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7/30/2019 12 Guidelines
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These guidelins are taken from the article:
Hans Gerding: Philosophical Counseling as Part of Clinical Parapsychology
that will appear in 2010, in a book about clinical parapsychology.
Guidelines for Philosophical Counseling of Exceptional Experiences
Next, a set of guidelines will be presented that was developed in the philosophical practice under
discussion. Further comparison with methods used in other relevant practices,1 will result in the
composition of a more general catalogue of guidelines for the philosophical counselor who works
with exceptional experiences.
In general, we suggest the philosophical counselor should steer a course in which the
following items are of importance.
(1) First and foremost, a philosophical counselor has to judge whether or not the clientsexperience could be either a warning sign indicative of an acute physical or psychological
disorder, or could be the cause of such disorders. In both cases, regular medical treatment should
be recommended to the client. Where no such risk is present, we may turn to the next items on the
list.
(2) From the start, the counselor has to make clear that he or she works with an openapproach that does not conform to a purely reductionistic interpretation. The importance of this
stance cannot be overestimated. To the experiencer, the counselors opinion on the content of
exceptional experiences is a crucial and most decisive element. Reasons for doubts about the
conceptual openness of a philosophical counselor may inhibit a client and may block off his or
her real story.
(3) The counselor should identify the range of positive and negative preconceptions and
stereotypes that the experiencer may hold on exceptional experiences in general.(4) The counselor should inform the experiencer on exceptional experiences in general, and
he or she should focus on the fact that such experiences generally may have a variety of possible
interpretations. Some experiencers may have to learn to distance themselves from reductionistic
inclinations they may have; others, in contrast, should be advised on the fact that the feltmeaningfulness of the exceptional experience often does not guarantee exactness, nor detailed
perceptions. In this latter case, the experiencer must be brought to understand that the experience
may not be a reliable source of information on, for instance, Gods predestination of men, or on
the phenomenology of a world of deceased loved ones, on experiencers past lives, or on what
angels and devils look like.(5) With that in mind, the counselor has to work out a more detailed and transparent account
of the experience. This requires a sequence of relevant and very specific questions, plus the
counselors ability to refrain from premature, injudicious conclusions.2
(6) Being able to demonstrate this specific interviewing competence is therapeutically
productive in itself: Showing a non-reductionistic expert attitude proves the counselor to be
trustworthy and authenticqualities that will reassure the experiencer.
(7) To characterize and illustrate the relativity of the often exotic nature of exceptional
experiences, the counselor should point out that millions of people have gone through very
1 These points are partly taken from Greyson (2000, pp. 330- 331) and Grof & Grof (1989, pp. 194- 195), partly
also from Targ (2001, p. 243) and from Kramer (1993, pp. 131-137).2 Failure to recognize a Kundalini-experience, may undo the therapeutic alliance and hinder spiritual growth
(Scotton, 1996, p. 265).
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similar experiences. This reduction of the perceived exclusiveness of the experience will obstruct
any megalomanic pretension on the part of the experient that may be aroused by viewing the
experience as a unique inspiration. It also will help to neutralize aspects of an experience that may
be frightening to the experient, and it can offer a comforting recognition in the case the
experiencer has feelings of isolation.
(8) Although the particular experience may not always be desirable, the experiencer still hasto deal with the fact that it is his or her own. To ascribe its cause to others or to inaccessible
external conditions is not a constructive approach. Instead of encouraging such projections, the
counselor is well-advised to stimulate acceptance and subjective confrontation of the respective
experience.(9) Certain aspects of exceptional experiences may contain verifiable elements, such as, for
example, in cases of telepathy, clairvoyance, precognition, out-of-body experiences, or presumed
past-lives memories. Whenever possible, checking and confirming such facts is important, for
although this will not strictly rule out multi-interpretability, it will undermine any normal
reductionistic explanations, and it may facilitate viable interpretations in terms of numinosity.3
(10) It is important that counselor and experient agree on the presupposition that the
experience may have a transformative or healing potential, and may even be an indication ofsome form of guiding influence in a process of self-realization and spiritual growth.
(11) When appropriate, the experiencer may be advised to write down reports and
reflections on his or her experiences. This method may stimulate the reflection on and integration
of the experiences. It may also reveal motives that could underlie the process.
(12) Depending on what has been discussed, a client may be directed to certain
literature sources and/or to specific courses.
3 Tarazi described how a therapist stimulated his client (in the USA) to check the many verifiable elements of her
imagery (a previous life in Spain) produced under hypnosis. Finding out that in reality nothing corresponded to her
imagery, the therapist reasoned, would reduce her obsession with this former life. However, manycorrespondences were indeed found. This was important for judging the case through both client and therapist
(Tarazi, 1990).
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