Stephen Murphy-Shigematsu - Multicultural Encounters
Stephen Murphy-Shigematsu - Multicultural Encounters
Stephen Murphy-Shigematsu - Multicultural Encounters
Encounters
Case Narratives from a
Counseling Practice
Stephen Murphy-Shigematsu
Published by Teachers College Press, 1234 Amsterdam Avenue, New York, NY 10027
Copyright 2002 by Teachers College, Columbia University
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any
form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, or any information
storage and retrieval system, without permission from the publisher.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Murphy-Shigematsu, Stephen
Multicultural encounters : case narratives from a counseling practice /
Stephen Murphy-Shigematsu.
p. cm. (Multicultural foundations of psychology and counseling)
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 0-8077-4259-7 (alk. cloth) ISBN 0-8077-4258-9 (pbk. : alk. paper)
1. Cross-cultural counseling 2. Cross-cultural counselingCase studies. I. Title.
II. Series.
BF637.C6 M86 2002
158'.3dc21
2002071972
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06 05
04
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02
Contents
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ix
1 Prologue
Ethnic Narratives
An Integrative Multicultural Counseling Framework
Counseling as Art and Narrative
The Reflexive Counselor
Writing Stories of Counseling and Development
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Contents
6 Epilogue
Understanding the Clients Worldview
Awareness of Our Own Worldview
Balancing Worldviews
Travelers and Guides
References
Index
About the Author
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Series Foreword
Counselors and other mental health professionals are increasingly encountering clients who differ from them in terms of race, culture, and ethnicity.
Unfortunately, most clinicians have been trained in psychological models
derived primarily from a Euro American worldview. As a result, few are
culturally competentthat is, prepared to understand how culture affects
the definitions of normality and abnormality, as well as manifestations of
mental disorders, and awareness of the need to balance culture-universal
and culture-specific approaches in treating a diverse population.
Multicultural Encounters: Case Narratives from a Counseling Practice transports the readers into the inner world of the client, taking us on a multicultural journey where issues of race, culture, and ethnicity are revealed
as dynamic and powerful dimensions of human existence. Stephen
Murphy-Shigematsu does a superb job in bringing to life the hopes, fears,
conflicts and aspirations of people through their life storiesstories that
illustrate the importance of culture. His comprehensive narratives allow
us to view the human condition holistically: Clients possess individual,
group, and universal identities that are inseparable. His insightful analysis forces us to understand why Euro American atomistic approaches that
analyze clients into thinking, feeling, or behaving beings are too limited
and fail to recognize that we are all of these and more. He reminds us
throughout that we are also social, political, spiritual, and cultural beings.
When first published in 1955, Robert Lindners historic book The FiftyMinute Hour mesmerized professionals and the lay public alike with its
description of the inner workings of traditional therapy. While fascinating and influential, its monocultural focus was a disservice to the clinical
field because it served to perpetuate the notion that culture was unimportant in therapy. This bias was largely invisible to readers, since the
profession at that time lacked a multicultural lens by which to view the
clinical encounter. Murphy-Shigematsus book is truly revolutionary and
brings a more complex, comprehensive narrative to the therapeutic table.
In his book, we learn to recognize the delicate balance that characterizes
individually and culturally sensitive therapy. The author is among the first
to present clinical acumen in multicultural narrative form, thus enriching
our understanding of client dynamics and the human condition. This book
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Series Foreword
serves as a valuable treasure trove of stories that professionals and students can use to understand multicultural thought and through that understanding to enhance their practice.
The constant theme throughout these therapeutic narratives is that
meaningful work with clients must consider each unique individual in his
or her social and cultural context. Murphy-Shigematsus book brings us
fascinating narratives of people within cultural systems; as their narratives
unfold, so does the complexity of their interrelationships and interactions.
It is not just race and ethnicity but also important sociodemographic markers, like class and gender, that define culturally sensitive counseling and
therapy.
As co-editors of the new series from Teacher College Press on the
Multicultural Foundations of Psychology and Counseling, we are delighted to
present Stephen Murphy-Shigematsus book. We consider it one of the
truly foundational contributions to the practice of multicultural counseling and therapy. This is not just a book to be read and studied, but also
one to enjoy.
Allen E. Ivey, Distinguished University Professor (Emeritus)
University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Derald Wing Sue, Professor
Teachers College, Columbia University
Acknowledgments
To my family, who nourished and sustained me and whose love is written
on these pages.
To the mentors who guided, inspired, and believed in me.
To the persons who shared their stories.
To the friends who encouraged me.
To those who supported and worked directly on the book.
To all a deep thanks and appreciation.
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Multicultural
Encounters
Case Narratives from a
Counseling Practice
CHAPTER 1
Prologue
So healing is the receiving and full understanding of the story so that strangers
can recognize in the eyes of their host their own unique way that leads them to
the present and suggests the direction in which to go.
(Nouwen, 1966, p. 68)
One day when I was a student in graduate school, the professor asked the
class to discuss whether there was enough culture and race in our counseling psychology curriculum. To my surprise, several classmates claimed
that since we had a cross-racial counseling course, there was sufficient
attention given to these issues. I countered that, other than the minorities, few students took this course, and voiced my feeling that issues of
culture and race needed to be integrated into every class. The discussion
solidified my position as an advocate of the centrality of cultural concerns
in counseling and my ardent pursuit of clinical training, education, and
research in this area.
Over the years I have heard numerous grievances from persons dissatisfied with their counselors inability to understand them. This impotence was sometimes attributed to the counselors race, but usually to a
lack of awareness of and sensitivity to the persons cultural background
and an absence of curiosity and openness to exploring it. Being viewed
through the cultural lens of such a counselor, they felt defective, deficient, underdeveloped, or otherwise labeled simply for their racial appearance, values, or ways of being to which they had been socialized. The
counselors, they claimed, were not even aware that they were looking
through a cultural lens, but simply assumed that everyone saw the world
as they did. These reports have encouraged me to continue to make culture an integral part of the education of mental health professionals.
However, I have often felt discouraged by the effects of my efforts. One
problem became clear to me as I was relating the story of a Korean woman
who was troubled by her relationship with a manipulative mother, and
her dream that revealed the underlying tension between them. The story
1
Multicultural Encounters
Prologue
ETHNIC NARRATIVES
In these circumstances, the idea that there is a fixed, invariant, and essential
Black identity that can be held constant while supposedly superficial differences like money, power, and sex proliferate is a defeat. . . . In its strongest
form, this type of essentialism represents the wholesale substitution of therapy
for political agency.
(Gilroy, 1995, pp. 1617)
The discourses on ethnic minorities that have thrust the field of multicultural counseling from the margins onto center stage have inherent limitations. The problem is that it is extremely difficult to teach about something that is supposedly specific to a whole group without generalizing.
Although we know that we are not supposed to essentialize, we find it
hard to talk about groups without doing so. So we acknowledge the di-
Multicultural Encounters
Prologue
hungered for a form of writing that allows us entry into the intimacies of
individual lives. Each individual who comes before us lives not as an African American or Asian American programmed with cultural or racial traits, but as a human being going through life agonizing over decisions, suffering injuries, struggling with isolation, trying to find meaning,
enduring losses, achieving insights, confronting mortality, and finding
moments of happiness. That all of these experiences are deeply influenced
by culture and race does not make them any less human. If we lose sight
of this we are lost as counselors. When we see someone more as Black (or
White) than as a human being, our connection is dangerously warped
(Vontress, 1979).
By presenting individual stories in this book, I am suggesting that the
demands on counselors go beyond the acquisition of culture-specific, generalized group knowledge, and must include the complexities of cultural
borderlands and multiple levels of cultural realities in a persons life. We
who work with clients from diverse backgrounds are challenged to cultivate a respectful curiosity and openness that allows us to look beyond our
assumptions and stereotypes to learn from the client. Multicultural counseling is considered a consciousness that guides all counseling, rather than
a set of skills and generalized knowledge.
Comprising narratives from the therapy process that emphasize both
the clients healing and the counselors development, this book tells the
stories of five persons who come from a variety of cultural backgrounds,
all clients with whom I have worked. Although the cultural backgrounds
of the clients may be unfamiliar to some readers, I believe that the stories
presented here have relevance to the field of mental health in general.
They are the stories of people of different cultures; they are also human
and existential stories of unique individuals.
Although clinical psychology and psychiatry have a long tradition of
emphasizing the presentation of individual cases, it is only from the 1980s
that psychological processes have been reinterpreted in light of recent
writings about narrative (Bruner, 1990; Sarbin, 1986; Spence, 1984). This
view focuses on how human experience is organized, remembered, and
transformed through stories people tell about their lives. Humans give
meaning to their lives in narrative terms by seeing themselves as living in
the drama of particular stories.
