The Practice of Spiritual Direction and Counseling
“Be yourself; everyone else is already taken.”
– Oscar Wilde
I have been doing some form of counseling professionally for more than 20 years. I practice pastoral counseling as an ordained Unitarian Universalist Minister fellowshipped with the UU Association of Congregations since 1999. Additionally, I have been a Certified Addictions Counselor since 2017 and I am currently a Certified Addictions Specialist registered in the state of Colorado (ACC.0998383). I am also an unlicensed psychotherapist (formerly labeled as a “registered psychotherapist” under certificate NLC.0104177. Finally, I received my training as a Spiritual Director from the Phoenix Center for Spiritual Direction through an apprenticeship program that provided me with specific training in spiritual direction in light of my 20 years of experience in other counseling professions.
The practices of Pastoral Counseling, Spiritual Direction, and Addictions Counseling are remarkably similar with subtle differences in their application. In all my professional approaches, I use Client-Centered practices. In Client-Centered counseling and spiritual direction, the central hypothesis is that the growth potential of any person will tend to be released in a relationship in which the counselor or spiritual director communicates genuineness, caring, unconditional positive regard, and a deeply sensitive, non-judgmental understanding. Thus, the counselor/spiritual director practices participative and empathic listening, while allowing the client to freely vent his/her/their feelings. I have been engaged in this approach for more than 20 years as an ordained minister including seven years as a hospital chaplain, six of those spent in focused work in addictions chaplaincy.
What is Pastoral Counseling?
Pastoral Counseling is the practice of coming alongside someone, often during significant grief or change. While traditional psychotherapists can have an understanding and acceptance of the role that spirituality can play in a person’s life, a pastoral counselor has a unique grasp of the spiritual resources that a person may bring to bear on their journey. I have studied across the spectrum of the varieties of spiritual and religious experiences people may have and, in my practice, I strive to understand the unique spiritual and religious identities of my clients and how the rituals they practice and the beliefs they hold close to their heart can support them.
What is Spiritual Direction?
Spiritual Direction is the practice of being present to the journey of exploration and discernment that a person does with the guidance of the Divine as that person has come to know and understand the Divine. In Spiritual Direction, the exploration of a person’s path and direction is guided by their own intuition and relationship to the Divine. In spite of the name, a Spiritual Director does not “tell” the client what to do or what God’s will is for them. Rather, through deep listening, reflection, and exploration, the director helps the client connect with their own experience of what the Divine is calling them to do.
What is Addictions Counseling?
Addictions Counseling is a unique practice of guiding someone who is wrestling with addiction along the path to recovery and stability. Supporting everything from abstinence to harm reduction, addiction counselors work with clients to set achievable goals, develop tools for dealing with triggers and cravings, and find support to help them through the cycles of long-term recovery. In my unique practice of addictions counseling with a spiritual frame, I work with clients to explore how spirituality as a whole life experience, whether in a theistic or humanist frame or something in between, can support their recovery. I also work with clients who are using 12 step programs to understand the concept of a Higher Power in their lives which may be a new or alienating concept to them in early recovery.
Regardless of the approach you are engaging (and sometimes you may experience a synergistic blend of all three approaches), the sessions will last about 45-50 minutes. They can take place on Zoom or in person. If we meet in person, we can meet in a private office or in a park, sitting across from each other or walking together. Whatever is most comfortable and possible for you.
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Business hours:
Monday - Friday: 10AM - 6PM
If you are scheduling a session for the first time, please fill out the contact information to the left with a brief note about your goals or interests for spiritual direction and/or counseling.