- Recite tales of people who are a lot worse off, and call the counselee a cry baby.
- Engage the counselor's mother-in-law as a co-therapist.
- Don't put a door on your office.
- Sing songs such as "Put On a Happy Face" and "Don't Worry; Be Happy" to counselees.
- Step out of the office and start laughing uproariously.
- Tell the counselee that although you can't figure out a solution to the problem, you'll bring it up in the sermon on Sunday and see if anybody has any ideas.
- Casually catch up on your reading while counselees bare their deepest problems.
- Tell the counselee you are videotaping the session for replay on the local cable program "Candid Clergy."
- Put a bumper sticker on your car: I'D RATHER NOT BE COUNSELING.
- Refer them to a helpful article in your favorite professional journal: the National Enquirer.
- Suggest counseling by fax machine.
- In front of the counselee, phone your spouse and ask for his or her opinion on what to do.
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Saturday, July 22, 2006
For My Preacher Friends
With tongue in cheek, Paul Bailey writes: Not every pastor enjoys counseling. [Or, like me, I suspect they feel terribly inadequate - FW] But, other than skipping town, how can you decrease the demand? Here, based on specious clinical research, are a dozen methods guaranteed to keep counseling off your to-do list.
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