Coaching Quote of the Day 11th January 2012
“Experience is the child of thought, and thought is the child of action.”
(Benjamin Disraeli)
“Experience is the child of thought, and thought is the child of action.”
(Benjamin Disraeli)
In today’s guest post Andy Lucas shares his coaching and therapeutic experience as he focuses upon beliefs.
by Andy Lucas
It seems to me beliefs are an intrinsic part of coaching and therapy, whether it be the belief by you, your client or both. And along the journey, during the dance between coach and client, all kinds of beliefs emerge, both generative and limiting.
When I completed my training all those years ago I remember being excited about using all the great stuff I’d learnt. But then as I actually worked with clients on a daily basis I didn’t always achieve the rate of change I’d anticipated. I sometimes got disappointed and even disillusioned about what I’d been taught, or at least what I thought I’d been taught.
Then things got really exciting because I became determined to understand what else I could do to become more confident about helping people. I became intrigued, even obsessed about the role of belief in coaching. As I investigated further I decided beliefs are probably just a string of thoughts giving meaning to what we see, feel and hear. As Plato wrote in Timaeus, we “should not look for anything more than a likely story”. And perhaps that’s all a belief is – “a likely story”.
If you’re going to make up stories then you might as well make them good ones.
As I continued to study and practise I began collecting a range of resources to work with beliefs. Some were just useful tips or ideas, others were entire approaches or techniques and all became part of an essential toolkit. And I wonder if this toolkit might help other coaches too.
A shamanic instructor once taught me the importance of staying out of the way when working with clients. Even though it can be tempting to offer advice or ask “content-leading questions” our work is generally more effective when we resist that temptation and allow our clients to generate their own solutions. So I have a rule for myself – do whatever it takes for the client to create their own generative beliefs. And if they’re thinking “stupid stuff” let them make it so stupid they find it impossible not to notice.
Belief follows experience so I reckon it’s a good idea to generate a rewarding experience for your client at the very first meeting. You want your client to believe in the work you do right? Creating a good experience for them at the outset is a good start, because experiences lead to belief. Perhaps there’s no better way to ensure your client believes in your work than to have them experience concrete or visible evidence at the very beginning. (And you might find you get to believe in yourself more too.)
I let loose my internal police from time to time, just to make sure I’m doing my job properly. And the chief asks me “Who are you treating, yourself or your client?” That’s all I need to hear to create total inner silence as the client begins to speak. I wonder what kind of ritual you might develop for yourself to create and maintain your external focus, the kind of state that has you pay close attention to your client’s communication.
Christian De Quincey in his book “Consciousness from Zombies to Angels” offers a simple seven step guide for “experience beyond belief”. Running through this process as a guided “closed eyes contemplation” can offer a useful foundation for your programme of coaching / therapy, because it gives the client an opportunity to develop flexibility in thinking and believing.
I like to find out how the client gets to be convinced about something, what they already believe strongly, how they “do believing strongly”. Help your client change their own beliefs, when they want to, by working with those structures of belief. I like Richard Bandler’s use of submodalities in belief change in his book “Get the Life You Want”, pages 19 to 30 Building New Beliefs: The Structure of Certainty”.
Perhaps a client is presenting an analogue rather than digital function of belief. It isn’t necessarily a choice of believing or not believing. Maybe there is a scale. How does a given proposition measure up against hope, intent, fear? What is their attitude to it? Does the client have a scale and how do they move things on that scale.
If a client wants to use compelling affirmations or self dialogue what kind of voice will have them pay attention and believe it? Michael Neill in his book “SuperCoach” demonstrates how to “make believe” something is true. In his exercise “Changing the Movie of Your Life” he illustrates a practical approach acknowledging the effect of the tone of the internal voice and of the kind of feelings when generating beliefs.
When preparing a session I ask myself “What are you doing to help your client move their focus from beliefs about problems to beliefs about solutions?” Even though it can be tricky for a client to resist focusing on a limiting belief some conversational approaches do the job. Robert Dilts, in his book “Sleight of Mouth – The Magic of Conversational Belief Change”, uses conversational skills to shift attention from a “problem frame” to an “outcome frame”. You can also read about focusing on solutions in Bill O’Connell’s “Solution-Focused Therapy (Brief Therapies Series)”.
Often the easiest way a client breaks free from the chains of an unwanted limiting belief is through humour. Frank Farrelly’s book “Provocative Therapy” is about using humour in therapy and coaching. Even though some examples in the book can be shocking it is still worth reading to explore the art of using humour to illicit rapid belief change. I often hedge my bets with this approach and start a potential piece of provocation by saying “If Frank Farrelly were here he might say to you…..”
I think there’s a good song about most things. I don’t know if it has anything to do with coaching but it makes me feel good. And don’t we all owe it to our clients to do that? So here’s some music from the wonderful Jocelyn Brown called “Believe”. She says “ …. all you need to do is find a way”.
Andy lives and works in Brighton. He is an NLP trainer (Society of NLP), coach, hypnotherapist and meditation instructor with a particular interest in Hawaiian Huna and Yoga Nidra.
Visit www.springtomind.co.uk for more details about Andy’s work.
“What a man thinks of himself, that it is which determines, or rather indicates his fate.”
(Henry David Thoreau)
In today’s guest post coach Louise Gillespie Smith shares a personal experiment that she now uses with her own clients.
by Louise Gillespie Smith
Six months ago I began an experiment to see what would happen if I fully lived with intention for a whole year. The idea is to set a different intention every month and to fully immerse myself, by directing my thoughts and action in alignment with each one.
