Reading A

Submitted by sylvia.wong@up… on Sun, 01/01/2023 - 19:20

Nelson-Jones, R. (2005). Starting initial sessions. In Practical counselling and helping skills (5th ed.) (pp. 128-140). SAGE

Sub Topics

Meeting, Greeting and Seating

The initial session starts at the moment of first contact with clients. Skilled counsellors and trainees possess good meeting, greeting and seating skills. Box 8.1 illustrates the difference between good and poor skills.

Box 8.1 Meeting, greeting and seating skills

Imagine two counselling trainees, each of whom is using an office near the waiting area, meeting, greeting and seating a client for the first time.

Poor skills

Counselling trainee A, who has just had an emotionally draining session with a client, decides to see the next client without any break. Still feeling distracted by unfinished business from the last client, she/he opens her/his office door, peers out, takes a few steps in the direction of the waiting area and calls the next client’s surname correctly but without any warmth. When the client looks up, the trainee offers no further introduction and in a neutral voice says: ‘Come this way please.’ Trainee A then goes into the office first and, when the client enters, shuts the door, points a finger in the direction of a chair and says ‘That’s for you.’

Good skills

Counselling trainee B takes a moment to calm down after an emotionally draining session with the previous client. Then she/he calmly comes out of the office, goes over to the waiting area, smiles and calls out either the client’s first name and surname or the client’s first name alone, depending on the nature of the setting. The client gets up and the trainee introduces herself/himself along the lines of ‘Hello, I’m ——. Please come this way’ and then escorts the client to the office, smiles again as the client enters and then, with an open palm gesture, indicates where the client should sit and says ‘Please sit down.’

Many trainees require practice at becoming comfortable people for clients to meet from the moment of first contact. An issue that some trainees raise is whether or not to engage in small talk when first meeting clients. This is partly a matter of individual style. As long as the small talk is minimal and does not give the impression of a social relationship, it may humanize the meeting and greeting process. However, it is wise to be sensitive to clients who are nervous about their conversational ability, to those who want to get straight into counselling, and to clients in crisis. Trainees can convey many of the main messages of warmth, welcome and interest through good bodily communication without the need for inappropriate small talk.

A person being welcomed

Opening Statements

Opening statements can have various functions: greeting the client again, indicating the length of the counselling session, checking ‘where the client is at’, and, where necessary, obtaining permission to record the session. Counselling trainees need to convey that they are not all-knowing. Opening statements, openers or permissions to talk, are brief remarks indicating that they are prepared to listen and be informed. Trainees start initial sessions with statements that build rapport and encourage clients to say why they have come. Trainees can leave until later explanations of how they work. Opening statements are ‘door openers’ that give clients the message ‘I’m interested and prepared to listen. Please share with me your internal frame of reference.’

The common opening statement ‘Please tell me how I can be of help’ and similar remarks are probably best avoided. Such statements can get initial sessions off to an unfortunate start by implying that clients are dependent on counsellors or trainees rather than on their capacity to help themselves.

Trainees should remember that when making opening statements, their vocal and bodily communication is very important in indicating that they are comfortable and trustworthy persons with whom to talk. They should speak clearly and relatively slowly, be comfortably seated and look at the client. They should avoid crossing their knees or arms. However, they can still sit with an open posture if they are crossing their ankles.

Good vocal and bodily communication can also make it easier to record sessions. Trainees who ask permission in a nervous or hesitant way are more likely to trigger doubts and resistance in clients than students who ask calmly and confidently. Box 8.2 provides examples of opening remarks that might be used for initial lifeskills counselling sessions.

Box 8.2 Examples of opening statements

When meeting the client outside the office

‘Hello [state client’s name], I’m [state your name]. Please come in.’

Acknowledging time boundaries

When the client is seated, a counselling trainee can first indicate the time boundaries of the session by saying something like ‘We have about 45 minutes together’, and then give permission to talk.

Permissions to talk

‘Please tell me why you’ve come.’

‘Please tell me why you’re here.’

‘Please tell me what’s concerning you.’

‘Please tell me what’s the problem.’

‘Please put me in the picture.’

Permission to talk acknowledging a referral

‘You’ve been referred by ——. Now how do you see your situation?’

Permission to talk responding to a client’s bodily communication

‘You seem upset. Would you care to say what’s bothering you?’

‘You seem very nervous.’

Permission to record a session

Before giving a ‘permission to talk’ statement, a counselling trainee may need to get permission to record the session:

‘Would you mind if I videotaped this session for supervision purposes? Only my lecturer’ [if relevant add ‘and counselling skills training group’] will see the tape, which will be scrubbed clean once it has been reviewed. If you wish we can turn the recorder off at any time.’

