Focusing
Focusing is a psychotherapeutic process developed by psychotherapist Eugene Gendlin. It can be used in any kind of therapeutic situation, including peer-to-peer sessions. It involves holding a kind of open, non-judging attention to an internal knowing which is directly experienced but is not yet in words. Focusing can, among other things, be used to become clear on what one feels or wants, to obtain new insights about one's situation, and to stimulate change or healing of the situation.[1] Focusing is set apart from other methods of inner awareness by three qualities: something called the "felt sense", a quality of engaged accepting attention, and a researched-based technique that facilitates change.[2]
Origin
At the University of Chicago, beginning in 1953, Eugene Gendlin did 15 years of research analyzing what made psychotherapy either successful or unsuccessful. The conclusion was that it is not the therapist's technique that determines the success of psychotherapy, but rather the way the patient behaves, and what the patient does inside himself during the therapy sessions.
Gendlin found that, without exception, the successful patient intuitively focuses inside himself on a very subtle and vague internal bodily awareness—or "felt sense"—which contains information that, if attended to or focused on, holds the key to the resolution of the problems the patient is experiencing.[3]
"Focusing" is a process and learnable skill developed by Gendlin which re-creates this successful-patient behavior in a form that can be taught to other patients.[3] Gendlin detailed the techniques in his book Focusing which, intended for the layman, is written in conversational terms and describes the six steps of Focusing and how to do them. Gendlin stated: "I did not invent Focusing. I simply made some steps which help people to find Focusing."
"Felt sense" and "felt shift"
Gendlin gave the name "felt sense" to the unclear, pre-verbal sense of "something"—the inner knowledge or awareness that has not been consciously thought or verbalized—as that "something" is experienced in the body. It is not the same as an emotion. This bodily felt "something" may be an awareness of a situation or an old hurt, or of something that is "coming"—perhaps an idea or insight. Crucial to the concept, as defined by Gendlin, is that it is unclear and vague, and it is always more than any attempt to express it verbally. Gendlin also described it as "sensing an implicit complexity, a wholistic sense of what one is working on".[4]
According to Gendlin, the Focusing process makes a felt sense more tangible and easier to work with.[3] To help the felt sense form and to accurately identify its meaning, the focuser tries out words that might express it. These words can be tested against the felt sense: The felt sense will not resonate with a word or phrase that does not adequately describe it.[3]
Gendlin observed clients, writers, and people in ordinary life ("Focusers") turning their attention to this not-yet-articulated knowing. As a felt sense formed, there would be long pauses together with sounds like "uh...." Once the person had accurately identified this felt sense in words, new words would come, and new insights into the situation. There would be a sense of felt movement—a "felt shift"—and the person would begin to be able to move beyond the "stuck" place, having fresh insights, and also sometimes indications of steps to take.
Learning and using Focusing
One can learn the Focusing technique from one of several books,[2][3] or from a Focusing trainer or practitioner. Focusing is easiest to sense and do in the presence of a "listener"—either a Focusing trainer, a therapist, or a layman trained in Focusing.[3] Gendlin's book details the six steps of Focusing,[3] which can also be taught as a four-step process, while emphasizing that there is an essence to Focusing which is a flow that is beyond steps.[2]
Focusing is now practiced all over the world by thousands of people—both in professional settings with Focusing trainers, and informally between laypersons.[5] As a stand-alone process, a Focusing session can last from approximately 30 minutes to an hour, on average—with the "focuser" being listened to, and his verbalized thoughts and feelings being reflected back to him by, the "listener". Generally speaking, but not always, the focuser has his eyes closed, in order to more accurately focus inwardly on his "felt sense" and the shifts that take place from it. Focusing can also be done alone.
New developments
In 1996, Gendlin published a comprehensive book on Focusing-oriented psychotherapy.[6] The Focusing-oriented psychotherapist attributes a central importance to the client's capacity to be aware of his "felt sense", and the meaning behind his words or images. The client is encouraged to sense into feelings and meanings which are not yet formed. Other elements of Focusing are also incorporated into the therapy practice so that Focusing remains the basis of the process—allowing for inner resonance and verification of ideas and feelings, and allowing new and fresh insights to come from within the client.
Several adaptations of Gendlin's original six-step Focusing process have been developed. The most popular and prevalent of these is the process Ann Weiser Cornell teaches, called Inner Relationship Focusing.[7]
Other developments in Focusing include focusing alone using a journal or a sketchbook. Drawing and painting can be used with Focusing processes with children. Focusing also happens in other domains besides therapy. Attention to the felt sense naturally takes place in all manner of processes where something new is being formed: for example in creative process, learning, thinking, and decision making.[6]
See also
- Emotionally focused therapy
- Internal Family Systems Model
- Intuition (mind)
- Method of levels
- Nonviolent Communication
References
- ↑ Cornell, Ann Weiser; McGavin, Barbara (2002). The focusing student's and companion's manual. 1 (1st ed.). Berkeley, CA: Calluna Press. ISBN 0972105808. OCLC 50431925.
- 1 2 3 Cornell, Ann Weiser; McGavin, Barbara (2005). The radical acceptance of everything: living a focusing life. Berkeley, CA: Calluna Press. p. 13. ISBN 0972105832. OCLC 63119783.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Gendlin, Eugene T (1982) [1978]. Focusing (2nd ed.). New York: Bantam Books. ISBN 0553278339. OCLC 41016737.
- ↑ "What matters most in psychotherapy is 'feeling' in the sense of being unclear and sensing an implicit complexity, a wholistic sense of what one is working on. This can be very quietly sensed, or it may be very emotional, but that is not the crucial question at all." Cited from: Gendlin, Eugene T (1978). "Befindlichkeit: Heidegger and the philosophy of psychology" (PDF). Review of Existential Psychology and Psychiatry. 16 (1–3): 43–71. OCLC 6903565.
- ↑ "Certified focusing professional search". Focusing Institute. Retrieved 13 February 2015.
- 1 2 Gendlin, Eugene T (1996). Focusing-oriented psychotherapy: a manual of the experiential method. New York: Guilford Press. ISBN 0898624797. OCLC 34121030.
- ↑ Hicks, Angela (2007). "Examining four styles of Focusing: the similarities and differences" (PDF). British Focusing Association. Retrieved 13 February 2015.
Further reading
- Cornell, Ann Weiser (1996). The power of focusing: a practical guide to emotional self-healing. Oakland, CA: New Harbinger Publications. ISBN 157224044X. OCLC 34828579.
- Madison, Greg, ed. (2014). Emerging practice in focusing-oriented psychotherapy: innovative theory and applications. Foreword by Mary Hendricks-Gendlin. London; Philadelphia: Jessica Kingsley Publishers. ISBN 9781849053716. OCLC 866622379.
- Madison, Greg, ed. (2014). Theory and practice of focusing-oriented psychotherapy: beyond the talking cure. Foreword by Eugene Gendlin. London: Jessica Kingsley Publishers. ISBN 9781849053242. OCLC 864418245.
External links
- The Focusing Institute
- Focusing Resources
- International Association of Focusing-Oriented Therapy (IAFOTs)