Being human vs.(?) Being a coach
Yannick Jacob
Existential Coach (MA), Supervisor, Positive Psychologist (MSc), Cambridge University Teaching Faculty, Course Director of the ACIC
Coaching is a relational practice.
When coaches start out, they tend to "do coaching".
As they mature, they become coaches.
They hold space, being-with their clients, rather than applying techniques and models. It's very powerful indeed to spend time in a space like that.
The next challenge is to figure out where the line is between being a coach and just being a fellow human being. The overlap is huge! But there are distinct differences that can have a significant effect on the relationship, and hence the outcome of the coaching.
For example, your client shares that they're being bullied in the workplace. You happen to have had similar experiences with bullying in the past, and so you find yourself empathising a LOT! Do you share this with your client?
On the one hand, it can create a very strong connection and the feeling of being truly understood (even though, phenomenologically, that's an illusion, it's a powerful experience for your client). And as a fellow human, you would probably want to connect in this way.
On the other hand, as a coach you know that your client’s experience is what we commit to focus on, and that your own experience isn't really that relevant here, if at all.
I no longer believe that there's a right or wrong in this sort of scenario, unless you're blatantly getting lost or triggered in your own experience and subsequently finding it difficult to focus or stay non-directive.
领英推荐
What's going on for yourself is actually a valid, and quite powerful way of working with clients, and there are some excellent resources on "use of self" in coaching.
If you are curious to explore this ahead, I have a list of resources you can check out. Tagged in the comments below.
Hope you'll find these resources helpful and I'd love to know how you relate to use of self in your coaching work.
With Love
Yannick
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That's it for this week!
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Founder Director Heresy Consulting. A Jungian approach to coaching supervision and consulting.
2 个月If appropriate of course. Why not? Human beings use narrative to illustrate perspectives and this is just another way to achieve this. It is fairly common practice in some forms of psychotherapy, and works very well in coaching. My own analyst does this from time to time with me and it is very helpful. The clinical psychology and psychoanalyst Soren Ekstrom puts this very well....suggesting that 'psychoanalysts are persons who train themselves to label their own stories in such a way that they will be able to be perceived as understanding the stories of others' Why not in coaching too? It is just a way of witnessing and internalising the other....
Strategic advisor within organisational and leadership development, key note speaker and author
2 个月Thanks for a great question-post. Recently I read Brene Browns Atlas of the Heart in which she distinguishes between empathy and compassion. The latter only being really possible if you have experienced something similar as the other person. That resonated a lot with me. I believe that in those situations it might not be necessary to share my experiences with the other person because I “know” the emotional responses and can respond to these with a deeper understanding.
Non-dual Listening Coach-Mentor fostering wisdom, leadership, and connection.
2 个月Thank you for offering the question, Yannick. I feel: rather than a shared experience there is the shared humanity, and it is more powerful to offer exploration at that level. If I had a similar experience and I have explored it deeply, and insights have come which have transformed me, then I trust compassion will organically arise.. So I can listen deeply, questions will come naturally., The experience the client brings, probably is showing itself at the surface-level . That which wants to be transformed lies at a deeper level. In trust deep questions will arise and the client can safely explore, find out and transform. ??
Inner-work, inner peace, new insight. Consciously pausing for solace, new choice, clarity, impact unlocks flow, creativity and energy, Our Pause Circles co-create aliveness, connection, deepened relationship & happiness
2 个月As for coaching and coach supervision. I've experienced many trained supervisors with models of coaching and the world. My observation is everybody would be better served by the focus on doing their own work, having and co creating better levels of observation, payience and deep, listening for nuances that are often dismissed as trivial and most importantly be a "clean" and clear mirror for reflection for the self and others.
Existential Coach (MA), Supervisor, Positive Psychologist (MSc), Cambridge University Teaching Faculty, Course Director of the ACIC
2 个月Check out this excellent article ( https://researchportal.coachingfederation.org/Document/Pdf/2951.pdf ),? my Coaching Uncaged episode with supervision legend Robin Shohet ( https://youtu.be/LUv4U9W9gWs?si=wwYQZk6hZx5IzAQn ), or this book on use of self ( https://www.abebooks.com/9780965043014/Triple-Impact-Coaching-Use-of-self-Process-0965043010/plp ), which David Tee recommended to me while discussing his guest lectures on my Cambridge module on psychological coaching.