The opening remark ‘You seem very nervous’ gives clients the opportunity to talk either about a problem they bring to counselling or about how they feel here-and-now in the interview. Trainees can sometimes give permission to talk by body messages alone: for instance a look, possibly accompanied by an arm gesture. On occasion they may sense that clients want to talk but have difficulty doing so. In such instances, if they follow up their opening remark with another, this may make it easier for clients to talk. Examples of ‘lubricating’ comments include:

‘It’s pretty hard to get started.’
‘Take your time.’
‘When you’re ready.’

Some counselling trainees have contact with clients outside formal interviews: for instance: correctional officers in facilities for delinquents, residential staff in half-way houses for former drug addicts, or nurses in hospitals. Here they may use permissions to talk when they sense that someone has a personal agenda that bothers them, but requires that extra bit of encouragement to share it. Opening statements for use in informal counselling include:

‘Is there something on your mind?’
‘You seem tense today.’
‘I’m available if you want to talk.’

Sometimes trainees may need to complete organizational requirements for gathering basic information before giving clients permission to talk. However, they require flexibility: for instance, clients in crisis require psychological comfort before bureaucratic form filling, which can come later. On occasion, limitations of confidentiality surrounding a session may need to be explained: for example the need to report to a third party, or any legal limitations. Where necessary, trainees who take notes may offer brief initial explanations for so doing and even ask clients’ permission.

Activity 8.1 Starting counselling sessions

If appropriate, readers who work in informal settings can adapt this activity to suit their circumstances. In addition, those training to use counselling skills for roles other than that of counsellor can adapt the activity for maximum relevance.

Part A: Meeting, greeting and seating

Role-play with a partner meeting a client in a waiting area, showing them to your office, and getting them seated – see Box 8.1 for suggestions. Then hold a feedback and discussion session and, if necessary, do more role-plays until you feel confident about your performance. Afterwards, reverse roles.

Part B: Making an opening statement

Role-play with a partner making an opening statement – see Box 8.2 for suggestions. Then hold a feedback and discussion session and, if necessary, do more role-plays until you feel confident about your performance. Afterwards, reverse roles.

Part C: Combining meeting, greeting and seating and making an opening statement

Role-play with a partner meeting a client in a waiting area, showing them to your office, getting them seated and making an opening statement. Then hold a feedback and discussion session and, if necessary, do more role-plays until you feel confident about your performance. Afterwards, reverse roles.

A group of psychiatrists structuring a program

Objectives of Structuring

Clients come to counselling in various states of knowing what to expect. Even those who think they know, may be misinformed. ‘Structuring’ is a term used to describe how counsellors and trainees let clients know their respective roles at different stages of counselling. Cormier and Nurius (2002) observe that structuring refers to an interactional process between counsellors and clients in which they arrive at similar perceptions of the role of the counsellor, an understanding of what occurs in counselling, and an agreement on which outcome goals will be achieved. Structuring occurs throughout counselling and even prior to counselling: for example through the publicity, image and reputation of counsellors and counselling agencies. Here the focus is on structuring skills in the early part of counselling, which may occupy only the first 10 to 15 minutes of initial sessions.

Effective structuring leads to positive outcomes as well as preventing or minimizing the chances of negative outcomes. The functions of structuring in initial sessions include: reducing anxiety by clarifying roles, explaining the purpose of the initial session, establishing the expectancy that clients will work on rather than just talk about problems, providing an introductory rationale for working within the lifeskills counselling model, establishing the possibility of change, and, if necessary, communicating limitations concerning the counselling relationship such as any restrictions on confidentiality.

When structuring in initial sessions, counselling trainees are, in fact, beginning the process of assisting clients to assume responsibility for developing their skills. Trainees can establish cooperative alliances with clients as partners in developing their skills rather than doing things either to or for them. In the medical model of counselling, physicians might think: ‘What can I do to cure my patients?’ In the lifeskills counselling model, counsellors think: ‘How can I best cooperate with clients to develop their self-helping skills?’

Too Much and Too Little Structure

Counsellors and trainees can provide both too much and also too little structure. If they provide too much structuring, clients may feel stifled by their agendas and reluctant or unable to reveal their own. Trainees may establish a ‘teacher knows best’ emotional climate that is conducive to dependency and resistance. Clients may perceive trainees as too set on fitting them into their way of working whether it suits them or not. Furthermore, if trainees talk too much at the beginning of sessions, not only do they make it difficult for clients to talk, but they may structure the counselling process in too intellectual a way. Too little structuring also has dangers. Clients may feel anxious and confused. Trainees too may be anxious and confused. In addition, clients may perceive that trainees have nothing of value to offer.