In this book I present an approach that experiments with narrative
clinical ethnographies to complement existing discourses of multicultural
counseling. These are individual stories and cultural generalizations are
avoided. Showing the actual circumstances and detailed history of individuals and their relationships suggests that such particulars are always
present and crucial to the experience of any individual. Such narratives
Multicultural Encounters
depict both human similarity and variability within groups and across
groups as well as previously unarticulated experiences of borderlands. This
approach celebrates the unity to be found in a diversity of individual narratives rather than searching for grand unifying narratives in a system of
similarities (Hayes, 1994).
The therapy presented in this book is grounded in an integrative framework of multicultural counseling and therapy developed by Derald Wing
Sue and colleagues (Sue, Ivey, & Pedersen, 1996). This is a metatheoretical
approach that recognizes that all helping methods exist within a cultural
context and represent different worldviews. Conventional counseling is
regarded as just one approach among multiple helping roles developed by
culturally different groups around the world.
Person-Centered and Culture-Centered
Operating within the structure of conventional counseling, this multicultural approach emphasizes that our effectiveness is enhanced when we
set goals and use methods that are congruent with the life experience and
cultural values of the client. Responding to a particular clients needs may
include modifying the kind of relationship that we offer. Working with
individuals from more traditional cultures who expect greater authority
in a counselor challenges us to recognize the limitations on individual freedom imposed by a persons culture and society, while maintaining liberation as expanding consciousness of self in relation to others as a basic goal
of counseling.
While this approach is person-centered, it is also culture-centered in
the sense of recognizing that reality is based not on absolute truth but on
understanding complex and dynamic relationships in a cultural context.
A culture-centered approach views the clients situation as formed and
embedded in multiple levels of experiences and contexts with every person having three basic aspects: He or she is like all others, like some others,
and like no others (Allport, 1962). A simultaneously integrated perspec-
Prologue
Multicultural Encounters
Prologue
meaning of their experiential world (Neimeyer, 1995). Reality may therefore be invented, and also situated in a context (Efran & Clarfield, 1996).
This consciousness that the belief systems and apparent realities are socially
constructed rather than given, and hence can be constituted very differently
in various cultures, is especially important in multicultural situations. The
liberating view of problems as problems, rather than persons as problems,
works against our professional desire to classify, diagnose, and label and the
biases we exhibit in these acts (White & Epston, 1990). This view guards
against the tendency in individual therapies to emphasize responsibility for
the problem in the client, failing to see how fault can also lie in the environment and therefore blaming the victim (Sue, 1995).
The nature of the counseling in this book is further guided by an
emphasis on interpreting the linguistic and discursive means by which
people construct their selves. The structure of human lives is viewed as
inherently narrative in form, in which people constitute and are constituted by the stories that we live and the stories that we tell (Spence, 1984).
Because counseling is sought when our stories become ineffective, it involves the editing of old restrictive stories and the composing of new liberating stories (Gergen & Kaye, 1996). Attention is also placed on the reflexivity of counselors in viewing the explication and reconstruction of their
own therapeutic stories over the course of therapy.
Weaknesses, Excesses, and Balance
Although each of these traditions is instructive, they all have their own
particular weaknesses and excesses. Traditional therapies are often criticized
as maintainers of the status quo, by their lack of attention to social change
and personal liberation (De Vos, 1982). Their philosophies and goals usually seem to be simply to help the person adjust to the society rather than to
encourage individual or environmental change. The focus on gratitude,
respect for those in positions of authority, and acceptance of fate can lead
to self-defeating, passive forms of resignation to an oppressive structure.
Humanism is discredited in poststructural and postmodern circles as a
philosophy that has continually masked the persistence of systematic social
differences by appealing to an allegedly universal individual as hero and
autonomous subject (Clifford, 1980). It is attacked for its failure to see that
its essential human has culturally and socially specific characteristics that
exclude most humans. The refusal to see how we as subjects are constructed
in discourses related to power limits the usefulness of humanism.
The postmodern approaches are also criticized as exaggerated and
utilitarian (Held, 1995). Is truth simply what works for you? The claim
that there are multiple realities can mean that no one can say that one
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Multicultural Encounters
way is better than another. The rejection of all attempts to posit essentials
and universals can be extreme in its nihilism when declaring that nothing
is real and nothing is authentic. Emphasis on the story can become a denial of experience, and an overemphasis on spoken words is inappropriate for individuals from certain cultural backgrounds. Assertions that reality is constructed can lead to denial that there are also essential facts of
experience (Schwarz, 1998).
The integration of these and other theories in clinical practice is often
problematic. Paradoxes and contradictions abound as we attempt to embrace certain principles while accepting their limitations. The concept of
intentionality can be useful as a key existential construct that holds that
people can be forward-moving and can act on the world, yet must remain
keenly aware that the world acts on them as well (Ivey et al., 1997). We
could also envision a tactical humanism in which we are liberated by a
sense of infinite possibility that is balanced with an awareness of cultural
limitations (Abu-Lughod, 1991).
An integrative approach attempts a harmony of alternative, indigenous,
and mainstream therapeutic traditions, modified by a consciousness of the
centrality of culture and a philosophical context of social constructivism.
Integration of different schools of therapy could also be described as striving for balance in which various perspectives are regarded as valuable contributions to our understanding. Balance means that understanding and
reconciling discordant opposites and tolerating inconsistency and dissonance
are vital capacities for the counselor to cultivate (Pedersen, 1997).
We are challenged to maintain balance in many ways:
Respect for individual satisfaction and free choice with an appreciation of the individual as embedded in family and society.
Belief in the necessity of assumption of personal responsibility for
present actions and therapeutic change with knowledge of the blame
that can be attributed to others for ones problems.
Emphasis on verbal expression with an understanding of the nonverbal intuitive, indirect manner of communication.
Appreciation of the value of contemplation with acknowledgement
of the need for action.
Attention to differences with focus on commonalties.
Utilization of cultural identity and other stage theories of development with a cognizance of the fluid, unpredictable, uncategorizable
nature of a life story.
Respect for the scientific methods of psychology with an awareness
of the artistic nature of counseling and the mystical nature of our
spiritual connections.
Prologue
11
Although approaches to counseling that outline clear stages and strategies are expanding the possibilities of psychotherapy as a science, they still
fail to account for the artistic factor in what we do. There is an undefined
quality of therapy that limits our ability to describe exactly what happens
and what heals. Resisting the allure of becoming a follower of an orthodox method of doing therapy means attempting to respond to the individuality of each client and accepting the ultimate uncertainty of what
occurs in the therapeutic situation.
I am reminded of a woman in Japan who prepares delicious natural
food for troubled guests who come from near and far for her therapeutic
meals. She never uses a recipe but tunes in to the essence of the vegetables,
which she has grown herself, and senses just how much each needs of
various spices and preparations to acquire their ultimate taste. Each individual piece of vegetable or fruit she touches is different and therefore each
product is also unique and not reproducible with a cookbook.
Similarly, counselors are challenged to attempt to tune in to the essence of the person, both like and unlike any other person who has sat
with them before. We can try to tolerate the anxiety of not knowing, the
feelings of helplessness, and the impulse to withdraw from the clients
experience (Shainberg, 1983). Together with the client we may attempt
to engage in a struggle to discover an insight, a moment of awareness,
trusting in our sensitivity and intuition to introduce what will enhance
our understanding. Without a manual there are no predetermined steps
and interventions to follow but all depends on the particular persons state
at that precise moment. Diagnosis may consist of a constant checking of
where a particular client is in a particular moment, and therapy of our
attempts to relate with them in each moment. A sensitive therapist relates differently with different clients, and with the same client at different times (Kahn, 1997).
This book paints personal portraits of some existential human dramas
of struggles with freedom, isolation, and meaning. Humans are seen as
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Multicultural Encounters
Prologue
13
Counselors also can tell stories that help clients to make sense of their
lives (Omer, 1998). These may be related to culturally appropriate and
powerful myths or master narratives that make sense of human weakness,
actions, and suffering (Harter, 1995). Or we may employ strategic metaphors that attempt to reduce distance from emotions such as rage or humiliation and allow the person to gain access to the feelings he or she denies
when asked directly about them. We may help clients to see how they are
caught in a web of largely unconscious metaphors and to escape and create new ones.
Since we are listening for the unique and fascinating stories in each
persons life, counseling can be seen as closely linked to the artistic and
imaginative process of storytelling. In this sense, it is very much a creative
act. Jung (1965) asserted that he was intentionally unsystematic, because
therapy with individuals demands individual understanding and a different language for every patient. Yalom (1989) carries this concept even
further by suggesting that if we take seriously the notion of uniqueness,
we need to invent a new therapy for each client.
