, teaching and training. I call this approach the Creative Nondirective Approach (CNDA). This new approach is based on Carl Rogers’ theories on nondirectivity, and those of Georgy Lozanov on Suggestology. One of the primary objectives of this book will be to disseminate this new approach, by defining it and the psychological foundation on which it is based. Ways of implementing the CNDA will be dealt with in another book.
I am not trying to claim that I have made a brand new discovery, and even less that I have sole possession of the truth in this particular branch of counseling, where I am far from the first to have done research. Nothing, after all, springs into being fully-formed from Jupiter’s thigh. Every creation is a continuation of that which preceded it, and its unique properties come from each individual’s subjective experience. There are, therefore, as many truths as there are creations. In a spirit of respect for what has already been accomplished in this field, I have set forth the principles of the Creative Non-Directive Approach (CNDA), an approach based on the interconnectedness of the individual and his entourage, and the way these interconnected entities grow, evolve and change. What the CNDA definitely is not is an educational or psychotherapeutic “method”, it is rather an “attitude” that the relationship therapist or helper should try and develop, an “inner state” that can be cultivated through self-examination, through deeper knowledge of his real self, and through love for himself as a person. This approach does not emphasize resolving problems, but rather focuses on the subject himself, as a person, and is designed to give him the opportunity of getting to know himself, of conquering his inner world, of freeing himself from the burden of repressed emotions, of fulfilling his creative potential and thus regaining control over his life.
It is impossible to master this approach without first studying human psychology in depth, or acquiring an intimate knowledge of how human beings function, and how the person interacts on an emotional level with his entourage and his environment. Since he will inevitably feel personally implicated, the reader cannot view the approach as a simple intellectual exercise, regarding it as purely cognitive and rational material; to get the most out of this book, he must start out ready to invest something in it, ready to get involved. When reading it, he must be attentive to the echoes of his own subjective responses, and be ready to draw parallels between the subject matter and his own life experience.
When approached in this manner, the book becomes an effective medium for self-examination, for inner growth and for spiritual renaissance.
Because the Creative Non-Directive Approach is based on respect for a person’s intrinsic wholeness, for the way his brain and his psyche function, for the way he perceives the world and for his adaptability to change, this approach emphasizes the helper as a person, and the importance of his training. It postulates that the most important ingredient in any successful helping relationship is the helper’s own continuing inner work. This book therefore is intended for specialists in physical and mental health care, for teachers and pedagogues, for parents, and for anyone who would like to foster healthier and more effective professional relationships in their work environment. But ultimately, and above all, this book is intended for anyone, regardless of his occupation, who believes in the importance of inner work and of finding the path to change and freedom within himself, who seeks to discover his hidden potential and become the master of his own destiny.
The Creative Non-Directive Approach invites you into the heart of your Self, where you will discover the key to your own fulfillment, and be equipped for involvement in a helping relationship through self-knowledge and true love for yourself as a person.
Everywhere in the Western world, and consequently also in Quebec, the past half-century has seen a shift – particularly in educational circles – from a rather radical form of directivity toward certain reasonably satisfactory attempts at non-directivity. The pendulum then swung back, bringing the previous strict attitudes back into vogue. In light of this, the extreme shifts that characterize the evolution and growth of humanity need to be counteracted by a search for balance.
The directivity phenomenon that marked Quebec before the Quiet Revolution of the 1960s, had a remarkable influence on the educational theories of that era. It was maintained by the religious, political and ideological powers-that-be, and was characterized by the tendency of certain persons in authority to impose beliefs and ideologies that they presented as absolute, universal truths, to be applied indiscriminately to all individuals regardless of culture, age, education or life history. Thus upheld, directivity dominated those on whom it was imposed by sustaining feelings of inferiority and guilt, and stifled creativity by imposing uniformity and showing a lack of respect for individual differences and personal subjectivity. Although this phenomenon has yet to disappear completely, it is generally acknowledged that the situation has improved greatly.
In the 1960s, in the name of human freedom, the need for creative expression and respect for the individual, major reforms took place that revolutionized Quebec society, opening the door – notably in the field of education – to less directive approaches. As put forward by Lewin and Rogers, these approaches surreptitiously crossed the border between the United States and Canada and influenced a people ready to cast off the yoke that was beginning to crush them.
