'Susan' first came to me because she wanted rid of a phobia she had about having
men in the front passenger seat of her car. This was proving particularly problematic
as she had recently struck up a new relationship, resulting in them always having
to travel in the boyfriend's car.
When I meta-modelled her, it soon emerged that the phobia was rooted in the partly-repressed
memory of a traumatic experience several years back. Then a man sitting in the front
seat of her car had tried to rape her.
Since the event was a clear-cut single traumatic episode, I used the NLP Trauma Care
to recode the patterns of that memory so they were far less immediate and thus far
less threatening to her. I future-paced Susan driving with a man sitting next to
her and she now seemed quite comfortable with that thought.
A few days later she rang me to report that she was indeed now driving her boyfriend
about quite happily.
So all seemed well; yet I suspected there were more deep-rooted problems. The amount
of guilt she had expressed over the attempted rape was significantly beyond what
might have been expected. Yes, she and her assailant had been on a date. Yes, they
had been parked in a quiet country spot. Yes, they had been doing a little kissing
and 'canoodling'. But she made it very clear to him that she was not up for anything
further - and that was a reflection of statements she had made to him earlier.
It also perplexed me that, though she had a well-paid job, she drove a beat-up old
car she hated. Even after the Trauma Cure, she was still contemptuous of the car.
So it was no great surprise when Susan turned up 3 months later, miserable, frustrated
and calling herself "a failure".
Enough
Dissonance to make a Change...?
Susan was still driving the car she hated. The relationship
with the boyfriend, 'Carl', was blossoming yet she felt she couldn't love him unreservedly.
She was a talented musician and was asked frequently to play with bands or at events
- yet she turned most of these invitations down. She also didn't feel she could allow
herself the time to practice - too many other pressing priorities! - and she would
have sounded better on a decent instrument. She had the opportunity to go self-employed
doing more personally-satisfying work but didn't feel she was upto it.
At the PURPLE level of Spiral Dynamics Susan had a dependency on her daughter, 'Julia',
whom she over-indulged and which the daughter sometimes abused. When Julia spent
time with the divorced father, Susan would go partly to pieces, mingling fits of
tears with bouts of drunkenness, and then spoiling the daughter on her return.
Her RED vMEME tended to be expressed only intermittently - and then often explosively,
as if it been kept all pent up inside. Carl apparently also had a temper which made
for some heated rows, for which Susan always took the blame.
Of BLUE there was barely a sign in her life. There was just enough for her to organise
her work - but her house was a mess, and there was little sense of timing, regularity
or organisation in her personal life. She lived largely from crisis to indulgence.
It was clear to me that the problems were manifesting themselves at the RED level,
with low self-esteem and consequently poor self-efficacy.
I meta-modelled Susan to discover that the root belief preventing her looking after
herself was that she was not good enough to be herself. (She had even had a nervous
breakdown when Julia was born, believing that she wasn't good enough to have such
a beautiful, healthy child!)
From this, I deduced that, vMEMETICALLY, there had been some failure of RED to develop
healthily in the PURPLE-to-RED transition.
Further meta-modelling revealed that the root belief of not being good enough to
be herself stemmed from early-middle childhood experiences of her late father - who
should have been the magical shamanic figure PURPLE needs - suppressing her self-expression.
"Be quiet! Shut up! Don't do that!", etc, were the responses she got to any form
of loud or noisy play she did while he was in the house. As a teenager, he discouraged
Susan's interest in music - "You can't eat your music" - and refused to support her
going to Music College.
Unsurprisingly, Susan's RED had not developed healthily. She allowed herself to be
abused (psychologically) by one of her brothers and ended up married to a man who
also abused her verbally and reinforced the I'm-not-good-enough motif.
The strategy I decided to work with for her was Penny Park's Mistaken Belief Visualisation.
However, when I explained to Susan that this would mean acknowledging her father
was the cause of her problems, she decided not to proceed with the therapy.
Two weeks later Susan was back, more miserable than ever. However, she still felt
she couldn't acknowledge the part her father had played - even though I explained
he wouldn't have understood what he was doing. (From discussing her childhood memories,
it was clear to both of us that he was a fairly repressed character who also didn't
feel good about himself.)
Finally, after another couple of months of misery, with her relationship with Carl
on the line, Susan had enough dissonance to accept what her father had unwittingly
done to her.
A
new Enabling Belief
I resourced Susan for the therapy by getting her to do Penny Parks'
Resourceful You exercise - which is about visualising *you* as good as you can be
- the exercise itself an antidote of sorts to Susan's problem!
We then did the Mistaken Belief Visualisation which, in essence, works on the presupposition
that beliefs, particularly in childhood, tend to be implanted through exposure to
other people. So the idea is to find the person who gave you the unhelpful/unhealthy
belief and - using metaphors for the belief - give it back to him/her; then a new
enabling belief - again couched in easy-to-use metaphors - is installed and tested.
Susan's father - dead several years in real life - was duly handed back his debilitating
belief and Susan created an enabling belief for herself to replace it.
We future-paced the new belief to test it. Susan told me after the exercise was complete
that one of the future scenarios she used for the test was her accepting Carl's asking
her to marry him - because she deserved his love and she wanted him to enjoy all
the love she had to give him!
Susan was then given a number of tasks to carry out to as part of reinforcing her
new sense of self-worth. Among these activities was the keeping of a 'happy book'
- a daily recording of positive events and the positive feelings that went hand-in-hand
with them. Although it took some effort at first, Susan quickly came to treasure
her happy book!
The changes she experienced over the next year or so were phenomenal.
In her early-mid 40s, Susan started behaving like a full-of-herself teenager. She
got rid of her 'old banger' and spent £6,000 on a car worthy of her status in life
and which she thoroughly enjoyed driving. Next up was £1,200 on a new musical instrument,
for which she took the time to practise. She was experiencing the blossoming of healthy
RED and began to love herself in a whole new way.
Then came the BLUE - within just a few months of the therapy, Susan was organising
her house, putting in place rules and schedules - particularly important for Julia
entering her teens - and starting to future-pace concerns.
Susan took the plunge employment-wise and started her own self-employed one-woman
business.
And Carl did ask her to marry him...and she did accept!
Postscript: It had been several years since I’d heard from ‘Susan’ when one day,
idly following some links on www.myspace.com, I came across a band site which featured
her prominently! I’d only heard very vaguely of the band before but it was clear,
from the site, that they were achieving a good modicum of success, with an album
out, some reviews in the national music press and gigs all over the country. And
Susan was a key member, not only playing several instruments and singing but also
writing some of the band’s material.
What a transformation from the repressed self-loather who had first come to me for
help so many years before! Of course, I can’t say Susan wouldn’t have become the
person she is now without my intervention; but I’m confident those sessions with
me were a key turning point in her life.