Therapy is viewed as a heroic and very personal quest, both for the
individual and for the therapist, who is simultaneously engaged in the
process. Understanding and accepting our own experiences and biases that
assist and impede us in seeing others more clearly is therefore regarded as
an integral part of therapy. Self-awareness is a source of empathic experiencing and our greatest aid in escaping the inevitable limitations in understanding others. Obvious gender, ethnic, class, or national differences are
only extreme forms of other, less apparent, cultural differences between
client and counselor. As we recognize these differences and begin to close
the gapsdiscovering new ways of seeing and being togetherthe stories of client and counselor come together with each life course altered by
the experience (Howard, 1991).
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Multicultural Encounters
Prologue
15
over the course of treatment in the same terms as the narrative revisions
made by clients. The therapeutic encounters here reflect a constructivist
position that the therapist is not acting as a blank screen but is engaged in a
co-constructive process where the therapists hopes, fears, and life experiences play an important role in shaping the unfolding of the clients life story.
The therapist attempts to face the anxiety and use the reality created between himself or herself and clients in his or her own life (Leitner, 1995).
The challenge is seen as the negotiation, renegotiation, construction, and
co-construction of viable and sustainable ways of being for both the individual and the therapist.
No matter how well we prepare ourselves professionally, the encounter
with another human being seeking relief from suffering invariably challenges us in unexpected ways. The therapeutic encounter, like any intimate relationship, is full of mystery, surprise, and unpredictable twists and
turns. If we are honest, we must admit that we are often unsure and at a
loss about how to be helpful. When we perceive this situation as a threat
to our sense of expertise, we may see it as a sign of failure or defeat. But
if we can accept these moments of uncertainty, they can be opportunities
for opening to occur (Katz, 1999). They challenge us to let go of our mental agenda, put aside our cherished theories and beliefs for a moment, and
pay closer attention to the person with us, forcing us into a more direct
relationship.
Accepting our helplessness and vulnerability forces us to slow down,
become more attentive, and waitwhich allows space for creative possibilities and a larger intelligence in us to take over (Welwood, 1983a). The
most effective healing occurs when we drop the attachment to being the
expert and open ourselves to the client (Morimoto, 1999). We often resist
this call because we are threatened by the fears and anxieties of the client
that too closely mirror those unresolved areas in our own life (Yalom,
1980). Yet one hopes that the connection with the client keeps opening
our heart despite our attempts to pull back and assume a more distant,
safe, and professional position (Katz, 1999).
Opening to a clients situation allows a counselor a chance to work on
these issues in ones own life. Struggling with ones own resistances to this
kind of engagement with a client reveals new awareness and wonder in
counseling. I have often been grateful to clients for waking me up from
my numb, half-asleep, preoccupied state of being through sharing the
genuineness of their painful searching. Without losing my boundaries, the
more I can let myself experience what the other persons reality feels like
the better I am able to respond from a place of true empathy and compassion (Welwood, 1983a).
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Multicultural Encounters
Prologue
17
you, what you bring forth will save you. If you do not bring forth what is
within you, what you do not bring forth will destroy you. These words
helped me to recognize our work as something to be shared, thereby overcoming an uneasiness with the self-centered, egotistic arrogance of presuming that writing about ones experiences and reflections would be of
value to others.
The concern that one must know more before writing a book was
relieved by words from Fijian healers that the straight path is silent and
humble work in which one keeps to the truth, saying only what one knows,
no more and no less (Katz, 1999). This is what I try to do in my counseling and teaching, and in my daily life, and adopting a different voice in
my writing would be false and inappropriate. Therefore, in this book, I have
tried to tell only what I know: no more, no less. But it has not been an
easy challenge. The temptation to want to tell more than I know in an
attempt to earn the respect and admiration of readers has been there
throughout my writing. I hope that I have not succumbed to this seduction too often.
My hope in writing this book is that those who read it will be better
able to provide help to those they meetassisting friends, colleagues, and
clients to be free in whatever responsible way the person chooses. While
we are all under cultural constraints, we are also endowed with the ultimate freedom of controlling our own minds and therefore our own reality. It is my hope that counselors can have some positive influence on this
freedom in the persons we encounter.
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Multicultural Encounters
CHAPTER 2
19
the way we look. Rather than this being an oversight, our lack of attention to a common concern of most people indicated our mutual awareness that as two mixed-bloods we would stand out in the crowd and recognize each other instantly.
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Multicultural Encounters
Hideo looked uncomfortable, not just from the heat but also I sensed
from the tension he felt about the meeting. He offered just brief answers
to my small talk about the weather and the town, so I asked him about
his desire to engage in counseling.
Yeah, my mother thinks I need counseling.
What do you think?
I think Id like to try it.
I was surprised to learn that Hideo had already been to a counselor,
just a few months before. But it turned out that he had been just once, so
I asked him why he had not gone back.
He paused a while before answering.
She said she knew what the problem was, but she was wrong.
And what did she say was the problem?
She said it was the bullying . . . but its not.
Your mother thinks so too?
Yeah.
And what do you think is the problem?
Im not sure.
Well, what is bothering you the most now?
A lengthy silence ensued until he finally spoke.
I started working in a gas station, but I have trouble talking with
people. I start to feel uncomfortable and feel like I want to get away. I think
people are uncomfortable with me too.
Through more questioning I found out that after finishing junior high,
Hideo had mostly stayed at home for the past 3 years, getting a high school
diploma through night school. Now he had decided to take a part-time
job and his anxieties had reemerged. He felt socially awkward and excessively nervous and didnt know how to reach out and make contact and
open himself to people.
And he had a sense of urgency. He was approaching his 20th birthdaythe ritual time of passage into adulthood in Japan. He felt that he
did not want to become an adult in such bad shape and wished to change
himself. I admired his courage and determination and wanted to support
his efforts. I hoped that his desire to change by his next birthday and my
imminent departure from Okinawa would give us the reality of a limited
time frame that could work to our advantage by increasing the efficiency
of therapy.
I suggested we meet once a week until the end of March, and then
we could talk about whether to continue or not. In any case, I informed
him that I would only be in Okinawa until September, when I would be
returning to my job in Tokyo. That gave us only 6 months.
21
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Multicultural Encounters
23
had decided to live together. She spoke a little English, and he very little
Japanese, but perhaps their inability to communicate had enhanced their
romantic fantasies.
She described a struggle with depression over the past several years
since the death of her mother, and appeared so needy that I wondered
who should be in therapy, son or mother. Although family therapy with
the mother might have been beneficial, because of Hideos desire for individual therapy and his extreme difficulty of speaking in front of her, I
decided to proceed privately, with the expectation that I might need to
invite the mother in again at some point.
The meeting with Hideos mother gave me a more complete picture.
His father had been emotionally distant and a verbally and physically inexpressive man who maintained a formal relationship with his son. Young
and needy himself, he had resented the attention Hideo received from his
mother. But after being rejected by her family and abandoned by Hideos
father, she had probably turned to her son for emotional comfort and intimacy. As a result, Hideos relationship with his mother had been exclusive, overly intimate, and prolonged in its closeness.
Hideo had missed school for a long time in junior high. Like most
school-refusal children, he was very close to his mother and, of course,
distant from his absent father. I assumed that these unclear generational
boundaries had interfered with Hideos developmental tasks of adolescence
and his psychological separation from his mother. And the resolution of
this conflict through identification with the father had not been possible
for Hideo. His adolescence had been arrested in terms of the development
of sexuality, autonomy, and social relations. It appeared equally hard for
his mother to separate from her now-adolescent child.
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Multicultural Encounters
25
ions, inclinations; he did not seem to know what he felt or what he wanted.
I began to wonder about the scholarly claim that Japanese people lack an
authentic self. It could be some time, I thought, before he could articulate
what was really bothering him, or trust me and therapy enough to be able
to reveal the source of his anxiety. Although he was attuned to others
feelings, needs, and moods, he was insensitive to his own feelings and had
little idea how to express them directly.
Hideo complained of having no emotions and no desires; therefore any
actions were too much for him to attempt. He described feelings of being
like a stranger, looking at others as though they were living in another
world, one inaccessible to him. But Hideo desired to be a part of that world
and the smiles and laughter of others made him envious. There was anger
behind his calm demeanor. He felt powerless in his life and incapable of
commitment to any options, all of which seemed unsatisfactory. He was
trapped, plunged into darkness, and afraid to leave his small world.
But alienation can potentially serve as motivation for the pursuit of
greater meaning and connection and new contexts for understanding. Now
that Hideo had begun to reject how he clung to and yet despised his alienation, he could open to alternative ways of viewing the world and his place
in it. This is the growth that I hoped to support as his therapist.
Searching for a foothold, I attempted to help him work on his life situation but made little progress. We talked about his work and focused on
some cognitive and behavioral strategies he might try. But he seemed to
resist any suggestions of how he might change his present situation, and
after a few sessions the therapy seemed stuck.
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Multicultural Encounters
but somehow the image of a Japanese woman kissing her grown son on
the lips seemed too incongruous to me.