Unfortunately, in many cases, this period of profound change in Quebec brought about a wholesale acceptance of the new and an indiscriminate rejection of the old, which cut us off from some of the values essential to our equilibrium. Thus the concepts of discipline and training were more or less disregarded in favor of freedom of expression and freedom of action. Disequilibrium, then, took on another face, and dissatisfaction found other causes. Just as “directivity” had resulted in our being crushed, so “non-directivity” brought about a feeling of insecurity. What were the reasons for this phenomenon? Why was the Rogerian non-directive philosophy – which represented near-irrefutable human values – unable, when applied to education, to satisfactorily respond to people’s real needs?
Although he was preceded by Lewin and followed by, among others, Gordon and Gendlin, Carl Rogers is generally recognized as the foremost proponent of the nondirective current in Western psychology, particularly in the therapeutic and educational circles of the mid-twentieth century. Rogers’ theory is founded on the hypothesis that each human being naturally tends toward the kind of fulfillment, actualization, and growth that increase his well-being (Rogers, 1942). This tendency means that the path to self-creation lies within each person, and that only he can tell what is good or bad for him and knows the answers to his problems. Following this conviction, Rogers believes that any approach that intends to help cannot be directive. Therefore the “helper” – be that person a doctor, psychologist, teacher, therapist or parent – should necessarily be “non-directive” if the “helpee” is going to move toward self-actualization. This is why Rogers, after initially calling his philosophy a “non-directive approach,” later spoke of a “person-centered approach.” The name change also came in response to the negative connotation of non-directivity, to which had been attributed, in a great many cases, the idea of “laissez-faire.”
What, though, are the characteristics of the Rogerian person-centered non-directive approach?
Rogers conceives of non-directivity as an attitude. The person-centered therapist is thus recognized as having an empathetic, congruent, accepting attitude: empathetic in the sense of being able to understand and respect the client’s frame of reference; congruent because the therapist knows how to be attentive to what is going on inside himself; accepting in that the “other” is unconditionally accepted for what he is (Rogers, 1942). The Rogerian approach, centered above all on real-life experience and particularly on the emotions, sets no clear limits on acceptance, which in my view bears qualification; I will return to this question later.
When applied to therapy, group activities, teaching, education or helping relationships, the non-directive or person-centered approach as conceived by Rogers has not always had the miraculous effects so fervently desired. The majority of those who have tried to put it into practice have run up against serious obstacles that caused them to either become more directive than they were in the first place or to modify the approach to make its application more satisfactory.
In fact, the numerous attempts at applying the Rogerian approach failed for specific reasons.
Besides the fact that it has been misunderstood and misinterpreted, the Rogerian approach has in some cases been improperly applied. First, it seems to me to be difficult to parachute people who have been trained “directively” since birth into an entirely non-directive setting. It is a mistake to believe that one can take charge of one’s life overnight when one has always been guided or led by the outside world. Becoming independent is in this case a progressive learning process, one that must be undertaken with respect for the psychological functioning of the human person and his rate of growth. Imposing non-directivity without taking a human being’s psychology and his natural rate of development into account is, paradoxically, being directive. Attempting to change a person or group by throwing them headlong toward a non-directive approach runs counter to the very principles of non-directivity. Can we, in the name of freedom, destroy values and realities which have existed for centuries without a care for those who believe in them? Can we, in the name of equality, wipe out such deeply-rooted realities as father, mother, teacher, leader? Can we, in the name of ideology, forbid the concept of “role”? And can we, with a wave of the hand, dismiss the authority represented by the simple fact of being a “father,” a “teacher,” a “boss” or a “president”?
Let us say that I am a non-directive contributor in the Rogerian sense, but because of who I am and because of my role as leader, teacher or relationship therapist, I impose my non-directivity and become in a certain sense directive, even though I may not wish to become so. Therein lies the paradox of Rogerian non-directivity: those who apply it have not always achieved satisfactory results because of the insecurity caused by the lack of structure that it generates. I am convinced – and I will demonstrate this later – that the need for security is fundamental to human functioning, and that satisfying this need is essential to the process of liberation, growth and change. Simply put, making people insecure inhibits their evolution.
