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Showing posts with label Counseling. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Counseling. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 25, 2016

From the Bookshelf ~ Seeing With New Eyes


Sharing a brief excerpt with you this evening from a favorite book, Seeing With New Eyes by David Powlison. God used this book to open my eyes and open my heart--to see past the rosy, the jaundiced, the bluesy, the sometimes mirrored lens as Powlison so expressively explains it. Yes, God does "make madmen sane."

http://www.leicestergalleries.com/19th-20th-century-paintings/d/a-bit-of-sunlight/15436

"To think Christianly is "to think God's thoughts after him." Of course, our thinking is both finite and distorted. We never see it all; and we often misconstrue what we do see. We see in a glass darkly, skewed reflections in a battered bronze mirror--but we do see. God, who sees all things directly in full daylight, enlightens the eyes of our hearts. We see surfaces, catching glimpses of interiors; God sees to the inky or radiant depth of every heart, all the way down to fundamental hate or fundamental love. Our glasses are sometimes rosy, sometimes jaundiced, sometimes bluesy, sometimes mirrored on the inside of the lens (so that all we can see are the turbulent contents of our own interiors). The madness in our hearts generates warped spectra. But God sees all things in bright, clear light--and this God is the straightener of crooked thoughts. He makes madmen sane."

https://www.ccef.org/resources/books/seeing-new-eyes


Painting ~ A Bit of Sunlight, Mary Hayllar, 1885
 

Friday, August 5, 2011

Thoughts on Love and Change

https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Regency_revival_genre_paintings#/media/File:Carl_Schweninger_junior_Das_Stelldichein.jpg

My daughter Elizabeth is a family counselor at their church, and not long ago after her husband presented a sermon on biblical love, he invited her to come up and discuss some issues with him from a counselor's perspective. I thought I'd share that discussion with you today.


What do relationships look like when the individuals are expressing jealousy and arrogance instead of biblical love?

As you said, biblical love makes the benefit of the other person its top priority. Jealousy makes the benefit of myself top priority, so much so that I resent the benefit of the other. This can definitely happen in a marriage gone awry, where there is so much resentment over past hurts built up that the spouses actually begin to wish for harm to come on the other. “I wish they would die, then I would be free to marry someone else.”

It can also happen in parent-child relationships when, for example, a mother is so jealous of her daughter’s youth or talents that she begins to resent her daughter. This will drive her to behave in ways that tear her daughter down (name-calling, mocking, degrading remarks, over-control, etc).

I’ve counseled others in roommate situations where there is an underlying coldness between the two because of one’s jealousy, so much so that it drove the jealous roommate into an eating disorder. “I’ve got to be skinnier than her, prettier than her, smarter than her...”

Arrogance in a relationship says “I’m not the one with the problem; you are. If you wouldn’t do ____ then we’d be OK.” Arrogance makes people completely blind to their own faults and focuses on the faults of the other. Arrogant people are very good at naming the sins of the other and being strangely silent in regards to their own.

This happens all the time in couples that I’ve counseled. When discussing a certain issue, one spouse says “We argued because George raised his voice,” or “If Sally hadn’t disrespected me, I wouldn’t have slapped her.” Or even, “It’s your fault we’re in counseling — you’re the one with the problem. If you hadn’t had _____, we wouldn’t need this.” It also happens in parent-child relationships where the parent is convinced the reason the child is disrespectful is because of the child — “I’m doing everything I can for this child, and this is how they treat me?” — when often there are underlying issues that place responsibility on the parent.


Paint a picture for us of a relationship involving self-seeking, irritation, or record keeping.
It’s a classic picture — in the heart of an argument, things that were done years ago are brought up in an effort to get in that last verbal punch. Wives who come to counseling with a tablet tracking each incident in which her husband has mistreated her. Brothers and sisters refusing to speak to each other because of a past argument. This is record-keeping.

I’ve worked with counselees who are habitually irritated. One who wanted her roommates to conform to her desires, to cater to her preferences. She wanted them to be quiet when she got home from work, to leave her alone for a quiet dinner or coffee break, to be meticulous about household chores. Or the husband who is short-fused when he comes home after work because his children won’t let him alone to watch TV or read the paper, or the house is a wreck, or the baby needs changed.


How would you as a counselor enable someone to see this in their own life?

I always have people journal. The journal is my main tool for helping people identify problem areas in their life and heart. I ask them to make a note on a sheet of paper every time they experience a negative emotion — anger, irritation, depression, sadness, anxiety, worry, fear, dislike, whatever. Then I ask them to answer a few questions about each scenario:
What was the situation? What happened?
What was I thinking about during the situation?
What was I feeling? What emotions was I experiencing?
What did I do/what was my behavior?
And, most importantly, What did I want? What did I desire or crave? What did I think I needed?

As we review these journals weekly, we begin to see patterns in a person’s life, and it becomes apparent to both of us where ungodliness resides and where their problem spots are.