Hideo was looking at me expectantly, and waiting for my answer. Now
what did he want me say? Was he simply asking me as a professional
psychologist to confirm his suspicions that his mother was acting a little
strange? Or to assert that she was normal? Was he releasing a family secret from its cage, hoping to dispel its power over him? Could it be that he
had never been able to ask another person this strange question? I felt I
needed to clarify the situation before passing judgment. But first I wanted
to acknowledge Hideos disclosure. This was clearly a turning point in
therapy and I wanted Hideo to realize the importance of what he had dared
to do.
I suppose its hard for you to ask that question.
Hideo hesitated before saying, I guess it has bothered me, but I
couldnt ask anyone about it.
Well, this kind of family situation can be hard to talk about, maybe
embarrassing for you or for your mother.
Hideo nodded as if he understood that I understood.
I appreciate your sharing this with me. And how does it make you
feel?
A little uncomfortable.
Have you ever told her that?
Yeah, I told her but she just says I cant help it . . . I love you . . .
Your fathers American . . . We dont have to do the Japanese way, were
Okinawan! She just says a lot of things that dont make any sense.
So she didnt seem to understand that it upsets you?
Hideo nodded.
Well, I guess a lot depends on the age of the children, and generally
when kids reach puberty mothers arent as physical with their sons. In
some countries, its more normal to hug and kiss. I dont know about
Okinawa, but in other parts of Japan where I have lived, Ive never heard
of mothers kissing kids on the lips. I think that most mothers, once boys
are no longer little, become more reserved in their touching. Its a way of
recognizing that the boy has grown up.
I could tell by the look on his face that Hideo wanted me to say more.
I was concerned with how he felt about his mothers behavior and her
awareness of his feelings. Whether kissing a male child on the lips should
be classified as an abnormal activity in Okinawa was less important to me
than the fact that it made him very uncomfortable and yet his mother
persisted in doing it and Hideo protested only mildly.
So I told him, I guess the important thing is that it makes you uncomfortable; I think a lot of people would feel the same. It would have
27
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Multicultural Encounters
great relief it is to people to simply discover that they are not alone, that
others share the same dilemmas and life experiences.
I could now understand why Hideo had insisted that the bullying was
not the problem. He had resisted his mothers and his previous therapists
attempts to begin therapy there because he knew that he was more concerned about something else. But at that time he was either unable or
unwilling to articulate his concern. I assumed that his simple question
revealed a far deeper fear of the erotic tension between him and his mother,
and of her refusal to treat him as the young man he had become.
29
questions about the girl and why I was playing with her and things like
that. She acted like she was angry but I couldnt understand why.
Why do you think she may have been angry?
I dont know.
Did you think that maybe she was jealous? I mean, maybe she felt
that you were everything to her and she didnt want anyone else to have
you.
Hideo didnt answer but after seeming lost in thought recalled more
of his feelings when his father left. His mother had retreated to her room
and, left alone, Hideo had followed her there. They comforted each other
in their loneliness and he had returned to sleep in the bedroom that he
had been removed from at his fathers insistence that a couples bedroom
was no place for a child.
Hideo began to paint a picture of a young man wary of competition
with men and inordinately shy of women. He seemed afraid to do anything, as experiences of joy, especially those with girls, threatened the
relationship of mother and son. Attempting to find pleasure was associated with inflicting pain on his mother. He was put into the seemingly
impossible position that if he was happy, it made his mother unhappy.
Therefore, if he sacrificed himself he could maintain his mothers equilibrium. The secret to his depression and lifelessness seemed to lie in this
dilemma he faced. His suffering was related directly now to his failure to
grow as a young male. He was afraid of his own sexuality.
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Multicultural Encounters
31
the house . . . sometimes she still does that . . . starts crying and doesnt
talk.
There seems to be a lot of unhappiness there. Maybe you decided to
take on some of that sadness, I suggested. I think kids do that for their
parents, to share it, to lighten the load. Its a form of love. But the problem is that the load can become too heavy for the kid.
I dont know . . . I dont remember deciding to do that.
Its just a possible explanation. This is the way psychologists think.
There is a belief that there is an unconscious, a part of us that is removed
from our ordinary consciousness. Therefore, we are not always aware of
all our thoughts and feelings. So even if you are not aware of thinking
like this, these things are going on inside you, out of conscious thought. If
this way of thinking doesnt make sense to you, dont worry about it. Just
consider that it is one possible way of understanding and explaining the
way the mind works.
Our goal in therapy was set by Hideo at the beginning when he asserted his desire to become more autonomous. And it was obvious that
this involved creating distance in the mother-child relationship. He seemed
fixed at a stage of early mother attachment, dependent on her and helpless, passive, and receptive. He sorely lacked the qualities of independence
and mastery of the social world, which children often learn from fathers.
His loving but overindulgent and domineering mother had been driven
by her own need for love to possessiveness and refusal to bear the necessary and inevitable separation from her growing child. And through his
identification with and empathy for his mother, Hideo had been released
from his aloneness, but trapped in a prison from which he struggled to
escape.
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Multicultural Encounters
33
SHARING STORIES
Although the theme of separation and autonomy constituted the content of our dialogue, I felt that my best chance to help Hideo lay in the development of a meaningful relationship with him. I assumed he had come
to me not only for self-exploration to deal with his problems but also for
what the relationship itself could provide. I hoped that the establishment of
an intimate bond with me might sufficiently attenuate his bond with his
mother so that he could begin to pry himself loose from her. Then I thought
we could turn to the identification and removal of obstacles that were preventing him from establishing intimate relationships in his social life.
Being Amerasian like Hideo was part of what I offered. It had drawn
him to approach me and filled him with expectations of shared understanding that I knew realistically did not always exist. The reflection of our own
human struggles was heightened as we faced each other.
But how these connections would be useful in therapy I still did not
know. Hideo had experienced deep and unresolved pain but had little
conscious awareness of these feelings of fear, embarrassment, grief, and
anger. He was overdistanced from his emotions, and I felt I needed to bring
him closer to them to enable him to experience and work through them,
to achieve catharsis and an aesthetic distance from his original experience.
But how?
Working on overcoming blocked feelings can be incredibly slow and
demanding. Some therapists go for instant and powerful breakthroughs
by blasting through defenses and confronting the client with his or her
feelings. However, such methods may not lead to long-term change and
may also create disturbing side-effects. I tried instead the less dramatic
process of constantly asking Hideo how he felt, to help him explore the
nature of his stifled feelings. He often was able to acknowledge that he
had feelings and to examine what was blocking them. When this failed to
generate a response, I would ask him how he felt about being asked how
he felt.
But with a time limit on our therapy facing us, I searched for some
way to move the process along more quickly. I reflected on my initial reaction to Hideos effeminate behavior. Why had I felt turned off, even
contemptuous? Why had it triggered memories of childhood violence in
which I triumphed by being tough? I became more aware of my narrative
of survival. But had it really happened as I thought? Yes, I had fought and
bloodied and vanquished my tormentor, but wasnt it in a boxing ring with
gloves, and not on the street? And had going to the Boys Club really gotten easier? Werent there always new tormentors every time I went? Yes,
I had refused to be cowed and continued to go there, but wasnt I always
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Multicultural Encounters
filled with a dread that at any moment I would be taunted and engulfed
in violence?
I wondered why I had succumbed to this romanticization of my youth.
Some years earlier in therapy, as I sought to rid myself of the confines of
my narrative of victimization, I had seized on the realization that although
I had been harassed and hurt I had never been defeated. I had not allowed
myself to be intimidated and had faced the bullies and won. Although the
racial slurs were hurled, they came from faceless mobs who dared not to
lay a hand on me.
We all construct stories, or narratives, of our lives to make sense of
them. And I had constructed a new narrative, truly romantic, as a tough
and stoic kid who had triumphed over the slings and arrows of racial prejudice. Now did it matter that my story may not have been historically correct? On the other hand, was it possible to even discover the historical
truth? Or did truth change according to the perspective of the observer?
I wondered how I could help Hideo to feel more and to construct a
new narrative. In his present tragic narrative, Hideo was a victim of his
possessive mother, of his irresponsible father, of his distant grandparents,
and of his vicious racial antagonists. But he was also a survivor and he
was still trying to live as best he could.
Before constructing this new narrative, Hideo first needed to get closer
to his emotions. Perhaps I could help him by asking him to remember what
it was like being attacked, called names, losing face; being unable to fight
back; feeling terror, humiliation, anger. He might resist my attempts, but
I thought he would respond because of our shared culture and experience.
After all, I had lived this myself, it was genuinely a part of me, not knowledge from a book. It was worth a try.
You know that there may be something about the bullying too that
is related to your deadening of emotions. You havent talked about it but
I know that when I was attacked it left me deadened in a way as a way of
coping with it.
