robert g
02-09-2006, 06:20 PM
Hello,
On the subject of metaphors you use for yourself & others, while in a therapeutic context, the usual metaphors are:
Coach
Guide
Practitioner
As I considered the functions of a guide, it occured to me that the guide is pressuposed to have knowledge of the terrain. In a therapeutic context, I'd call that the internal world of subjective experience. At that point I questioned whether the client is actually the guide as they are intimately knowledgable by experiencing, through the senses, the terrain.
Who I believe Guide's & Coaches are:
Mr Pearce (my basket ball coach)
The bush tucker man (Australian outback survival)
Tracker (aboriginal whose function it is to find others via terrain)
and for others:
Client
Explorer
The explorer metaphor pressuposes taking a journey beyond places uncharted previously. That may be the case when becoming conscious of unconscious patterns, memories, associations, metaphors, identities.
Who I believe explorer's are:
Captain Cook
Sir Edmund Hilary
Christopher Colombus
What that tells me is the client is able to guide themselves through their internal terrain. That would mean the practitioner becomes a passenger or tourist. At which I'd question what function other than sight seeing does the tourist serve?
The tourist chooses where, when & the duration they are passengers. This is intimately interwoven with the guide's knowledge of where, when & the duration for the terrain they are familiar with.
The two are travelling parrallel with each other, both inputting into where, when & the duration of the visit into the internal terrain.
Recently I've been practising being both the explorer & guide, using the clean language patterns with my internal dialogue & external voice. I've found metaphors previously unknown and willingly guided myself down the path of self discovery.
Perhaps this is where self application of language patterns can yield measurable self knowledge, providing the explorer continues to go where they haven't explored before and the guide directs the attention of the explorer to the internal terrain.
It's as if the explorer / client decides on a place to start, then the guide asks the explorer to describe their surroundings. Then, the guide can chose to take the explorer back in time, forward in time, in and around the terrain, & into metaphorical parrallel universes in which the function of both remain the same...Map Making!!!
I truly believe examining the metaphors we use to describe ourselves is a school of self knowledge with an unlimited borrowing library.
On the subject of metaphors you use for yourself & others, while in a therapeutic context, the usual metaphors are:
Coach
Guide
Practitioner
As I considered the functions of a guide, it occured to me that the guide is pressuposed to have knowledge of the terrain. In a therapeutic context, I'd call that the internal world of subjective experience. At that point I questioned whether the client is actually the guide as they are intimately knowledgable by experiencing, through the senses, the terrain.
Who I believe Guide's & Coaches are:
Mr Pearce (my basket ball coach)
The bush tucker man (Australian outback survival)
Tracker (aboriginal whose function it is to find others via terrain)
and for others:
Client
Explorer
The explorer metaphor pressuposes taking a journey beyond places uncharted previously. That may be the case when becoming conscious of unconscious patterns, memories, associations, metaphors, identities.
Who I believe explorer's are:
Captain Cook
Sir Edmund Hilary
Christopher Colombus
What that tells me is the client is able to guide themselves through their internal terrain. That would mean the practitioner becomes a passenger or tourist. At which I'd question what function other than sight seeing does the tourist serve?
The tourist chooses where, when & the duration they are passengers. This is intimately interwoven with the guide's knowledge of where, when & the duration for the terrain they are familiar with.
The two are travelling parrallel with each other, both inputting into where, when & the duration of the visit into the internal terrain.
Recently I've been practising being both the explorer & guide, using the clean language patterns with my internal dialogue & external voice. I've found metaphors previously unknown and willingly guided myself down the path of self discovery.
Perhaps this is where self application of language patterns can yield measurable self knowledge, providing the explorer continues to go where they haven't explored before and the guide directs the attention of the explorer to the internal terrain.
It's as if the explorer / client decides on a place to start, then the guide asks the explorer to describe their surroundings. Then, the guide can chose to take the explorer back in time, forward in time, in and around the terrain, & into metaphorical parrallel universes in which the function of both remain the same...Map Making!!!
I truly believe examining the metaphors we use to describe ourselves is a school of self knowledge with an unlimited borrowing library.