How to Cope – The Welcoming Approach to Life's Challenges: How You Can Turn Distress into Helpful Action
By Claire Hayes
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About this ebook
Claire Hayes
Dr Claire Hayes has worked in a variety of roles over the past thirty years, including principal teacher, clinical psychologist, lecturer, educational psychologist, executive coach, researcher and clinical director. The focus of her work continues to be on how best to help people cope with whatever is causing them distress. She has developed a particular format known as the ‘Coping Triangle’ to teach the basic principles of cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) as a way of helping people understand the nature of their distress and take practical steps to do something to improve things. Her first book, Stress Relief for Teachers: The Coping Triangle, was published in 2006.Dr Hayes’s work with individuals and organisations has evolved from ‘coping with life’s challenges’ to welcoming them as opportunities to learn, grow and respond proactively. She currently works as a Consultant Clinical Psychologist (www.drclairehayes.ie) and as Clinical Director with Aware (www.aware.ie).
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How to Cope – The Welcoming Approach to Life's Challenges - Claire Hayes
Part 1
The ‘Welcoming Approach’
Introduction
And suddenly you know: it’s time to start
something new and trust the magic of beginnings.
—MEISTER ECKHART
How many of us can honestly say that we welcome every challenge that life brings? While some challenges can be exciting and can stretch us to discover abilities and strengths we never knew we had, others may be very difficult. At any moment we can hear news that causes us to think thoughts such as ‘This is terrible,’ ‘How am I ever going to cope?’ ‘This is all my fault,’ ‘I didn’t do enough,’ or even ‘This is too much—I can’t take any more.’
Thoughts like these can cause us to feel upset, anxious, sad, angry, guilty, embarrassed, ashamed or depressed. Life’s challenges vary and, interestingly, something that may seem overwhelming for one person can be exhilarating for someone else.
Some people are naturally good at coping and tend not to get too distressed by anything. They tend to be flexible and adaptable and are skilled at asking for, and taking, help. Many of us, though, struggle at asking for help, seeing it as a weakness to do so. If we have a lot to deal with already and don’t realise how much of a struggle it is to manage, it may take only a very small challenge to cause us incredible distress. Challenges that we could easily cope with one day might be just too much on a different day. We may react by withdrawing, lashing out, or even harming ourselves or someone else. It can be a relief to remember that we always have choices about how we react to life’s challenges.
This book is a book of hope. While life itself teaches us that life can be challenging, this book invites you to welcome these challenges and the feelings and thoughts that you have about them, so that you are better able to deal with them proactively. It does so by describing the ‘Welcoming Approach’ and illustrating, through a number of case studies, how it can be used to help people develop resilience and strength.
It’s important to emphasise that I have devised each of these case studies specifically for this book. While the people I describe are all fictitious, their challenges are similar to those facing real people whom I have been privileged to work with over the past twenty years as a clinical psychologist and an educational psychologist.
Some of the challenges are universal, while others are very specific. In creating one particular story about a young man who had a heart transplant I was inspired by the courage, dignity and resilience of my friend Aoife, who underwent a double lung transplant in 2013. She has given me her permission to acknowledge her strength in coping with one of life’s greatest challenges.
In writing about the ‘Welcoming Approach’ I have also drawn on a range of learning experiences I have had the opportunity to experience over the past thirty years.
This book is in two parts. The first describes the Welcoming Approach in detail. It presents two case studies to illustrate how our thoughts, beliefs and actions can affect our feelings. Part 2 deals with how the Welcoming Approach can be applied to helping us with particular challenges that we will all face at some stage in our lives: pressure, rejection, loss, failure, success and change. These are not our only life challenges and may not be our greatest. Life is very much an individual experience, and some of the stories you read in this book may not be relevant to you at this time. If that is so I invite you to welcome your feelings, pay attention to your thoughts, question what you believe, and concentrate on what helpful actions you can take.
I hope you will enjoy reading this book and will find it informative. Sometimes looking at life’s challenges can actually result in our feeling pressured and overwhelmed, particularly if we think there is nothing we can do to change things. If that happens to you, please welcome your feelings as indicators that you may need some support at this time, and follow up by talking to someone who cares about you and who is in a position to provide real support. This may be a family member, a friend, or a GP. As you will see, feelings generally make sense, but we don’t need to panic because we have them: we just need to do something about them!