Counselling trainees’ voice and body messages may enhance or impede structuring. Again, negative outcomes may arise if trainees come on either too strong or too weak. For instance, clients may feel overwhelmed and put off by trainees who structure in loud voices and gesticulate too much. On the other hand, trainees who structure in diffident voices, with minimal use of gesture and eye contact, may convey insufficient commitment.

Some Structuring Skills

A choice that counselling trainees face is how much to structure at the start of initial sessions. Lifeskills counselling always starts with checking out ‘where the client is at’. It is probably best to do initial structuring in two statements, an opening statement and a follow-up statement. If trainees offer the whole explanation at once, they may fail to respond to clients who want emotional release or are desperate to share information.

In two-part structuring, the opening statement provides the first occasion for structuring. Here trainees can establish time boundaries and give clients permission to talk. After trainees have used their active listening skills to enable clients to say why they have come, they may summarize the main points for clients and check the accuracy of their summaries. Then trainees can briefly and simply explain the remainder of the helping process to clients. Box 8.3 presents two possible second structuring statements providing a framework for the lifeskills counselling model presented in Chapter 4. The first statement applies where the client clearly has only one main problem, and the second statement where the client has presented with more than one problem. If a specific situation has not already emerged, then a trainee’s follow-up statement may request the client to identify a situation within a main problem area for their work together.

Box 8.3 Examples of structuring statements

Opening or first structuring statement

‘We have about 45 minutes together. Please tell me why you’ve come.’

Possible second structuring statements

Single problem

‘You’ve given me some idea why you’ve come. Now what I’d like to do is to ask some more questions to help us understand more fully your problem [specify]. Then depending on what we find, I will review with you some skills to help you cope better. Once we agree on what skills might be useful, then we can look at ways to develop them. Does this way of proceeding sound all right?’

More than one problem

After summarizing the different problem areas, the counselling trainee says:

‘Which of these would you like to focus on? [The client states her or his choice.] Good. Now I wonder if we can identify a particular situation within this problem that it is important for you to manage better. Then we can explore this situation more fully and perhaps come up with some useful skills for dealing with it. Is that all right with you?’

Structuring can strengthen collaborative working relationships by establishing agendas or goals for the counselling process as well as obtaining agreement on how to proceed. Trainees may need to help clients choose a particular situation to work on that is important for them. Trainees may also need to respond to questions. However, they should not allow themselves to be lured into an intellectual discussion of the counselling process. If they make structuring statements in a comfortable and confident way, most clients will be happy to work within the suggested framework.

How counselling trainees send voice and body messages matters. Their voice messages should indicate their commitment to what they do. Good voice message skills include easy audibility, comfortable speech rate, firm voice, clear articulation, and appropriate variations in emphasis. Trainees’ body messages should support their verbal and voice messages: for example by appropriate gaze, eye contact and use of gestures. A theme throughout this book is the need for counsellors and trainees to pay great attention to voice and body messages. Structuring is a clear instance where ineffective voice and body messages can countermand verbal messages.

Basic Summarizing Skills

Summaries are brief statements of longer excerpts from counselling sessions. Summaries can pull together, clarify and reflect back different parts of a series of client statements either during a discussion unit, at the end of a discussion unit or at the beginning and end of counselling sessions. Clients also use summaries: sometimes of their own accord and sometimes at the request of those counselling them.

Here the focus is on counselling trainees’ summaries in the facilitating client disclosure phase of initial sessions. Such summaries can clarify what clients have communicated and, if they have had a lengthy period of talking, trainees can summarize to establish their presence and make the interaction more two-way. If clients are telling their stories very rapidly, it can help them to calm down if trainees deliver summaries in a measured and unhurried way.

When clients explain why they have come for counselling, trainees may use summaries that reflect whole units of communication. Such summaries tie together the main feelings and content of what clients say. Basic reflection summaries serve a bridging function for clients, enabling them to continue with the same topic or move on to another. Other functions include ensuring accurate listening, rewarding clients and clarifying both parties’ understanding. A variation of the basic reflection summary is the reflecting feelings and reasons summary that links emotions with their perceived causes.

In this and previous chapters skills for beginning the initial session have been reviewed. Box 8.4 puts many of these skills together in an abbreviated example of the starting the initial session and the facilitating client disclosure phases of the relating stage of the lifeskills counselling process model. In actual fact, there is often no clear dividing line between the facilitating client disclosure phase of the relating stage and the reconnaissance phase of the understanding stage – it is more a matter of degree.