When I first read Rogers in the early 1960s, I admit that the principles of his philosophy, presented in On Becoming a Person and A Way of Being, and applied to education in Freedom to Learn and to psychotherapy in Counseling and Psychotherapy more than just impressed me. Yet I quickly realized that I could not be satisfied unless I were to adjust this approach – in my educational practice, in the way I raised my four children, and later in my work as a therapist and at my training centre – according to who I am and the people with whom I was working: my children, students or clients. In this way, inspired both by Carl Rogers and by the originator of Suggestology, Dr. Georgy Lozanov, and based on my research, and especially my personal experiences as a parent, teacher, leader, therapist and trainer, I succeeded in creating my own approach, which I call the Creative Non-directive Approach, or CNDA.
The CNDA is an affective, relationship-based approach that fosters creativity through respect for a person’s overall emotional and physiological makeup, for his rate of progress from one stage to another, for the process of change and for his self-creation.
I call this approach “creative” and “non-directive” because it is based on the “directivity/non-directivity” dialectic, and the development of a person’s creativity, with respect for that person and for his evolution.
I believe it is important to a basic understanding of the approach to define the exact nature of the directivity/non-directivity dialectic as I perceive it, and to show that any dialectic of this nature tends to foster the growth of a person’s creative potential.
According to the CNDA, non-directivity in its purest state cannot exist, because of two important limitations: the fact that the helper himself is still pursuing his own inner work, and the setting. The CNDA does, in fact, include a fairly large amount of directivity, and it is paradoxically the dialectical conjunction of the directive aspect with the non-directive aspect of the approach that makes the approach creative.
To to further clarify, I have grafted the ideas of “container/ content” to the ideas of directivity/non-directivity. Thus the CNDA is an approach that is clearly composed of both “content-non-directivity” and “container-directivity.”
Like the Rogerian approach, the CNDA is a humanistic approach that is centered on the person. Creative non-directive relationship therapists or counselors do not hide behind their theories and their techniques; on the contrary, they experience the helping relationship as a human relationship. In spite of their professional competence, they have their limitations, as do all human beings, and their actions are based as much on who they are as on what they know. It is therefore obvious that their work will probably be affected by their life experience, by their emotional blocks, their strengths and weaknesses. It is just not realistic to believe that helpers have to solve all of their own problems before they can help others. Even if he has progressed through a great deal of inner work, any person involved in a helping relationship can become vulnerable when going through periods of difficulty, insecurity and real anguish. Even those therapists who claim to be neutral are subject to this phenomenon. In fact, they are precisely the ones who fall victim to it completely unawares, which can be twice as harmful for the client.
Whatever approach he may use, the counselor cannot program himself as he would a robot. He is a human being, and as such will react – at least internally – to what is going on around him. The more he tries to program himself, and cut himself off from his emotions, the less he is able to help, because an ignored emotion could become a defensive issue for him. If he lives, loves, suffers and cries in his personal life, then he is able to listen to the joys and sufferings of others. But just as this ability to be aware of and take responsibility for his desires and emotions constitutes one of the counselor’s strengths, the inability to do so, or the negation of emotion, could easily become a source of projections, judgments, interpretations and a tendency to “take charge” that is not helpful to the client. Also, when the counselor rephrases a situation out of his own experience rather than using the client’s frame of reference, his observations become directive. In training its practitioners, the CNDA greatly emphasizes the importance of inner work. The counselor can only aspire to a creative non-directive approach if he has that self-knowledge and the ability to distinguish between what comes from him and what comes from the client. However, as the counselor is not perfect, and, in spite of his ongoing training, may make errors in judgment in this area, non-directivity in the content of his approach is, in actuality, a goal he will spend his whole life working toward.
Even if non-directivity in its purest state does not exist, it is nevertheless true that the counselor who is integrating it into his approach will remain constantly aware of the need to respect others, and to continue his own inner work, because he is aware that this approach is limited by its essentially perfectible nature.