Chapter 1
Welcome to the Welcoming Approach
Céad míle fáilte: A hundred thousand welcomes
Picture a three-year-old child playing. She is holding a balloon and is laughing as it bounces in front of her. Suddenly it breaks free of her grip. She stands puzzled for a moment before beginning to cry. Most of us would do our best to rush to the rescue, jump to catch the balloon, anticipating her grateful smile. Sometimes that may happen; often, though, the balloon ascends quickly out of reach and bursts on the branch of a tree.
It can be very difficult to listen to the cries of the little girl. Many of us would wish at that moment that we had a bigger, brighter, better balloon to give her so as to take her mind off her loss and make her feel happy once more. Few of us would use that moment to explain to her that the rest of her life will be just like this. When she has something precious that she thinks makes her feel happy it can blow away, without any warning, and burst. As we cannot get the original balloon back, some of us might comfort the child and tell her not to worry and that we will buy her an even better balloon. Some of us might scold her for crying, tell her that it was her own fault anyway for not holding on tightly enough, and hope that she will have learnt her lesson for the future.
Will we allow that little girl to express her feelings of upset and anger, or will we teach her to smile and pretend that ‘it doesn’t really matter,’ to make us feel better? Our response as adults will depend on our own understanding of the loss of the balloon for the child, on our own experiences of loss and on our own comfortableness with feelings.
Picture the little girl—let’s call her Anna—going home believing that pain follows joy and that loss follows laughter. As Anna gets older she may become one of the increasing number of people who experience anxiety or depression. She may cling to people or to objects and find change in her life very difficult to cope with. She may develop a more hopeless outlook on life and find it difficult to have anything of beauty or value. ‘What’s the point?’ she may ask, without expecting an answer. ‘Life is only going to destroy it anyway.’
This story can have a different ending. While we may wish to protect Anna from the pain and distress of losing her balloon, our protection might not help her to develop coping skills. Instead we can use the bursting balloon as an opportunity for her to develop resilience and to learn that she is able to cope with upsetting things.
Now think about Richard, one of Anna’s classmates. When he was three years old he fell and hurt his knee, his dog died, and his sister accidentally stood on his favourite toy. Each time something upsetting happened he burst into tears and his mother immediately picked him up and cuddled him. Richard wasn’t able to name his predominant feeling as ‘shame’ as he listened to his father shouting at his mother to stop treating him like a pathetic baby. He had no way of knowing that his father was reacting in this way as a result of his own experiences of being beaten for crying when he was a child. All Richard knew was that it was not all right for him to cry, that he was weak, not strong like his father and not good enough. This led him to cry even more, and while he craved his mother’s comfort he also resented her for treating him like a baby and alienating him from his father.
Richard could not have explained how he felt when he was three years old, when he was thirteen or even when he was thirty. His feeling of confusion grew as he grew older. His uncertainty about when, or even if, it was all right to express feelings grew too. He discovered alcohol when he was fourteen and saw how all his self-doubts and anxieties just disappeared. He didn’t like the look of pain in his mother’s eyes when she realised that he was drinking heavily, though he craved the look of respect he thought he saw in his father’s eyes. Would we be surprised to know that Richard’s first and second marriages failed, that his children were afraid of him, and that he became more deeply unhappy as he grew older?
What’s going on? How is it that, despite an increasing awareness of the importance of the early childhood years, of education, of libraries of self-help books and a range of evidence-based therapies, including cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) and mindfulness-based therapies, the World Health Organisation predicts that by 2030 depression will be the principal global burden of disease, surpassing heart disease and cancer? Could it be that the rate of depression, anxiety, eating disorders, substance abuse and unhappiness is increasing in the world because we strive to feel happy and are not able to cope with not feeling happy?
The Welcoming Approach invites us to welcome our feelings of distress as we would welcome a precious child. It is beautiful to hold a baby who has just been bathed and is wrapped in a warm blanket; it is not so beautiful to have the same baby be sick all over us. We accept, though, that this is what babies do, and we don’t expect them to be all smiles all the time. Our tolerance for cries diminishes as the child gets older.