Hideo seemed surprised at the mention of my personal experience,
and very interested.
Did you have any experience of bullying growing up in the United
States?
Sure, many times. I guess a lot of kids growing up here assume that
in the United States there is no discrimination toward Amerasians, but it
depends on where you live. I grew up in a completely White town, so I
stood out. And it wasnt so long after the end of the war. I was called names
a lot, like jap, chink, ching chong chinaman. Maybe it wasnt so severe,
but it hurt me a lot when I was little. I couldnt understand how people
could hate me just because I was Japanese.
35
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Multicultural Encounters
background to use. After that we were able to talk about the anger and
other feelings generated by the bullying. I tried to help him to not only
deal with the feelings that were coming up, but also to put his experience
into the wider social context of Amerasian experience in general and also
of Okinawa as a breeding ground for prejudice.
Having finally talked about the bullying he had endured in junior high
school also led to talking about being mixed. It had always been a source
of pain and confusion for him and I could see that his alienation had also
been aggravated by his experiences of racial difference. Once he transferred
to public school, in his completely Japanese neighborhood and Japanese
school, he was different from others, racially and culturallynot just different, but American. He was also fatherless, and these were differences
that made him the butt of antagonism and contempt and contributed to
his excessive self-consciousness and emotional isolation. Hideo asked me
how I felt about being mixed, and as always I tried to answer his question
as openly and clearly as I could.
I guess its always concerned me more than some people. When I was
younger there were times when it bothered me a lot. Being called names
was hard, but I think I learned as a kid that we cant control the way others
look at us. We just have to accept the way some people will look down on
us. The only thing we can control is our own self-respect, what we think
of ourselves. Meeting other Amerasians has really helped me to come to
terms with it. To me being mixed was something that I wanted to explore.
Thats why I came back to Japan. I wanted to really have both sides of my
heritage.
Hideo asked, Where do you feel more at home, in Japan or the United
States?
In a way I have always felt Japan is my home, since I was born here.
But in other ways I have felt like a stranger, especially in the way that I
am always regarded as a foreigner. I lived in the States for a long time, so
Im also at home there, but for some reason I choose to live here.
I had gone on long enough, and tried to bring the focus back to him.
How about you? Youve told me a little about it already, but do you still
feel it is hard to be mixed?
It was hard when I was younger and kids would call me names. Junior high was the worst, because I was actually attacked and bullied. I felt
like some people looked at me like I represented the American military or
something. If there was some demonstration against the military bases, some
kids would look at me as if I was bad or I was the enemy. Even some of my
teachers I dont think treated me fairly. When I did well in English they just
said, Of course, after all youre American. I had a fantasy that if we could
only live with my dad in the United States everything would be better.
37
Ah, yes, the Amerasian fantasy. Those in Japan dream that life in the
United States would be better; those in the United States dream that life
in Japan would be better. There is always the allure of the illusion of the
great escape across the sea when things get rough.
I guess whats harder though was that even my family would say
things. If I did something bad, it was always, See, youre American! It
was like they were saying I was bad because I was American. Even my
grandmother would say that kind of thing. . . . I always thought she loved
my cousins more than me.
Having grown up with two loving families, one Irish and one Japanese,
I sympathized with Hideos situation. He had never had his fathers family
and the attitudes of his mothers family had really hurt him; to know that
he was loved less, just because he was part American. I only knew this rejection from outsiders, not from anyone within my family. His pain showed.
38
Multicultural Encounters
I encouraged him to come up with a concrete plan for such a trip, and
to prepare for it so that he could get the most out of it. I offered to help
him in any way I could, but I thought it was important for him to do the
investigation and legwork to demonstrate his will to act. I felt there was
more to this trip than what he was saying. Surely he must have the desire
to see his father, I thought, but decided to wait to see if he brought it up.
In the meantime we returned to Hideos relationship with his mother.
I tried to help him again to see the tragic narrative he had developed as
the hero who must suffer to save his mother. His happiness must be sacrificed so that she can live. The bullying that he endured also drove him
further into isolation with his mother, and therefore allowed him to fulfill
her emotional needs. He had become the martyr who gives up his life to
accompany the mother, alone and forsaken.
39
live. As Hideo accepted that he himself had brought on his trouble and
resolved to change, he evolved from tragic hero to romantic hero.
I tried to introduce stories that would contain powerful metaphors that
might touch him deeply, as the one about racial violence in childhood had.
Since Hideo had been raised as a Christian and throughout his life had
attended church, I related the story of Jesus that had inspired me as a young
man trying to gather the courage to leave home and go out into the world.
Because I left the church nearly 30 years ago, my recollection was a little
vague, but I still remembered the basic story.
What youre going through reminds me of the story of the young
Jesus, and how he disappears. Have you heard it?
Hideo shook his head.
Well, Jesus is a teenager and he disappears one day, so his parents go
out looking for him. At last his mother discovers him talking with the wise
men in the temple. She gives him a hard time, telling him how worried
she was and so on. But Jesus is unmoved by her show of emotion and
calmly informs her, But mother, did you not know that I must be about
my fathers work?
Hideo said, Yeah, I remember that story now. I was worried that Jesus
really upset Mary.
Of course you were, I thought. I decided to tell him something even
closer to home. I dont know if this will mean anything to you, but it is
something that has stayed with me. I remember when I was about your
age and my father said to me, Steve, dont let your mother drive you crazy.
I assumed that he meant that a mothers love can be enveloping and comforting but also smothering and that as a growing boy I needed to distance
myself from it.
Hideo nodded as if he understood the point of the story.
When you think of separating from your mother, what do you think
you are afraid of?
I think Im afraid that she will fall apart.
Because she seems so fragile?
Hideo nodded.
You know, I think your mother is a lot stronger than you give her
credit for. Shes been through a lot. And were not talking about abandoning her; you wont do that, your love is too strong. Were talking about
learning to rely on her less, to allow others to be important to you, close
to you. That would free your mother to do the same. But I think she needs
you to make the first move.
Hideo looked at me as if pleading, Is there no other way? But I felt
that I needed to drive the point home.
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Multicultural Encounters
When two people are stuck together and you try to separate them it
is going to cause some pain. But unless they separate they cant continue
to grow. For you to grow up you have to cause your mother pain. There
is no other way. But these wounds heal.
An image came to me from my gardening, so I continued, Its like
when you have two plants growing close together they stunt each others
growth. But if you move them a little apart they both have a chance to
thrive.
Hideos blank look told me I had wasted a good nature metaphor on a
city boy who had obviously never grown anything. I couldnt think of a
better metaphor for him, so I just said, Its the nature of a mothers love,
to give and then to let go. Your mothers challenge now is to let go. Your
independence is for your mothers sake as well. And a childs difficult reality is that he must eventually separate from the one who raises him; and
in doing so he cant help but inflict pain on his mother.
Hideo was quieter than usual today, and I felt like sharing my experiences so continued to talk. You know I am an only son too and I think I
had a hard time separating from my mother. I went through something
like what you are going through now. I know its not easy. But one thing
I learned is that my mother wanted me to grow up too. Even though its
painful to separate, she knew, as I think all mothers do, that it is natural.
They wont be around forever, so they need us to become independent.
Therapists usually learn in training not to share personal information.
Perhaps for some therapists this is a necessary rule to abide by. Many rationalizations are given for not sharing personal matters with clients, especially that time is valuable and that it is the clients therapy not the
counselors. Abuse of this technique no doubt occurs, but I have found
that judicious sharing of myself and my experiences has helped clients.
They have often told me how much they appreciated such revelations and
how they were key aspects of therapy for them. Perhaps the awareness
that the therapist must also struggle with and resolve personal problems
provides them with a sense of a shared journey that lowers their resistance to revealing their problems.
Clients have let me know how much they want to hear about my
personal life, and usually it is not very much. If they do want to hear a
lot, it is a warning that they are avoiding facing their own issues. Generally, a little personal information goes a long way. My rule is to keep it
brief, and return the focus quickly to the client. With Hideo I stretched
this rule, not only because he was so silent and reticent, but because he
seemed so moved by my personal stories and they in turn powerfully
elicited his stories.
41
FINDING FATHER
While sharing my experience helped therapy to progress, Hideo had
lived in fear of hurting his mother for so long that it was not a quick process to break this pattern. We returned to this theme many times. But Hideo
began to make moves in his life, joining an English class, attending social
gatherings at church, and reading more about the United States. In therapy
he became even more active in bringing up new subjects, including his
father.
I think now being mixed is not so hard. Even though some people
might not like me, in a way its even a good thing because I have more
than one cultural heritage. But I guess whats harder is knowing that I
was not wanted . . . that my father didnt want me.
Why do you say he didnt want you?
Because he left me.
But do you know why he left?