Having said that, creative non-directivity, as far as its content – that is, its actual substance – is concerned, is not a method and is even less a teaching or therapeutic technique. First and foremost it is, like Rogerian non-directivity, an attitude of complete respect for the innermost nature of each human being. Based on Rogers’ theory that each individual carries the potential for this own fulfillment within himself, this attitude of respect that sustains the helping relationship relieves the counselor of the power he wields over the lives of others and allows him to regain control over his own life. It is precisely this recovery work that enables him to progressively develop a creative non-directive approach to counseling.
The terms “relationship,” “attitude,” “nature” and “power” are central to the whole concept of the CNDA and deserve to be discussed individually, as do the conditions for developing a creative non-directive attitude.
Helping relationships, by definition, touch on two areas: “helping” and “relationships.” Specialists in the field have tended to stress the former and, unfortunately, neglect the latter. The CNDA philosophy lays great emphasis on the “relationship” aspect, in the belief that it is not possible to help someone unless we, as Helpers, have managed to establish a relationship with the client that is defined by a respect for the roles of each of the parties involved.
Two people can be said to have a relationship when feelings of trust and affection, which have a positive effect on the unconscious, are present. We should not be deluded into thinking that it is possible to have a satisfactory relationship if affection, trust and, by extension, mutual influence are not present. What I am saying is this: the relationship therapist cannot truly help his client, a professor his student, or a parent his child, unless he radiates an attitude of love for, and faith in, himself and the other.
The term “relationship,” as used here, does not refer to a system of techniques, methods or concrete procedures for establishing contact and solving problems. Rather, it refers to a kind of relationship that is sustained by feelings, which, although not always expressed as such, are nevertheless perceived through the parties’ attitudes. When the client feels that his counselor likes him and believes in him, and the counselor feels that the client likes him, too, and trusts him completely, then the kind of relationship necessary for the counseling process has been established. This key event usually takes place during the first session, the first day of classes or the first meeting, and it marks the real starting point of a helping relationship. This event is, in fact, difficult to pinpoint since it definitely does not belong to the realm of the conscious mind, but rather to that of the unconscious.
This moment may, of course, be followed by the ups and downs that mark every helping relationship and which, precisely because it is a relationship, take the helpee as well as the helper through different stages of questioning, doubts, and regressive as well as propulsive periods. It is nevertheless true that, in spite of the difficulties along the road, counseling is only relevant if it is sustained by an attitude of trust and love.
The notion of “attitude,” developed by Rogers and largely reiterated by Lozanov (1978) and Lerède (1980) in Suggestology, is a notion that is essential to the CNDA, and one without which creative non-directivity would not exist.
An attitude is a psychological disposition that radiates unconsciously from a person, revealing his emotions, his intentions and his real thoughts. It refers to the helper’s inner state, which he communicates unawares, in all his relationships, through non-verbal language: intonation, delivery, how loudly or softly he speaks, his facial expressions, his gestures and, above all, the energy waves given off by his physical body.
The effect of the therapist’s attitude on the client’s unconscious cannot be measured as such, but are nevertheless of considerable significance as far as his mental stability, and therefore his behavior, is concerned. Here we have the most subtle and effective form of influence there is, precisely because it cannot be controlled. If, for example, the therapist harbors judgments, feelings of aggression and intentions to dominate, his non-verbal language will necessarily reflect his inner reality and have a negative and disturbing effect on the client’s unconscious. It is not enough to present an impeccable exterior, to say encouraging words and to do commendable things to help others. Above all, the therapist must feel – live – what he presents, says and does. If there is any contradiction between his verbal and non-verbal language, between his actions and the underlying attitude, between the “seeming” and the “being,” then the client will receive a contradictory message – the conscious message and the unconscious one – and it will trouble and perhaps even disturb him.
The helping attitude is therefore essentially a genuine one, and essentially nondirective in the sense that there is no underlying need to prove, to manipulate or to dominate, but rather a desire to respect the nature and the development of others.
It is an attitude that has nothing to do with the “seeming” or the “doing” and everything to do with the “being.” This means that it is impossible to become “non-directive” overnight, since nondirectivity presupposes a lengthy process of inner work, in which one acquires knowledge, acceptance, respect and love for one’s individual essence, for one’s own nature.
The nature of a human being is defined as the set of characteristics that define and distinguish him, and without which he would not exist.