When we drive a car and a warning light flashes, most of us make arrangements to get the car examined. We heed the warning and we take action. How might life have been for Richard if he had learnt this at a young age? How would the world be if each of us learnt to see our feelings as warnings, to welcome them as warnings and to act on the warnings?
When people are feeling low, upset, angry, anxious or sad, the last thing they might want to do is to welcome those feelings into their lives and into their hearts. Instead they may well do their very best to get rid of them. They may take medication, talk to friends or therapists, eat or drink to excess or perhaps even deny the feelings altogether. The feelings will not go away, however: they will stay there until they are recognised and responded to.
My work as a clinical psychologist involves helping people to recognise and be gentle with these uncomfortable feelings and— to quote the late Susan Jeffers—‘do it anyway.’ The natural instinct for any of us is to avoid something that makes us feel bad. The snag is that by avoiding it we give power to the object itself, as well as to the thoughts that cause us to feel bad. So where does ‘welcoming’ come in?
A few years ago I received an unexpected bill. I was not prepared for the intensity of the feelings of shame, upset and embarrassment I experienced and wondered why my reaction was so extreme. Deciding to ‘practise what I preach,’ I read some of the books I recommend to other people. One of them contained an exercise in which I was to deliberately focus on experiences I had had in the past that made me feel good. As I began to think about this I had memories of many experiences of myself as a child, a teenager and a young woman being welcomed by my parents, my aunts, my grandmothers and my friends. My Aunty Noreen used to say that as a child I brought my own welcome with me and would arrive running towards her with my arms open, ready for the big hug I was expecting. When I reflected on my bill I realised that I could welcome my feelings of distress as a wake-up call for me to be more organised. The more I began to welcome them as an invitation for me to act, the easier it was for me to do something proactive. Then, over time, I did feel better.
Since then I have used the Welcoming Approach with clients who have experienced a wide range of distressing feelings, including anger, anxiety, fear, guilt and shame. This approach uses the ‘Coping Triangle’, which is my way of explaining the basic principles of cognitive behavioural therapy to help people understand how they are feeling, to become aware of their thoughts and beliefs and to focus particularly on how they can act in a helpful way to improve the quality of their lives. Towards the end of the book we will come back to Anna’s and Richard’s stories and see how the Welcoming Approach might help them.
So what is the Welcoming Approach? It involves recognising, accepting and then welcoming feelings as messengers so that we can act proactively to improve our situation. It also involves welcoming the ability we all have to recognise our thoughts and actions as ‘helpful’ or ‘unhelpful’ and how we can then focus on acting in a helpful way. Through this process we become aware of what we believe about ourselves, our lives and our future.
Ultimately, the Welcoming Approach is a gentle and powerful way for us to turn feelings of distress into helpful action.
You may have noticed that I use questions a lot. I do this deliberately. When I was a child, some of my teachers didn’t like me asking ‘stupid questions’. I only learnt gradually that there is no such thing as a stupid question. If we think about what we want to know, we are more likely to find out the answers. Here are some questions for you to ask yourself so that you can maximise your learning from this book.
What does the word ‘welcome’ mean to you? Now picture yourself arriving at someone’s house and receiving a warm welcome. What was it that made you feel welcome? Was it the tone of voice of the person? Was it a hug? Was it that you were immediately offered a cup of tea?
Think about the person you enjoy welcoming most. Why? What is it about him or her that makes it easy for you to be welcoming? How do you demonstrate your welcome? Now take a few moments to read slowly Derek Walcott’s wonderful poem ‘Love After Love.’
The time will come
when, with elation,
you will greet yourself arriving
at your own door, in your own mirror
and each will smile at the other’s welcome,
and say, sit here. Eat.
You will love again the stranger who was your self.
Give wine. Give bread. Give back your heart
to itself, to the stranger who has loved you
all your life, whom you ignored
for another, who knows you by heart.
Take down the love letters from the bookshelf,
the photographs, the desperate notes,
peel your own image from the mirror.
Sit. Feast on your life.
Had you any reaction to this poem as you read it? I had. I had a very strong reaction that took me completely by surprise the first time I read it. I pictured myself hearing my doorbell ring and walking to the door to open it, only to discover with an acute sense of disappointment that