No, I never understood why he left. I just remember coming home
from school one day and finding my mother on the floor sobbing, all rolled
up in a ball. My aunt was there trying to comfort her. She took me aside
and told me that my father had left. I guess I was kind of in shock or something and I think I went to their bedroom and opened the closet and drawers
to look for my fathers things. Then I went to the front door, and thats
where it really hit me, because all my dads big shoes and boots were gone.
Jesus, I thought, the big son of a bitch didnt even say good-bye to his
kid! I kept this thought to myself though, and instead asked him, Where
did he go?
I found out later he went back to the United States. My mom never
really explained what happened.
Did you ever hear from him?
No, he never wrote.
I guess that must have been pretty hard for you as a little kid.
Hideo didnt answer, just nodded, as if in acknowledgment of his suffering as a child, then shrugged his shoulders.
Can you remember any other feelings you had at that moment?
No, because I think I was numb . . . it was kind of unreal . . . like a
bad dream.
What about now when you think back on it?
I guess it was building for a long time, but I didnt know it.
Having seen the misery they have caused to countless innocent lives,
I have a harsh attitude toward men who father children and casually leave
them behind. I just took it for granted that my father had raised methats
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Multicultural Encounters
what fathers are supposed to do. But when I realized how many men had
not done the same, I appreciated my father more just for staying with me.
I recalled a scene from childhood, walking down Main Street with my
Irish aunt. A big man stopped us and asked about my dad. My Aunt Margaret told him that he was back from Japan, and glancing down at me said,
This is his son. A big grin came to his face and he said, Ive got a few
kids back there myself. Aunt Margaret stiffened at his words, looked him
hard in the eye, and said, Well, my brothers not like that. And she pulled
me by the hand and we walked away from that man.
Surely as a child Hideo had experienced rage and disappointment in
his father after being abandoned without a wordand perhaps blamed
himself for driving his father away. He had lived with dreams of his fathers
return as well as a growing stoic acceptance that he never would, when
his army boots failed to appear again by the front door. But gradually he
had learned to make peace with the past. My heart went out to him and
I wished I could comfort him.
You know, usually the reasons for leaving have more to do with the
problems between the couple than the children. Your dad left because he
and your mom couldnt get along; it wasnt because of you. Maybe you
need to forgive yourself for something you didnt cause.
Hideo looked at me with a puzzled expression.
I mean little kids often imagine that they have somehow caused
their father to go away, by being bad or unlovable. Maybe you did that
to yourself.
He didnt answer, and now that we were on the topic, I decided to
bring up something that I had been waiting in vain for Hideo to broach.
Do you think you might want to meet your father?
Ive thought about it for a long time. I didnt say so before, but I think
one of the big reasons I want to go to America is to meet my father.
What do you think it might be like to meet him?
I guess it would be pretty strange. I havent seen him for more than
10 years. Its hard to imagine.
What do you think could go wrong? I mean, what are you afraid
might happen?
I think what if he doesnt want to see me?
You realize that he may be remarried with a family now. And that
he may not be what you have fantasized.
Hideo nodded.
What are your feelings toward your father now?
I dont know. I guess Im not angry any more. I dont expect anything from him, and I dont want to cause him any trouble. But I just want
to meet him once.
43
I wanted to prepare him for what could happen and for him to learn
about his vulnerabilities. I wholeheartedly supported his desire to meet his
father, but I wanted Hideo to be aware of the scenario he would probably
face. I offered to introduce him to other young Amerasians who had told
me of their experience in searching for and finding their fathers. At least he
would have a better idea of what to expect, a realistic sense of what awaited
him. I imagined a young lifetime of fantasies exploded in a moment of brutal reality. Better to temper those dreams first with a dose of sober realism.
But not too much. Hideo had allowed himself to dream and to desire
and he needed to continue to let his feelings blossom. When he had insisted
at the beginning of therapy that he felt dead inside, I had assured him that
he had feelings, but suggested that maybe its too painful to feel; that maybe
the pain gets short-circuited and put onto other things. I warned him that if
he cant feel pain he wont feel anything else either.
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Multicultural Encounters
didnt feel anything special, like I thought I might. He was just like a nice
middle-aged American man, like one of those guys you see on American
television programs, kind of bald and fat.
I was sorry that Hideo had been disappointed, but how many happy
endings to this story are there? Everyone I know who has searched for
and found a long-lost father has told me of similar feelings.
I was worried about disturbing him, and disrupting his life. But he
explained that he lived alone now. He had married, but was divorced a
few years ago. He said he never had any other kids, so I guess that makes
me his only child.
I wanted to ask him why he left us, but couldnt. But without my
saying anything, he told me he was sorry that he had left me and my
mother. He said they just couldnt get along and he found it hard to live
in Japan. After he had come back to the United States he figured it was
better not to bother us. I had a lot of other questions I wanted to ask him
but mostly I just listened to him. Then he asked me about my plans for
the future and I told him I wanted to go to college.
Hideo seemed to savor his words and to deliberately slow down his
already normally ponderous pace of talking to maintain the suspense. I
felt like sticking a pin in him to make him speak faster. But in the midst of
my irritation, I suddenly realized with joy that Hideo was actually teasing
me, and demonstrating an ability that for him was a great stride forward
in his human relations.
Finally he blurted out, And he offered to help me. He said there is a
community college in his town and that he could help me to go there. He
is tough though. He told me he will continue to pay my tuition only if I
get decent grades.
Wow, so what are you going to do?
I decided to go. I dont know what it will be like, but Im going to try
to go to school in America and live near my dad for a while.
I was amazed. It was more than I, and even Hideo, could have expected. Of course, there had been no romantic and dramatic reunion like
in a movie, but there was a connection, deep and old, that had stirred inside
the man and encouraged him to try again to be a father to his now grown
child. And even if his real-life father had disappointed Hideos fantasies in
almost every way, his father had reached out to him and Hideo was hungry enough and open enough to give the man a chance.
As for Hideos mother, she had been opposed to his plans from the
beginning and remained so. But despite her disapproval, Hideo felt that
she understood his desires. He had tried to win her over by asking her if it
wasnt natural for a boy to want to know his father. And he tried the other
card I suggested he playwasnt it natural for an American-Japanese dual
45
national to want to know his fatherland America? What could his mother
say, except to warn him that his father would just disappoint him some
day, and that he would find that he was a stranger in America and that
Okinawa was his real home? And when Hideo persisted with his plans,
she gave him her blessing as graciously as she could, saying Go ahead
and find out for yourself.
He had appeased her by promising to return to Okinawa after finishing community college. Of course, he would not be the first youth to
make that kind of promise to his mother and eventually fail to return.
But Okinawan youth often return home after adventures in the mainland
or America, finding that they miss life in the islands. And it was hard to
imagine that Hideo could stay away from his mother for very long. Their
bond would not weaken easily and could someday, perhaps sooner than
later, bring him back home to his mothers side. One could hope that both
he and his mother would grow while they were apart.
But the important thing was that he was taking the challenge. He was
acting. Hideo was separating from his mother and going out into the world.
He was putting his own needs first and daring to hurt anothers feelings.
He was starting to grow into the adult that he wanted to become. Hideo
was living his life as an adventure.
I was happy for him. Hideo was owning his separateness and assuming
responsibility for his life. He was accepting the consequences of his actions
and opening himself to the possibility of deep intimate connections with self
and others. As he embraced his sensual and emotional intimacies, he discovered the yearnings of his soul, and a song emerged. Hideo had discovered his voice. He was celebrating himself, singing his song. I told him that
he was a hero on an adventure. He smiled, and suggested that perhaps that
was an exaggeration. But I think he liked this expression, and I meant it, in
the sense that when we truly attempt to live, we are living heroically.
He questioned whether he could really change himself.
I warned him, Well, dont expect too much, youre probably not ever
going to be the life of the party.
Hideo smiled, and almost laughed!
But you have changed already. You are really living now. You will
always be shy and quiet, but that doesnt have to stop you. As a shy person you may attempt and do almost anything.
A FINAL HANDSHAKE
Our final hours were devoted to attending to his fears about leaving
his mother and his impending departure. Old symptoms reappeared as self-
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Multicultural Encounters
doubts, and he questioned whether he could really pull off such a grand
scheme. Could he really leave his mother? Could he really get to know
his father? Could he adjust to life in the United States? Staying at home
and the gas station suddenly seemed appealing again. He complained that
maybe he wasnt ready yet.
I think that his anxiety was also about the end of therapy and partly
because he would miss me. After all, he had finally allowed himself to trust
someone with his feelings and had benefited from our relationship. Ending also evoked vivid memories of the painful loss of his father and stimulated anxiety over the potential loss of his mother. I tried to assure him
that such regression before the end of therapy was common, and warned
him that his growth would not be linear because issues are never completely resolved, but recur again, requiring reinforcement of lessons we
have once learned.