It is generally acknowledged that education often has the effect of distancing man from his innermost nature, that is, from that which makes him unique, rather than bringing him closer to it. This is due to the fact that it overrides individual differences by trivializing real-life experience, or by crushing those who try to distinguish themselves. Such current educational practices stand in the way of self-knowledge, inhibit creative potential and impede the process of growth and actualization.
The CNDA’s objecive is to discover the inner self, and it therefore proceeds differently. Although it upholds the notion that there are common aspects that unite people of all races, ages and religions, it also recognizes individual differences, and draws them out rather than banishing them. This recognition is mainly conveyed by the helper’s attitude: the more he works at attaining his true nature, at manifesting his own differences, the more he will radiate an attitude of respect for the nature of those he helps, and the less he will attempt to exert power over others.
It is impossible to discuss the notion of “power” without touching on a subject that is an issue not only in political, economic, social and cultural circles, but also in everyday human relationships. Wherever there are attempts at imposing uniformity, man grasps at power as a means of distinguishing himself, of expressing himself in order to prove that he exists, of pushing himself forward and taking his place. The “imposition of power” reigns, at the expense of “self-empowerment.”
By “imposition of power” I mean the ascendance we take over others: that which incites us to suppress them and try to change them. By “self-empowerment” I mean the individual’s ability to use the inner power that manifests his difference, in order that he may be empowered to create himself, empowered to free himself from what education has grafted onto him, and empowered to actualize himself as much as possible.
The creative non-directive philosophy holds that the only person in the world over whom we can have power is ourselves, and that the only power we have over others resides in the power of unconscious influence arising from our attitude. In other words, we cannot influence change in others deliberately, only unconsciously; not by what we do but by who we are. Moreover, this influence will only prove positive and effective if it takes place within the context of real self-acceptance, and acceptance of the other. This is the reason the CNDA defines itself as an affective, relationship-based approach.
Let me tell you the story of a client I will identify as Jasmine (not her real name). When she first came to see me, Jasmine was 31 years old. Her biggest problem was her relationship with her mother. She told me that they were on extremely bad terms, that she found this very draining, and that it had been going on for as long as she could remember.
Why had Jasmine and her mother been involved for years in an essentially destructive relationship? Simply because neither accepted the other as they were and each of the women wanted to change the other. Ever since her teenage years, Jasmine had been trying to change her mother and, at the age of 31, she still had not succeeded. She had tried everything: challenging her, confronting her, blaming her, criticizing her, judging, ridiculing and avoiding her. Nothing had worked. Both of the women were searching for the chink in the other’s armor, the Achilles heel where she could be wounded, crushed, perhaps even destroyed. Explanations and justifications succeeded only in making their confrontations worse.
After many years of this, Jasmine had such a negative selfimage that it had seriously affected her belief in her own potential. What was she to do? She could see no way of improving her relationship with her mother – and she was right. As long as both she and her mother wanted to change the other (“imposition of power”) without attempting to change themselves (“self-empowerment”) then the difficulties would go on indefinitely. When the CNDA helped Jasmine discover that the answer to her problem was to stop attempting to take power over her mother and above all to regain the power over herself that she had given away, then her anxieties slowly began to disappear. She realized that she had spent her life giving others the power to dominate her, to hurt her and to destroy her, and that she had to regain that power. She was able to do so by maintaining and respecting her own pace, as she progressed through the stages of the process of liberation and change, which I will discuss further in Chapter 4.
Regaining power over our lives means first getting to know ourselves so that we can develop our potential and bring a positive, loving influence to bear on others through a creative nondirective attitude. However, a creative non-directive attitude, based on inner work, can only be developed under certain conditions.
I stated previously that one cannot acquire an attitude of creative non-directivity overnight. It can only be fully actualized if the helper has integrated into his life the ability to take responsibility for who he is, if he has attained a high level of self-acceptance and acceptance of others and if he maintains, for himself as well as for others, a profound ability to love.
The mental attitude suggested, encouraged and upheld in all our institutions and, indeed, throughout our whole society, is one of refusing to look at oneself, the better to watch, judge, condemn or idolize others. This attitude, which is based on comparison and evaluation, results in a state of dependence and creates permanent competition, thus reflecting only the most infinitesimal part of each human being’s intrinsic wholeness.
