GARCIAWESTBERG » Archive
DON’T ASK QUESTIONS IF YOU WANT SOME ANSWERS
You can spend hours, days, and even weeks and a lot of therapy trying to answer questions such as: Why do I get so angry? Why didn’t I get that job? Why did she dump me? There are times when it is good to look for answers, but there are other times when it is best to let it rest. Questions cannot be answered with any accuracy. There are many answers to the same question; I could understand my anger, for example, to be rooted in some childhood trauma or I could understand it to be rooted in a need to manage stress. The answers we get depend on the book we are reading, the person we are talking to, or the time in which we answer the question. It may … Read entire article »
Filed under: Mindfulness, Self-Development
Communication Styles
Virginia Satir is well known for her discussion regarding roles we take on when we communicate with each other. She identifies the following as distinct communication styles we assume when we feel threatened, scared, of misunderstood. Basically, the stances hide feelings. Placator: This stance involves feeling like one is wrong and that one needs to apologize and please someone else. This stances places the person in a position of “lesser than” which needs approval and recognition from someone else. The placator will always try to avoid conflict. Most often, this begs one to spend most of one’s time attending to what is important and urgent to others and ignoring the same for themselves. This position is usually one that hides fear. This is one of the most common communication stances. Blamor: This … Read entire article »
Filed under: Couples Therapy
The 5 Freedoms
This is probably the first thing I remember reading in graduate school. To this day I repeat to myself that I have a right to express what I feel, think and need. The freedom to see and hear what is here, instead of what “should” be, was, or will be. The freedom to say what you feel and think, instead of what you “should” feel and think. The freedom to feel what you feel, instead of what you “ought” to feel. The freedom to ask for what you want, instead of always waiting for permission. The freedom to take risks on you own behalf, instead of choosing to be only “secure”. … Read entire article »
Filed under: Couples Therapy, Self-Development
Communicating With Threatening People
Virginia Satir is the queen of communication. Watch how she models communicating with difficult and/or threatening people. She demonstrates the different communicative stances people generally assume and how these stances can lead to disconnect. … Read entire article »
Filed under: Couples Therapy, Self-Development
Communication Skills 1
This article focuses on a technique used to help couples listen to each other in a way that will lead the person speaking to reveal his innermost emotions and thoughts. It is difficult to undertake without a therapist to referee and model, but it is worth a try. … Read entire article »
Filed under: Couples Therapy