Box 8.4 Example of basic reflection summary

Marital counsellor to wife: Just to summarize so far. You’ve known Jack for 10 years and been married for five. You now have two children, Denise aged 3 and Jonathan, aged 2. Your relationship with Jack has always had some problems, but in the last year they have become greater. One of the problems has to do with money. At the moment, you do not go out to work and you feel that Jack could be making a fairer division of his salary to look after you and the kids better. Another issue has to do with Jack’s spending a lot of time with his mates rather than with you and the kids. At the moment you do not feel Jack is really committed to the marriage and wonder what you can do about this. Is that about right?

In the next example (Box 8.5) a male counsellor assists a male client to start telling his story, though the sexes could just as well be different. The setting is that of a college counselling centre. Readers should note that during the facilitating client disclosure phase, the counsellor is just ‘tracking’ the client by staying in his frame of reference. Remember, the most important thing for the counsellor to do at this stage is to start creating a relationship with the client that enables him to feel understood. Those trainees learning to use their skills as part of other roles or in informal helping settings are asked to modify the way the relating stage is presented to suit their future work.

Box 8.5 Example of the relating stage

Counsellor : We have about 45 minutes. Would you please tell me why you’ve come.
Client : Well, it’s my exams coming up.
Counsellor : Uhm. When?
Client : In three weeks. These are the final exams on my accounting course and I’m scared that I will fail.
Counsellor : You feel extremely worried about passing your final accounting course exams.
Client : I’m never really good in exams, but this time I feel that I’ll really make a mess of them.
Counsellor : So you really fear the worst.
Client : My parents tell me it’s all right and to just do as well as I can, but I just don’t feel that way.
Counsellor : So your parents are trying to support you, but it’s hard to support yourself.
Client : I’m not revising well. I’m going much too slowly because I’m worrying.
Counsellor : Your anxiety is causing you to get behind …
Client : And that makes me worry even more.
Counsellor : So you’re in a vicious circle.
Client : I’m also concerned about how I am going to do in the exam room.
Counsellor : What do you think may happen?
Client : I’ll be very nervous and that will make matters even worse.
Counsellor : Your nervousness will add to your revision difficulties.
Client : I tend to get uptight before and in exams.
Counsellor : Can you tell me more?
Client : Yes. I don’t sleep properly and feel tired most of the time.
Counsellor : You feel worn down because you do not sleep well.
Client : And, in the exam room, my mind blocks until I am able to calm myself down.
Counsellor : So you have difficulty attending too, and have to make a real effort to concentrate. Can I summarize the ground we have covered so far?
Client : OK.
Counsellor : Right now you are really worried about your final accounting exams in three weeks’ time. You think that you are revising too slowly and inefficiently. You are also concerned that you will get very nervous both before and in your exams. You feel very tired because you’re not sleeping properly and in the exam room fear that your mind will block for a time. Is that about it so far?
Client : Yes, it is.

Activity 8.2 Practising relating stage skills

Work with a partner. Each of you thinks of an area in your personal or work life that you are prepared to share in role-playing the relating stage of an initial session. Alternatively, you can role-play a client with a genuine concern. One of you acts as client. The counsellor/helper conducts an interview of up to 15 minutes using the following skills:

  • preparation skills, for instance setting up the room and any recording
  • equipment
  • meeting, greeting and seating skills
  • making an opening statement skills
  • active listening skills
  • structuring skills
  • summarizing skills

See Box 8.5 for an example of this activity. After the relating stage session, hold a feedback and discussion period, possibly illustrated by going through a videotape or audiotape of the session. After a suitable interval, reverse roles.

A person signing a contract

Contracting refers to making agreements about the process of counselling and establishing the respective roles of counsellor and client. Contracts can be of varying degrees of formality. Each counselling approach has an implied or explicit contract built into it: for instance, a person-centred contract for person-centred counsellors and a cognitive therapy contract for cognitive counsellors. Likewise, lifeskills counselling has an assumed contract. The matter then becomes that of how formal and explicit to make the contract and when to do this. Related to this is the matter of whether contracts are more suitable for some kinds of counselling, for instance where there is a specific and limited goal to be attained, than where the goals are broader, for instance personal growth.

In reality, contracting is often assumed rather than explicit. For example, a client undergoing rational emotive behaviour therapy will have the approach explained up to a point as part of the process and by continuing in REBT might be perceived as participating in a contract, even though the word ‘contract’ may never be mentioned. Similarly in lifeskills counselling, the counsellor does not provide a full explanation of the approach, but describes enough of it to motivate clients, let them know how to participate, and answer any queries. This does not mean that both rational emotive behaviour counsellors and lifeskills counsellors might not draw up formal contracts if they considered that to be of most benefit to clients. However, most counsellors do not consider this necessary. Instead they choose to explain the process a little at or near the beginning and explain it further as it unfolds.