But I encouraged him that he no longer needed me and that his growth
was now a part of him that would go with him wherever he went. He was
now able to trust and open himself to his father or others, just as he had
done with me. I told him that I had also gotten a great deal from working
with him. He seemed surprised, so I tried to explain.
I learned about your experience, your life, how its different from and
similar to mine. I guess because we are both American and Japanese that
talking with you brought up a lot of feelings and memories. And in trying
to help you deal with things, I also helped myself at the same time. I then
gave him a playful dig: I also learned to be patient when someone doesnt
talk much.
Hideo smiled; he had learned to laugh at himself.
And soon our time was up. Hideo had changed. He had begun to build
a life for himself. He had dared to confront his pain and fear. He had wished
and enacted his dreams. Yes, he was a hero on an adventure. Perhaps Hideo
wouldnt think so, but I wouldnt hesitate to describe him in that light.
Although I knew that he would continue to face intense struggles, he had
come a long way and I felt happy for him. As he got up to leave our eyes
met.
Well, take care of yourself, Ill miss you. And as I said the words, I
choked a little; it was true, I would miss him.
His eyes became teary and he nervously nodded his head up and down.
Thanks is all that would come out of his mouth, but his eyes expressed
his gratitude.
I put out my hand and we shook. His hand was as cold and limp as
ever but this time he looked me directly in the eye and gave a genuine
smile whose warmth dissipated the chill of his hand. I held onto his hand.
47
If youre going to the United States youve got to work on your handshake.
Hideo was puzzled.
Americans like them firm, I said. Imagine youre squeezing the
water out of a hunk of tofu, and I clasped his hand tightly.
Hideo smiled and squeezed back.
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CHAPTER 3
49
Khermani would begin each session with a question about what actions I had taken during the week on his behalf. So, did you talk to my
professor? Did you meet with the department head? Did you write a
letter to the dean? Did you arrange for me to meet with the president?
Sometimes I had done what he had demanded and other times I hadnt,
but it didnt seem to make any differenceeither way he would be disappointed in the outcome. I would try to discuss the merits and demerits of
possible courses of seeking redress, but with a growing feeling that he
would sabotage any action that I initiated through his rash actions.
As we talked, Khermani would soon move away from last weeks
demands to voicing his most recent complaints and describing the latest
incidents. He claimed to be often wronged, victimized by others, and he
was stridently self-righteous. He was brittle and irritable and often sarcastic and provocative. His focus shifted from one grievance to another. The
time passed quickly and he controlled the session with his insistent talking overwhelming my normally laid-back style. Our dialogues seemed to
mire in the muck of complaints and accusations.
Coming to Japan was a big mistake! he claimed.
Im sorry that you feel that way. I wonder what we can do to improve the situation?
Get me a new professor!
How would you describe the problem with your professor?
He is an idiot, he knows nothing!
I would sometimes try to shift the focus from complaining to considering alternative courses of action.
Lets consider your options. I suggested. Would one possibility be
going back to Iran?
Are you joking? We all want to get out!
Well, another option is to stay here. What is positive about being
here?
I thought I can do research here.
How is your research going?
How can I research in this environment? The program here is
terrible!
He may be right, I thought, but there was little I could do to change
the situation. So I tried to explore other areas of his life.
How is living in Japan in other ways? I asked.
Japanese are prejudiced toward foreigners. They look down on Iranians. They think we are all here working as cheap, illegal laborers.
I constantly struggled to move away from such exchanges, which could
take up considerable amounts of time unless I aggressively attempted to shift
the focus to a more productive tone. I would try to say things like, So I
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Multicultural Encounters
think I have some understanding now of the problems you are facing. Lets
try to focus now on what we might do to address these problems.
And often he would stop himself, and say, Okay, okay, never mind.
But invariably a few minutes later he would begin his tirades again. I knew
that the most important thing I could do for him was to maintain our relationship and not allow him to drive me away. I persevered, but I became impatient and felt that I was failing him. He battled with me during
the sessions and belittled the importance of my assistance, which was not
producing the results he wanted. But there was always a surprise for me
as I attempted to end the sessions.
Okay, you are busy. I am taking too much of your time. So when
can I see you again?
Perhaps my facial expression said to him, Are you sure you want to
come again? because he would then explain, I know you cant really
help me, but what would I do if I couldnt come here? Where would I go?
Who would listen to my problem?
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Multicultural Encounters
port Khermanis research. His professor was not a bad person, he said,
merely a fool.
He had numerous stories of how he had been wronged, but the most
striking and confusing was one about his fathers death.
My professor wouldnt let me go home when my father died, he
claimed in an angry voice. I couldnt go to my fathers funeral!
How terrible, I thought.
But Not so, claimed the professor when I questioned him. And he
told a far different and stranger story. Khermani hadnt even known of
his fathers death until nearly 6 months after he died. His mother had come
to Japan specifically to break the news to him. I wondered why, until an
anthropologist colleague whom I consulted explained that it was common
practice in Iran. It is considered inappropriate to inform a child of the death
of a parent by telephone or letter, and so the news may be kept hidden
until the opportunity comes to inform the child face-to-face.
I wondered how common this practice is today, but I did hear the story
of an Iranian student who in a similar situation became extremely distraught when a fellow Iranian expressed condolences about her fathers
death. The student was shocked and disbelieving, as she had heard nothing from her family.
While I took this knowledge in intellectually, I found it strange and
upsetting. My experience in working with people who were grieving the
deaths of loved ones had led me to believe in the importance of going through
a mourning process. An essential part of this grief work was to come together with others who shared the sorrow. Depriving a child of the opportunity to grieve his fathers death with his other family members was incomprehensible to me. But I knew that I had to regard my own belief as
culturally determined in the same way that Khermanis familys beliefs were.
So while it was hard for me to accept what had happened as an appropriate way of dealing with loss, I could now understand why Khermani
had not been able to attend his fathers funeral or even known about his
fathers death. But I still didnt understand why he had blamed his professor for the situation. Was it just part of his way of blaming everything that
went wrong on one person?
The relationship with his professor had not always been bad. In fact,
Khermani admitted that his professor had been very kind at first. He had
invited Khermani to his house for dinner and had been helpful in his research. But then the renowned professor had become busy and had asked
Khermani to consult not with him, but with the associate professor. Did
Khermani feel abandoned? Khermani refused to listen to the advice of the
associate professor, saying that he would take directions only from the
professor. Actually, he was the same age as the associate and felt that in
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Multicultural Encounters
tire fault lay in the system. Students like Khermani can cause a great deal
of trouble for a professor, making unrealistic demands on their time. Their
inability to communicate easily verbally and to understand nonverbal
communication can create numerous misunderstandings and conflicts.
Khermani was a big man with a sharp glare and a loud voice and a swagger in his walk that intimidated others. I heard that he had once thrown a
book through a window in anger. But a psychologist friend who had worked
in Iran cautioned me that Iranians were emotionally expressive people who
showed tears, affection, and anger easily. They tend to indulge in a lot of
verbal exaggeration, he claimed. So was Khermanis threat just an expression
of this cultural pattern of behavior? Was Khermani aggressive and dangerous or just being Iranian? Placed in the context of Japanese society, where
cultural norms generally prescribe control and reserve in emotional expression, the behavior of someone like Khermani can become distorted and seem
extreme. After all, he had never actually touched anyone in the lab.
Sometimes in the sessions he would become agitated and threaten that
he was going to get violent with his professor, knock him down and kick
his head. However, if I pressed him, he would soon reassure me that he
wouldnt really do anything. His professor, though, seemed worried about
the possibility of being attacked, and the possibility of sabotage, such as
through the destruction of equipment or data. I too feared the possibility
of Khermanis sinking into feelings of hopelessness that could lead to either a suicidal attempt to escape the torment or a violent attack against
one of his imagined tormentors.
Even as I considered such an outburst of violence unlikely, I had to
admit that Khermanis anger scared me. I am uncomfortable with a person whose anger seethes out from him and suddenly and unexpectedly
erupts, disrupting the niceties of social customs and formalities. But I knew
that it was important to allow him the space to express those feelings and
to legitimize them. I needed to stay with him, despite my discomfort. I tried
to reflect his feelings.
You seem angry about the way you feel you are being treated.
I tried to empathize with his feelings.
I think I can understand how you would be angry about what
happened.
I tried to help him to express his anger in more productive ways.
I realize you are angry, but is there a way of expressing your anger that
still enables the other person to respond and actually encourages dialogue?
Like what? Khermani asked.
I mean without accusing, without blaming the other person . . . talking in a way that leaves room for the other person to stay with you rather
than run away?
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motives. Although he could rationally and logically explain the basis for
his beliefs, he was unable to consider alternative evidence or explanations.