Since being unloving is so ugly and obvious to people around us, why do we act unlovingly towards others? After everyone has heard my sermon today, why would we not all just go home and start loving one another?

Because of that last question I described when explaining the journal. When it comes down to it, we want, desire, or crave something more than we want to honor God. We desire that thing so badly that we will do whatever it takes — unloving or not, sinful or not — in order to get it. We call these “ruling desires.” Often in the case of the jealous person, that ruling desire is for the praise of others, or affirmation. This is tied to the concept of identity — do I seek after the cultural ideal? Do I believe I am entitled to the things culture tells me I am? Or do I see myself through a biblical lens?

For the arrogant person, the ruling desire is often control — or “the need to be right.” For the person who keeps records of wrongs, the ruling desire is likely safety and security: “I won’t feel secure until you prove yourself 100%, and since I am entitled to feel secure, I won’t make myself vulnerable to you until you straighten up.” For the irritated person, that desire is likely comfort and ease — “I want life to be easy, and when you make it difficult, I get upset.”

We all want something, and it is this heart desire that drives us. It is why we do what we do. If I truly and genuinely desire to please God and sacrifice my own cravings, I will live in godliness and will live out biblical love. If, however, I am unwilling to give up my craving, I will always put it above obedience to God.


How can we see tangible change in our relationships?

Well, it’s not to simply resolve to do better, to be more loving, to change our ways. We have to start with our hearts — at the level where our ruling desire dwells. When we understand that the reason we do what we do is because of unruly desires running amok in our hearts, we understand that change must begin with repentance. Put simply, we are sinners in need of a Savior. Will we admit that? Will we admit that we want something more than we want to obey God, and that this is therefore sin? Will we, as James puts it, “grieve, mourn, and wail” over these sins in true repentance? Then, will we identify tangible, practical ways that we can “put off” the old ways and “put on” the godly ways? Will we do the work of rehabituating ourselves? I often take counselees back to their journals to help them flesh this out. We look at old, ungodly ways of thinking and behaving and then we look at replacement biblical thoughts and replacement biblical behaviors. We then develop action plans to help them live out these new thoughts and behaviors.

Change is not quick, and change is not easy, but it’s the process of sanctification — growing in grace, and daily becoming more like Christ.


Painting ~ Das Stelldichein 1903, Carl Schweinger 1854-1903
Wikimedia public domain

Friday, March 4, 2011

On Blogging and Stewardship of Time


I sat down with my laptop last evening to blog, but couldn't think of anything to write about except a particular thought that had been percolating from what someone said a few days ago. I need to give that one a little more time, though, to think about how to express it because I don't want my comments to reflect negatively on any specific person. So I checked in on a few blogs that I enjoy reading to find that one gal has put hers aside for awhile. It was taking up too much of her time. Not only the blogging itself, but the whole Internet thing.

I began to think about how much time I put into blogging myself and considering if it's good stewardship of my time or not. I mostly reserve my sessions for evenings after my major responsibilities and ministries (which includes running around with My Beloved when he wants me to go along--and I do like lunch out!) are finished for the day. My Beloved knows, though, how I think and tweak. Sometimes it is sheer determination that keeps me away from my laptop. The Internet can be a distraction at the least, but can become an addiction and an infiltration to the mind. Of that, we must be most cautious.

I'm writing this morning because I've been refreshed in my spirit by something I read in my quiet time earlier today. It has encouraged me to keep on blogging. In his second letter, the Apostle Peter said,
This is now, beloved, the second letter I am writing to you in which I am stirring up your sincere mind by way of reminder, that you should remember the words spoken beforehand by the holy prophets and the commandment of the Lord and Savior spoken by your apostles
~ 2 Peter 3:1-2
When I began blogging, I felt that it would be an opportunity to remind myself and others of what God has said to us through His Word. It helps me to think with eternity in mind, and perhaps to help you think that way as well. Words don't come easily for me. I'm not one who chatters, with words spilling all over the place. I have some friends who are, and one in particular who says she loves to talk. That's not me, so my words are formed more slowly and, hopefully, more carefully. As my sidebar says, my blog is intended to draw my own heart homeward--here in my earthly home, and toward my heavenly home. I hope I'm also encouraging you along the way. And, so, I continue to muse and write, hopefully keeping my tongue and my time tamed. It would be a great encouragement to me if you'd let me know if this blog is an encouragement to you. My addy is in the sidebar. :-)

I'm heading over to the church this afternoon to work on the Book Nook and get it looking springy. I'm adding several of these mini booklets from Christian Counseling and Educational Foundation. These are just a few of them--there are over 40 available. CCEF is a counseling group that is restoring Christ to counseling, and counseling back to the local church. I've taken some online classes from them and it's true biblical counseling that turns hearts toward Jesus Christ--no hodge podge of psychiatry mingled in. You can check them out here.


May you have a God-honoring weekend and a blessed time of worship at church, growing in the grace and knowledge of our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ.

Painting ~ A Girl Reading by Peter Ilsted
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