The lifeskills counselling process model may be viewed as having a contract built into it. The stages and phases are an outline of how counsellors intend to work with clients, though there is allowance for variation depending on specific client needs and wishes. For instance, phase 3 of the understanding stage, where counsellor and client agree on a shared analysis of the client’s problem, means that a contract defining what is wrong is part of lifeskills counselling. Similarly, the first or intervening phase of the changing stage follows on from the understanding stage to outline a plan of action and could be viewed as a contract between counsellor and client regarding remedying what is wrong. When counsellor and client agree on homework assignments, this might equally be viewed as making an informal contract.

An implicit feature of contracts is that of commitment to keeping them. Contracts that are signed and sealed can, of course, be broken and more informal contracts may be scrupulously kept. In lifeskills counselling, contracts tend to be verbal and their usefulness depends on the shared perception of counsellor and client that they have value.

Another aspect of contracting in counselling has less to do with the treatment approach and more to do with practical and business arrangements. An important issue is that of time-keeping. Here part of the lifeskills counselling’s informal and, if necessary, explicit contract is that both counsellor and client will turn up on time and, if not, provide notice if possible and have a good reason for lateness or absence. Confidentiality is another key issue and, where possible, any limitations on it should be shared in advance. However, both time-keeping and confidentiality can be matters of agreement between counsellors and clients rather than part of formal written contracts unless, of course, a counselling agency has its own strict rules which both counsellor and client are expected to observe.

In any session, counselling trainees may face decisions about referring clients elsewhere. Even experienced counsellors have types of client with whom they feel competent and comfortable and others where they feel less so. Lazarus states that an important counselling principle is to ‘Know your limitations and other clinicians’ strengths’ (Dryden, 1991: 30). He considers that referrals should be made where other counsellors have skills that the counsellor does not possess or more appropriate personal styles for particular clients. Important ethical issues surround referral, for instance ensuring the best treatment for clients where other counsellors are more expert with specific problems, for instance schizophrenia or traumatic stress disorders.

Referral may not be an either/or matter. Sometimes counsellors continue working with clients but also refer to other counsellors and helping professionals. Alternatively, counsellors may be the recipients of referrals from other helping professionals who continue to work with the clients concerned. I worked as a sessional counsellor in a leading career outplacement company where all my clients were referred by other professionals who continued seeing them for job search counselling. I acted as a ‘back-stop’ for clients whose problems were more severe or different from the normal clientele presenting for job search assistance.

Sometimes clients are referred to gain additional knowledge about their problems. For example, clients with thought-blocking problems or sexual dysfunctions might be referred for medical checks. Depending on the outcome of these checks, the counsellor may gain relevant information to help determine whether or not to continue seeing them.

On other occasions counsellors and trainees can refer the clients’ problem rather than the clients themselves to other counsellors and helping professionals. For example, they can discuss with colleagues or supervisors how best to assist certain clients. Occasions when one may refer the client’s problem rather than the client include being the only counsellor available in an area, or when clients state a clear preference for continuing working with their current counsellor, or when clients are unlikely to follow through on referrals in any case.

The following are some skills for making referrals.

  • Know one’s strengths and limitations. Be realistic about the kinds of client with whom one works well and those with whom one is less skilled. Be realistic about one’s workload and set appropriate limits on it.
  • Build a referral network. Get to know the resources available in the area so that good referrals are made. Where possible, avoid referring ‘blind’ to someone whose competence is unknown. Furthermore, check whether another counsellor or helping professional has the time available to see the client.
  • Provide appropriate information. Provide the client with relevant information about an agency or individual to whom they are referred: for instance a contact person, their telephone number and professional address, their theoretical orientation, and the scale of fees charged, if any.
  • If possible, refer early on. When counsellors and trainees defer referrals longer than necessary, they waste clients’ and their own time. In addition, it is preferable to refer clients before emotional bonding takes place.
  • Avoid unnecessary referrals. Sometimes it is better for clients to continue working with the counsellors that they have. Tune into anxieties and fears about seeing certain clients. Counselling trainees build confidence and skills by expanding the range of clients with whom they can work. However, wherever possible, they should ensure that they have adequate supervision and support.
  • Build a support network. A support network provides professional support for a counsellor or trainee when they want to refer clients’ problems rather than the clients themselves. Their support networks are likely to overlap with their referral networks
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