The CNDA suggests the opposite approach. It transfers attention away from others and directs it inward. It trains one to think first of oneself, to work toward knowing, understanding, accepting and above all, loving oneself. This attitude used to be labeled egotistical and was thus rejected. It is, in fact, the most liberating and healthy attitude there is. After all, how can anyone know, understand, listen to, respect and love others if he cannot first attain those goals within his own self? How can he accept another person, with all his strengths, weaknesses and contradictions, if he does not first accept his own? It is precisely this ability to concentrate on ourselves that renders us capable of accountability.
Personal responsibility refers to an individual’s ability to be accountable, to come to terms with himself, and to actualize himself in the fullest possible sense.
Regaining power over our own lives is a lengthy learning process. To attain that goal we must develop the ability to accept the consequences of our choices and our decisions. By making others responsible for our problems, troubles, emotions, expectations, difficulties, failures, frustrations and deceptions, we give them power over us, and lose our freedom. However, when we integrate responsibility and accountability into our lives, we automatically find the road to independence and satisfaction. In many cases we have been taught to make others responsible for all the unpleasant things that happen to us, and so we blame them, judge them, criticize them and above all try to change them to make ourselves happy. Unfortunately, it is not that easy to change others, especially not if we reproach, judge and criticize them. Thus our attempts to change others usually end in failure, and this fosters permanent dissatisfaction. By trying to change ourselves, rather than desperately attempting to change others, we are adopting a responsible attitude, thus becoming truly accountable.
In order to develop this attitude, we must first become aware of our tendency to blame and to want to change others, and we must have a deep desire to regain power over our own lives by trying to change ourselves. Without this awareness and this deep desire, nothing is possible. We must also accept the fact that learning accountability takes time because we must first get rid of our futile habits in order to adopt a more effective approach toward others, and this is not always easy. However, if we are prepared to respect our rate of integration, we will achieve encouraging results. They will be evident in greater self-knowledge, an increasingly strong feeling of freedom, a more vivid expression of our creativity and, above all, by a unique feeling of self-love.
In order to attain that goal, it is crucial that we try and train ourselves to look inward when we feel disagreeable emotions or are disappointed, rather than blaming, judging or accusing, and also that we train ourselves to take responsibility for both our past experiences and our current problems. We are the only ones who can solve those problems in a satisfactory manner.
Accountability, however, is not a one-way street; there is traffic moving in both directions. There are always two parties in any relationship, and integrating our personal responsibility means becoming accountable for our own past, but not for that of the other party. The more I learn to be accountable for my emotions, desires, choices, expectations, frustrations, and so on, the more I am able to free myself from taking responsibility for other people’s feelings. It is because of this, because I have learned to be accountable and to give back to the other what belongs to him when he makes me responsible for his problems, that I can become increasingly independent, free and creative.
When the concept of personal responsibility and accountability has been fully integrated, one is no longer powerless in relationship with others or when confronted with life’s events; one gradually develops an inclination toward action that becomes innate, and thanks to which, one comes to know inner freedom, success and satisfaction.
For example, let me tell you about a client I will identify as George (not his real name). When he came to see me for the first time, George had severed all connections with his friends because he felt used by them, and had the overwhelming impression that he was neither appreciated, valued nor even liked by anyone. He had decided to withdraw from all his relationships because when he was with others he had the feeling that he did not exist. He resented his friends for using him when it suited them, and dropping him when they no longer needed him. Even after he confronted them, the situation did not change. In his sessions, George realized that he experienced the same feeling in his family, professional and social life as well. Unfortunately, the idea of withdrawing from the world and seeing no one did not satisfy him either, and this was, in fact, what had led him to come and see me. Realizing that neither unsatisfying relationships nor total solitude were what he wanted, he was looking for a way to meet people without feeling used. The Creative Non-Directive Approach taught him he couldn’t satisfy his deep-seated need for love at his own expense, by giving everything to others. George realized that, in doing so, he was giving others the power to use him as they wanted, and then making them responsible for his own troubles. He wanted others to acknowledge him, but never asserted himself, never gave importance to his limits, never asserted his needs, for fear of losing people’s love. Paradoxically, in giving others power over his life, he got exactly the opposite of what he wanted: indifference.
