Friday, June 24, 2016

Your Child's Counselor



Counseling is a vulnerable and personal experience no matter the age.  Admitting you need professional help as a parent can be humbling.. You may have feelings of failure.. Feel as if you're at your wits ends.. Feel defeated.. Feel anxious.. Choosing the right counselor for your child can be a difficult process.

Your child's counselor is your family's counselor.  And, he or she should understand these feelings or reservations you have.  You should feel heard.  You should feel understood and empathized with.  Your child's counselor is not just there to counsel your child.  He or she is there to help counsel you.. to offer you parenting help, hear your concerns, hear your updates, and help your family heal or function in a healthy way.

Your child's counselor should be a trusted partner.  You should feel confident in his/her knowledge and abilities to counsel your family.  You should fully trust him or her.  This means trusting the counselor to tell you what you need to know but keeping your child's confidence.  For example.. The counselor would discuss John's anger with you this way.. "John is expressing and exhibiting a lot of anger in our sessions.. I was wondering how he deals with anger at home and school?"... The counselor would not say.. "John spent the entire hour session beating the snot out of the bop bag.. he stabbed it.. yelled at it..etc"... You have to trust the counselor enough to tell you what information you need to know.. Not always details and specifics.. but themes and summarizations. Keeping the trust and confidence of your child is crucial to the counseling relationship.  And if the time comes when quotes and details need to be shared, you can trust that the counselor will share them in the safest way possible for the child or teen.  Keeping your child safe, is the #1 priority.

Your child's counselor is a part of the team.  The team refers to the parents, the child, the teacher(s), the pediatrician, the counselor, and other professionals--psychologist or psychiatrist etc.  Any one that is involved in helping your child is a team player.  Help cannot be achieved by one person.  It takes every one doing their part.  This is why it is important to sign a release of information.. Allow your counselor to contact those who are also helping your child.  The team will work efficiently with open commutation.  A good counselor will want to work with a team.

Your child's counselor recognizes your worth as a parent.  This cannot be understated.  Too many parents feel pushed aside when their child has a problem... "leave it to the professionals"...  If you are not actively involved in your child's counseling process, it is time to find another counselor.  NO ONE is more important in your child's life than YOU.  You are an integral part in helping your child.  The counselor is in your child's life for a moment.  You are in your child's life forever.  This means you, the parent, will see this through to the end.  You will be there to help your child through life and the complications it brings.  Therefore, the counselor should be equipping you.  The counselor helps in this time of need, but prepares you and your child to be independent of the counselor.



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