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How To Find a Competent Christian Stepfamily Therapist |
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by Ron L. Deal, M.MFT. Author, The Smart Stepfamily & Founder, Successful Stepfamilies Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist Licensed Professional Counselor
Finding a competent stepfamily therapist can be quite a challenge. Indeed, not all therapists are created equal (i.e., most don't have any specific training in stepfamily dynamics or therapy). So your first option might be to use the personal help options offered by Successful Stepfamilies. You can learn more about our coaching, counseling, and marriage intensives here.
To find a therapist your area, begin by visiting the National Stepfamily Resource Center's web site for a list of proven professionals by state/city: http://www.stepfamilies.info/find-a-professional.php (please note that these may or may not be Christian counselors). You can also locate a Christian counselor through the American Association of Christian Counselors (once at their home page click "Find a Counselor" or call 1-800-526-8673).
If there isn't a therapist in your area, ask your physician, minister, or child's teacher, "To what therapist would you send a friend to see?" Even then, however, the person they suggest might work well with a number of presenting problems, but not with stepfamily issues.
The truth about most counselors is this: they aren't any more informed about stepfamily life than the clients they serve. Many counselors and therapists assume that stepfamily relationships should function just as biological family relationships. Without specific training, counselors can actually be harmful to your marital or stepfamily health. I had one man drive six hours for an appointment with me because the first five therapists he and his stepfamily members saw only worsened his situation. This isn't meant to be a slam against therapist; I happen to be one of them. It's just a reminder that all therapists have a scope of competency. You need to find one whose scope includes stepfamilies.
Questions to Ask: The best way to find a therapist is to interview them by asking a few questions. Use the questions below as a guideline for checking out a potential therapist. A short summary of the kind of answer you want to hear follows each question. Begin the phone call by saying, "Hello. My name is Ron and I'm considering making an appointment. I was wondering if I could ask a few questions about your clinical practice." With their permission, proceed by asking:
1. "Are you a Christian?" "How does your faith make a difference in how you conduct therapy?" Obviously you want a therapist who shares your Christian value system. But it is my experience that many "Christian counselors" operate from a humanistic worldview and conduct therapy no differently than would a secular therapist. If they are not able to articulate their faith and how it is integrated into therapy, thank them for their time and move on.
2. "What kind of therapy training did you receive in graduate school?" There are many different schools of psychotherapy. Counseling and clinical psychology, community counseling, rehabilitation counseling, clinical social worker, and marriage and family therapy are just a few. You want to find someone whose graduate training was primarily in family systems theory. This model of treatment is most effective in working with the relational issues that stepfamilies face.
Marriage and family therapists are the most adequately trained persons with this modality and are equipped to work with individuals, couples, and family units. Some psychology and social work programs are "systems based" as well. If you are unclear about their clinical orientation, ask them what modalities of treatment they subscribe to. Hopefully you will hear "family systems theory" among a handful of others (such as "cognitive-behavioral" or "brief therapy").
3. "What specific training have you had in stepfamily therapy? Again, believe it or not, most therapists have had little or no training in stepfamily dynamics and therapy. The therapist may respond by saying, "I attended a two-hour workshop last year on stepfamilies, but believe I could serve your needs well." Attending a continuing education workshop is better than nothing, but you are hoping to hear them say something like, "I had a required course in my graduate training on stepfamily therapy and have had a great deal of experience in working with stepfamilies throughout my practice" or "I studied stepfamily therapy in a post-graduate course."
4. A good follow up question is, "How might you treat a stepfamily differently than a biological family?" You aren't looking for any specific answer here; you simply want to know if they can tell you the difference. They should be able to give you two or three examples of how stepfamilies differ from biological families or how they might see different groups of people depending on the problems at hand (e.g., children only, biological parents and their children, stepparents individually, just the couple). Listen to their response. Do they stammer through an answer or can they articulate a good answer?
5. "What books on stepfamily life would you recommend?" This will let you know how much they have read on the subject and whether they have a standard book or two they recommend. A good stepfamily therapist with experience can recommend a few books off the top of their head.
6. "Will you see our children as well?" Because children and teens have their own individual issues to work through, finding a therapist who will see children and teens (or at least knows how to incorporate their concerns into family sessions) is important.
When you find someone you feel comfortable with on the phone, attend the first session and then decide if they can help you long term. Above all, bath this decision in prayer as you seek someone who can provide wise counsel.
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#1: by natalie porter on 05.05.2009 @ 08:07am CDT
hi i have just gotten married a month ago. i am divorced but my husbands wife died. alot of the material i have viewed on your site seems to just refer to divorce, i am finding it very difficult to know how to help the kids move on in their grief and bring their memories of their mum with them but am feeling suffocated by it all. alot of pressure from grandparents and uncles/aunts and just trying not to feel jealous of a dead wife!!!!! help my husband and i are both christians.. |
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#2: by Ron Deal on 05.05.2009 @ 08:38am CDT
Natalie--
Excellent question. Because loss gave birth to your new family (as it does in all stepfamilies) you are a grief counselor, even if you didn't anticipate becoming one.
We do have many articles addressing stepfamilies after both death and divorce. Use the search box (upper left-hand corner of this web page) and search "loss". You'll find many articles such as this one: http://www.successfulstepfamilies.com/view/528.
Blessings! |
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#3: by Betti on 05.19.2009 @ 01:47am CDT
Natalie, 40 years ago I was in the spot you are in! We have survived, but it was very difficult. Several things I have learned:
1. Be sure your husband handles discipline problems with his biological children. I wish I had known how important that is. I read this in Ron's book, but 38 years too late! ". . .one would naturally assume that since authoritative parenting is best for children, stepparents would need to begin there. Surprisingly, research suggests this is not so, at least not at first. . ." When I was a divorced single mother, I needed some counseling in dealing with my kids. I was shown that authoratative parenting was the way to go. It helped. So, when I married a widower with three sons of his own, I naturally thought that was what I should do! Wrong!!!
2. Dealing with the children's maternal aunts, uncles, and grandparents was very difficult for me. I think it would help if your husband made it clear that you are now his wife, that he loves you, that you are first in his affection. That is tough!!! He probably wants his deceased wife's family to feel very certain that the children will still be available to them, that nothing will change just because he has remarried. No easy answers, but be certain that you both make your marriage a priority. Don't pay so much attention to the important task of child rearing, that you neglect your own needs as a couple.
Remember, if you can, that your new family is a REAL family, but it does not replace the family that was broken by death. This is not easy, I know . . .
God bless you. May He be very near you, and help and comfort you -- as well as the children. |
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