For George, there was only one solution left: changing himself. He devoted a lot of time and energy to this because it required that he look at himself in a way he had never done before. In doing so he realized – with some pain – that he let others take precedence because he did not love himself. How then could he ask others to love him when he did not love himself?
By taking responsibility for his problem, he opened a door that he had always kept closed before: the door of selfknowledge and self-love. Although this door is extremely difficult to pass through, one of its redeeming features is that, sooner or later, it leads to freedom and creativity. This is the reward for those who decide to take responsibility for their lives.
George’s case is not unique. There are many people who are at the mercy of the power they have given to other people. Regaining that power is not always easy, because it implies getting rid of patterns that have been entrenched for years. The process of becoming accountable for one’s life is a long and arduous one, but it is definitely liberating! Once achieved, true freedom and independence cannot be lost.
But how far exactly does this accountability go? Are we responsible for things we are forced to submit to? Let me answer that question with another example. During my career as a relationship therapist, I have dealt with a certain number of clients, both men and women, who had been abused; Jean-Paul was one of them. When he was in high school, Jean-Paul lived with his parents in the city, and they decided to send him to work on a farm one summer during the holidays. His time was divided between the farmhouse and the fields; in the morning he helped the farmer’s wife with the housework and in the afternoon he worked in the fields with the farmer. Within a week, the woman in question, who was approximately 40 years old and had no children, sexually abused him and forced him to perform acts that he found revolting.
When he came to see me, Jean-Paul was 32 years old. He had never told anyone else about his experience, first because the woman had threatened him in a number of ways, and second because he was ashamed of it. He had been unable to touch a woman since then and, at 32, was left a lonely and extremely depressed person.
Was Jean-Paul responsible for that experience, which for years had ruined his life?
In my opinion, accountability here does not concern the event so much as the manner in which it is dealt with. Let me explain what I mean. Jean-Paul was an only child, whose mother was possessive and very invasive. At a very young age, he had assimilated a pattern of passively allowing himself to be invaded and dominated by others. In his case, being accountable for the manner in which he dealt with the event meant working on how he related to this invasion. Maintaining a “victimized” attitude only means that one will fall deeper and deeper into depression. In all the abuse cases I have seen, I have observed serious problems of invasion and repressed aggression. Victims of abuse are people who have been constantly invaded, not only on a physical level, but also in their psychological, emotional, intellectual and professional space, and who have almost never reacted. Publicly denouncing the abusers is, in itself, not enough to solve the problem. What is needed is an in-depth personal transformation, the goal of which is to regain power over one’s own life by integrating accountability.
In therapy, the idea of personal responsibility or accountability is closely associated with the idea of non-directivity. In other words, non-directivity is not possible without accountability. In fact, it is because he takes responsibility for his own troubles, fears, defense mechanisms and patterns, that the therapist is able to prevent himself, as far as is possible, from projecting them onto his client through judgments, comparisons, interpretations or taking control in a variety of ways. According to the CNDA, personal responsibility is the path par excellence to independence and freedom. If the client does not fully integrate his responsibility and his accountability, he is in danger of becoming dependent upon his relationship therapist. In such a case, each party waits for the other to change. The therapist becomes a savior, a judge or a spokesman. In teaching the Creative Non-Directive Approach, I concentrate first and foremost on integration of responsibility and accountability. Without this key element, the helping relationship becomes directive and the client is unable to attain the desired independence and freedom.
Of course, learning creative non-directivity through responsibility is not like discovering a secret passageway into a magic kingdom. The path that leads there is real, and the goal cannot be reached without going through a lengthy process of acceptance.
Rogers considered acceptance to be a key element of non-directivity. According to him, it referred to a characteristic of the therapist that enabled him to be receptive to the client, with all that he is, unconditionally and without judging him. The CNDA holds that acceptance is the ability of the helper to be receptive to the helpee with total respect for what makes him different.
An accepting counselor is one who is able to “receive” the other, with all his past history, life experience, emotions, needs, desires, thoughts, opinions, tastes, way of life, behavior, outward appearance, choices and decisions … all without making a judgment.