Wednesday 29 November 2017

Re-writing your past in this present


Dec 2017

Re-writing your past in this present by Dr Elizabeth McCardell, M. Couns., PhD
     Irvin Yalom, in his wonderful book, Creatures of a Day, and other tales of psychotherapy, has a chapter called “You Must Give Up Hope for a Better Past,” but in it he notes that the past is continuous with the present and you can rewrite your past whenever you decide to. Therapy is a very good place to do this. Therapy provides set-aside time, space, confidentiality, professionalism, a trained listener who has chosen to listen and be absolutely present for you; it provides safety and the therapist, a skilled use of tools that can re-write the landscape of your history into a more comprehensible, less destructive form. Therapy is like an alchemical crucible where the telling and the hearing are part of the transformative process of re-writing your life story.
     I hear many accounts of lives in my work. I have heard events in people’s lives that no one has ever heard before, that the person never dared tell before.  I am humbled hearing those things said for the very first time as well as knowing that I will remain the only hearer of these things, as I am sworn to silence (with two exceptions) by virtue of my profession. It is times like these that the two of us carry your life (and I do know from my own experience what a relief that is).  I am, though, merely a journeyman beside you, with a map out of the jungles, ragged peaks, and marshes. I will travel with you as long as you wish me to be there and then you can proceed as you wish. You can, of course, hire me once again to walk with you whenever you like.
     There are two exceptions to the confidentiality rules we therapists are required to stick to: your safety and the safety of others, or when I’m required by the courts to impart information. In the case of the latter, I will fight for confidentiality as far as possible.
     As I say, I have heard, and hear often, events in the lives of my clients that have never been said before, and hearing them, will likely never speak of in any identifying way. My lips are sealed.
     Some years ago I heard an old woman, now deceased, tell of things she’d kept under wraps for eighty plus years. She spoke of family, shame, blame, rapes, escapes, homelessness, restitution, travel, education, careers, pleasures, fundamental vulnerabilities and sensitivies, and a desire for her story to be heard, without criticism. The two processes: saying and being heard mattered to the healing of her soul and that’s why she came to me.
     Sometimes it is sufficient once to tell a trusted person stories that have not been told; sometimes, though, the events in lives need much more work than a telling. A re-authoring is needed. The past is rarely ever boxed away and discontinuous with the present. What happens now changes how the past is thought and felt about. Yes, of course, the facts of a  past are history,  but mostly for most of us, the facts are not what disturb us; it is our feelings from that past that can haunt us. This is what can be re-authored; this is where change happens.
     Imagine if you will, you and me walking through the landscape of your past in the present moment talking together. Our walking is a journey of the mind, of the soul. As we walk, we talk and I bring to our therapeutic conversation the tools of my trade. We experiment with ideas, we write and rewrite, I hear your dreams and we traverse the language of the dream to the dream’s heart,  I hear your aspirations and insights and I am changed while you are changing. My journey with you is also transformational for me (do you see now why I love my work?). Here, in this place of now, we discover new vistas, opportunities and new ways of being in the world.  And nothing is ever the same old, same old again. The ghosts have left the room and you can be in the world freer, and happier.