Skip to main content

Relationship Coaching or Counseling — Which?



Relationship Coaching or Counseling — Which?
Couples go to counseling to improve their relationship - don't they? Well, not necessarily. Many couples enter counseling so consumed with anger at each other and with what is wrong with their relationship that positive change scarcely enters their minds. They have no vision of a better marriage and consequently no goals that could reorient them in a healing direction.
Unfortunately, so compelling is the temptation to blame the other partner and so intense is the anger and hurt that many couples in counseling never move beyond a negative fixation on all that is wrong with their relationship. They have nowhere positive to go and consequently never get there.
It take a well-trained and forceful couples counselor to insist, after a period of venting, that partners drop their negative focus and start creating a better future together. Unfortunately, counselors who do insist on a positive focus to the work sometimes discover that "getting better together" is not really what couples have in mind. Knowing what you don't like is easy. Changing focus - deciding what you want instead and working toward it - is not easy.
Enter relationship coaching. Coaching is an action-focused process for bringing about change. It emphasizes visioning a desirable future, developing specific goals to realize the vision and committing oneself to the process of achieving those goals.
Asked what they want from counseling, new clients will often reply with a variation of, "I want to understand why we have such an awful marriage." A typical coaching client response would be, "I want to build a better marriage."
Relationship counseling and coaching differ. The difference is more of degree than of kind, however. And some forms of counseling - notably short-term, solutions-oriented counseling - is in practice very much like coaching.
In general, counseling stresses understanding; coaching stresses action. Counseling is more psychological, coaching more behavioral. Feelings are more prominent in counseling. Goals and action steps to achieve them are more important in coaching. Counseling focuses on the past and the present, coaching on the future and the present.
Counseling is more "Why?," coaching more "How?" Counseling is more concerned with obstacles to action, coaching with the action itself. In practice, counseling attends more to problems than to goals and to personal inadequacies more than to strengths. Coaching is the opposite. Counseling is one of the healing arts. Coaching is an educational process. Counseling wants to make well. Coaching wants to make successful.
It follows that coaching and counseling attract different sorts of people, or perhaps it would be more accurate to say - people at different stages of the growth process and, therefore, with different needs. As a generalization, we can say that coaching attracts people who want to act more than they want to understand, while the people who come for counseling want understanding more - and healing.
If you want help with your marriage or couple relationship, should you go to a couples counselor or a relationship coach? That depends on what sort of condition the relationship is in and, since the relationship is you and your partner, what sort of condition you both are in.
If the relationship is very unstable and you are too emotionally upset to work together, try counseling until the relationship settles down, then turn to relationship coaching, if that option is open to you. Similarly, if either one or both of you feels so emotionally clogged with anger or hurt that you feel incapable of even contemplating cooperating together on goals for the future, then again - counseling is probably the better short-term direction.
When you are committed to change, go for coaching or work with a counselor who has had coaching training and integrates coaching methods in his practice. And by the way - the need to heal the relationship does not in itself argue for counseling rather than coaching. It is very healing to discover through coaching, first, that you can behave better toward each other despite your pain and, second, that your improved behavior can suggest a new and positive future.
Relationship Counseling
Relationship coaching not well-known
If you are like most people, when you seek help for your relationship, you first think counseling. You may well never have heard of relationship coaching, which is a relatively new approach.
Actually for people who are tired of the blame game, ready to take responsibility for their own behavior and willing to work for change – relationship coaching may be the best choice.
How is coaching different from counseling?
One way to understand relationship coaching is to distinguish it from counseling - a somewhat chancy undertaking, because some forms of counseling are very close to coaching, and coaching at its sensitive best is counseling-like.
Despite the risks of over-generalization, here are some rough distinctions between counseling and coaching:
·    Counseling stresses understanding. Coaching stresses action.
·    Counseling asks why? (Why can't we be happy?") Coaching asks how? (How can we achieve happiness?")
·    Obstacles are prominent in counseling. Opportunities are prominent in coaching.
·    Counseling is psychological. Coaching is behavioral.
·    Counseling is therapy. Coaching is education.
·    Counseling is cure-oriented. Coaching is success-oriented.
Knowing those differences, how does coaching look to you so far?
Is coaching or counseling best for you?
If your fundamental goal is more psychological understanding than learning new skills and changing yourself and/or your relationship, you may be helped better in a strictly-counseling program, rather than our relationship coaching one. On the other hand, if "doing it differently" is ultimately your goal, you may well have come to the right place.
For further assistance and appointment – PLEASE VISIT www.thecounselor.info

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Social Work for Inclusive Development.!

Prof. T K Thomas 06 Nov, 2018  Way back in 1988-’89 one was visiting drug and alcohol de-addiction and rehabilitation centers in Delhi and elsewhere as part field study for research to write a 30 episode serial for All India Radio. Radio DATE [ Drugs, Alcohol, Tobacco Education] was a joint initiative of All India Radio and the Indian Council of Medical Research [ICMR]. After visiting many centres the head of a government run facility asked what was one’s next place of visit. When he heard Navjyoti Delhi Police Foundation he sarcastically commented that at that centre started by the first woman IPS officer Kiran Bedi in Sarai Rohilla police station, they were practicing “Danda Therapy”[therapy using the rod]. He was told that as a media person one would go and find out what therapy was being practiced in Navjyoti . One was warmly received by Suneel Vatsyayan, the young and dynamic Director of Navjyoti, a Master of Social Work from Jamia Millia Islamia [presently member of ...

Six lakhs professionally qualified workforce aspires for National Council of Social Work Profession...

NAPSWI’s Representation To Bharatiya Janta Party for inclusion of  Granting Professional Status To Social Work Profession and a Legislation For Social Workers’ Welfare  in their Election Manifesto   We all are planning to eagerly participate in forthcoming Parliament (Lok Sabha) Election and Elections of some of State assemblies.  We would like to introduce ourselves as one of the youngest human service profession and we are one of the major stake holders of Social service sector . Professional Social Work as a subject is being taught in 125 countries including India and the same is being and practiced. Our goal is to promote social change and development and the empowerment of people.   We work with vulnerable, marginalized, poor, and people in distress and ensures social justice, human rights, and collective responsibility. The Professional Social Work as a discipline in this country is more than eight decades old. It has received recognition as earl...

Health Tip: Dealing With Social Phobia

(HealthDay News) -- Social phobia is an irrational fear of social situations, including being judged or scrutinized by others. The U.S. National Library of Medicine suggests these potential remedies for coping with social phobia: Receiving cognitive behavioral therapy to help identify the causes of such fears and learning ways to control them. Slowly beginning to attend parties and other social gatherings. Practicing social skills in a group therapy setting. Getting plenty of sleep and exercise, and eating meals on a regular schedule. Limiting or avoiding caffeine, over-the-counter cold medications and other stimulant medications.