I am in the middle of the experiment now and it’s been quite amazing how the different intentions I quite flippantly set for each month at the beginning have all flowed into each other perfectly. The timing has been right for all of them.
Setting my intention for a yoga class or situation has always worked for me. I have found it quite a fun and empowering way to choose how I want to be and act around anything I do. So I thought, what if I was to expand this and see what would happen if I lived with a different focus each month.
I have always dreamed of travelling around India for 6 months and this is going to be part of the journey, I leave in January. As a coach I also believe it’s good to step outside your boundaries and challenge yourself. I find I am more a more effective coach when I am developing and stretching myself as well as my clients.
I began with “being creative”, I had not done any art for well over twelve years, it was always something I had loved at school but ever since have just become stuck with. My intention lead me to drawing again, visiting different art galleries each week, going on a graffiti hunt, and watching a street dance show.
It was amazing, I found just sitting down with the intention of being creative with no expectations just helped me to start doing art again. I was drawing nearly every day and I discovered that art is a great meditation, once you are immersed in a picture you think of nothing else.
What has been interesting since I have moved on to new intentions, I have not done any more art which just proved to me the power of having an intention.
My next intention for June was to “do things differently”, now this was a challenge. I literally aimed to shake everything up; I ate different food, I walked different routes, I listened to different music, I gave up TV for a week, I went to new places basically anything that was routine was changed.
I had no idea how much mental effort this would take as most of what we humans do is habit. Luckily my creative juices were already flowing from the previous month so they were put to good use.
Since then I have focused on kindness, love, play and now peace. Kindness and love opened my heart, I felt extremely connected with people and an intense feeling of love, play bought out my spontaneous side which had lain dormant for a year or so and I had an unbelievable about of fun. My intention this month is being peaceful, this is perfect timing as I have just moved from London down to the seaside.
Have fun with it, it can open all sorts of experiences that you would never imagine!
You can read about my Journey of Intention here; http://ajourneyofintention.com/ or follow me on Twitter LouiseatCreate.
About the Author/Further Resources
Louise is a confidence coach and image consultant, she runs a business called Create Yourself supporting people to create lives they love.
In this weeks guest post, talent coach, Richard Nugent shares his expertise and approach to “motivational coaching”.
by Richard Nugent
As a coach with a background in NLP and a bucket full of other positive psychology you would think that my clients would regular be coached to ‘think positive’. After all that’s what us ‘motivational coaches’ do right?
However I think that ship has sailed. Many perspective clients have tried the whole positive thinking thing and it hasn’t really worked for them. Where does that leave us? I don’t think that positive psychology should be ditched and we should go back to the days of trawling through clients’ past for sessions upon end to enable their future. Instead I think as a profession we should look for new distinctions in the field to help our clients think more clearly.
My experience of 3 principles based work has certainly helped me become more aware of my thoughts and the ‘reality’ that they create for me. This in turn has of course helped me create new insights and more distinctions for clients. Here is a very simple example of this in action.
A recent meeting in the south meant a 5am start for me and a ninety minute drive either side of a full day of thinking, challenging and learning. My return journey to the airport was halted by a closed motorway and after a lengthy spell stuck in traffic and a missed flight the realisation that a five hour drive home beckoned. I was speaking to a client during the trip back up north who asked how I managed to be positive even at a time like this. It struck me that having to think positive as well as driving safely, finding my way home and communicating with my family just felt like an extra chore.
For me the distinction between positive thinking and useful thinking is a small but powerful one. I became aware that ‘getting positive’ about not getting home until 1am after a long day would be a task, however also being aware that being unhappy, angry or blaming the world for it would not get me home any quicker at all. Acceptance of the situation, gratitude that I had been delayed by an accident rather than involved in it and a focus on being present in the task (driving safely) was a much more useful frame. Notice the ‘useful’ frame rather than positive.
Those of you who are experienced coaches this awareness of thought should not be new, but my experience of sharing the distinction with a client – and an experienced client at that – highlighted again that we are lucky enough to have insights that are natural and obvious to us that others aren’t aware of.
Try this simple exercise.
Reflect on your last five coaching sessions
List the interventions, solutions or models that you used to move you clients close to where they want to be
Now chunk this list a step further, ‘stuff other coaches probably know’ ‘stuff most clients know’ ‘stuff not many other people on the planet know’.
You could probably use this as a catalyst for an article or even product but for me the purpose of this is simply to become more consciously aware of your own thinking and your thoughts.
My guess is that as you explore your thinking, you will find that you have your own pretty unqiue take on positive thinking which helps your clients create more of the world that they want. It is unlikely to be directly aligned with early nineties ‘happy clappy high fives all round’ approach nor is it likely to be the ‘sit where you are, think positive and all will come to you’ approach popularised in the last decade. Whatever your philosophy is in this specific area can you describe your distinction?
I would love to hear it (email ri*****@*************ng.com) and I bet your clients would too.
Richard works with talented people in the fields of business and sport – and has been for almost a decade. Those who he has worked with all say the same thing: they have achieved more than they thought was possible because of his support and insight.
He has helped leaders in international brands such as Lego, Merlin Entertainments and Tesco to realise their potential while his work with professional footballers, managers and cricketers has led to trophy winning performances and multimillion pound transfers.
Entrepreneurs with the commitment to work with Richard reshape businesses, unlock the secrets of financial success and discover the answer to the ultimate question for business owners – how do I balance my work and personal life?
“Most people are about as happy as they make their minds up to be.”
(Abraham Lincoln)
“My life has been full of terrible misfortunes, most of which never happened.”
(Michel De Montaigne)
“When there is no enemy within, the enemies outside cannot hurt you.”
(An African proverb)