But was Khermani really paranoid? Vigilance is required in assessing
paranoia in minorities. They may often have valid reasons for their complaints that others are biased toward them or treat them unfairly. They
can have good reason to suspect that others are against them. Therefore
their accusations of prejudice and discrimination must be treated seriously
because they are commonly experienced by vulnerable minorities, such
as foreign students.
General attitudes of Japanese toward Iranians were certainly negative. Some Japanese claimed to be afraid of the Iranian men who congregated in city parks on Sundays. They were welcomed by the small businesses that needed unskilled labor, but ambivalently by everyone else,
including a Japanese government afraid of allowing foreigners into the
country. Some Iranians told me that they prefer to call themselves Persian, partly as a way of attempting to escape from the negative stereotypes to which they felt subjected.
So if Khermani felt that others looked at him with critical and fearful
eyes, he was probably right, at least some of time. And if he felt vulnerable, well, foreign students have a vulnerability that other students do not.
They are temporary guests, as the Immigration Bureau reminds them, and
many are receiving scholarships directly from the Japanese government.
They fear that if they step out of line they may be sent back home, dashing their dreams of educational advancement.
My reading of Iranian history and culture warned me that Iranians have
learned to live with uncertainty, distrust, and cynicism from a long history
of adaptation to adverse political circumstances. An Iranian psychiatrist
advised me that this may be manifest as a sense of mistrust in interpersonal
relationships in which individuals feel that they must always be on guard
to protect themselves, fearing that others will take advantage of their trust.
I wondered how to utilize this generalized cultural knowledge.
I imagined that living in an environment in which a person cannot
understand much of what is going on around him or her would aggravate
a sense of mistrust. Should I assess Khermanis mistrust as less extreme
than I suspected because his cultural background inclined him to be mistrusting? On the other hand, I was also aware that he was far more distrustful than the few other Iranian students I knew.
He had been to a neurologist, who had prescribed some tranquilizers,
which Khermani had taken for a few weeks. But he didnt like the sideeffects and had stopped taking them when he ran out. I recommended
that he go back to the hospital but my suggestion fell on deaf ears.
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But when Khermani repeatedly voiced the same complaints with new
supporting evidence, and calls from his professor kept coming complaining of new incidents, I began to despair. And I had to acknowledge that
ominous signs were increasing in our relationship. I feared it was losing
its human quality of relating as friends or allies. I questioned whether
Khermani was crossing that critical boundary that separates the troubled,
suffering, anxious person from the psychotic.
I looked for clues in how I was treating him. Wasnt I beginning to
objectify him? Khermani was in danger of no longer being a person to
me, but instead a delusion, a DSM psychiatric diagnosis. I was finding
it difficult to work with him, to feel his presence and engagement in
the therapy process. I worried that the relationship between us was
full of concealment. Worst of all, I was even wishing that he would get
worse so there would be no question of the psychosis and his need for
medication.
Some psychiatrists maintain that psychosis can be diagnosed by the
character of the therapy relationship. The patient should be considered
psychotic if the therapist no longer has any sense that he or she and the
patient are allies who are working together to improve the patients mental health. I wondered if I still believed in the prospect of his development
or if I had given up on that possibility and instead only hoped to keep him
out of the hospital and prevent him from destroying himself.
I decided that I needed to intensify my efforts to get him to go to a
psychiatrist for a consultation. As always, I approached him gingerly with
my request. At first, he eyed me strangely and then with a turn of his head
away from me and a flip of his hand dismissed my suggestion as unnecessary. But I knew that I had to persist, for my sake as well as his.
You think I am crazy? Khermani laughed nervously.
I am just saying that you are clearly upset about what is happening
and it wouldnt hurt to be more relaxed. Your thoughts also seem confused and if you could get a little clearer you might be able to do your
research better.
No, it will not help, Khermani said, closing the door on the discussion.
In desperation I tried another approach. I contacted a senior Iranian
medical doctor who was doing research at the university and explained
the situation, taking care to protect Khermanis privacy. He offered to talk
directly with Khermani. So after I got Khermanis permission, the three
of us met in my office. After we engaged in some small talk, they conversed in Farsi as I sat and observed, not understanding a word.
Finally, they turned to me and with a smile the doctor assured me,
Khermani will go to the hospital. He has promised me that he will go.
And he did.
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61
move away from the sense of failure that had developed in response to
the continuing existence of the problem. However, the meetings degenerated into each blaming the other. In the end, they were unable to cooperate and unite in a struggle against the problem.
I had a growing feeling that neither changing the system nor mediation was going to work. My impression was that Khermani was unproductive in his research, and I imagined that this reality was deeply disturbing to him and connected to his problems. I was sure that he suffered
from feelings of inadequacy. As a proud and elite academic, he could not
accept that he was failing. Again I wondered how much to consider culture, having read that Iranians are very proud, and therefore boastful and
impatient with learning, and have difficulty admitting mistakes.
I considered the applicability of acculturation theory, which would
label Khermani as adopting a marginal style of adaptation. He would be
described as open to his own culture, yet closed to the host culture. I knew
that like many other foreign students he worried about his family back
home, missed his supportive network of trusted friends, and had great
difficulty in making new friendships with Japanese. He appeared to resist
becoming acculturated and felt alienated from his surroundings, wallowing in the anxiety of the present and the uncertain future. Yet I heard claims
that Iran has managed to absorb cultural influences without losing identity and continuity, and wondered if Khermani could do the same in Japan.
Was it possible to help him by changing his mode of acculturation to one
that is considered healthier, by enhancing his openness to the host culture? I tried to encourage him to reflect on how to adapt better to Japanese culture.
You know, if you could apologize to your professor for what you said,
Im sure things would improve.
I should apologize to him? he responded incredulously. After all
that he has done, why should I apologize to him?
I realize that you feel he has done you many wrongs, but you are
also telling me that you accept that you too did not act properly on occasion. You told me that sometimes you spoke disrespectfully. If you could
apologize for your own behavior, it could allow him to apologize for his
behavior.
No way. I will never say Sumimasen like Japanese always do. They
are always saying Sumimasen, sumimasen.
You know, in Japanese, sumimasen doesnt mean It was my fault.
It just means that you feel bad or at least recognize that a problem has
occurred. It doesnt mean that you apologize and take blame or responsibility for what happened. Saying sumimasen is simply a gesture of humility and desire to smooth relations. By lowering your head, you encourage
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the other person to lower his too. So its a way of avoiding confrontation
and conflict.
It may be different in Iran, I continued, but this is a culture steeped
with rituals and customs of apology. If you want to survive here, you have
to perform these rituals. If you try to use the same values and rules that
are accepted in Iran, it just wont work here.
Khermani was unmoved by my explanation, and only convinced that
my suggestion indicated that I did not understand the situation at all.
It is impossible.
But if you could do it, it could improve the situation. Why cant you
do it?
Khermani smiled at me as if to say, I can see you are trying to help,
but your attempts are futile.
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One day Khermani produced a letter from his professor, and pointed
to a line that had particularly enraged him.
Look what he wrote! He said that he will not talk with me any more!
I read the note and disagreed, No, I dont think so. I cannot talk with
him means that he finds you difficult to talk with.
No, he said that he will not advise me any more, he insisted.
We went back and forth till finally I said, Okay, lets try to look at
this objectively. You have good English, but are you a native speaker of
English?
He looked at me skeptically.
I repeated my question, Are you a native speaker of English?
Okay, no.
Am I a native speaker of English?
Yes, of course, he admitted.
And do I have a doctorate from Harvard University, a university that
you respect?
Khermani nodded.
And would you agree that my understanding of English is greater than
yours?
Maybe, in general, he grudgingly admitted, making me want to lean
over and shake him and say Come on, damn it, admit that my English is
better!
But I controlled my impulse and said, So would you agree with my
interpretation that your professor did not mean that he will not talk with
you any more, but only meant that he finds you difficult to talk with?
Khermani would not back down. He insisted, No, he meant that he
is not willing to talk with me any more.
I took a deep breath and settled back in my chair, moving away from
Khermani. He was driving me crazy. In my feelings of frustration I wanted
to rub the evidence in his face. Even when he was obviously wrong he
wouldnt admit it. What could I do, I wondered, to help him to admit that
he was wrong? He easily dismissed my comments when we worked with
second-hand material for which his defenses had already been constructed.
I tried to focus on the immediate situation of what actually transpired
in the therapy situation. I believed that an awareness of my own feelings
was my most important instrument for identifying how he contributed to
his own predicament.
I turned our attention to us. What was the outstanding feature of our
relationship, I asked myself. Frustration? Boredom? Irritation? Yes, I was
frustrated and I was irritated. I was also bored with his repetitive complaints
and denials. I needed to confront him in some acceptable way. He could
deny responsibility for everything else, but not for what he did to me.
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Multicultural Encounters
culture anywhere, for some people it may influence their lives mostly as
an internal or intergenerational conflict between expectations and desires.
I asked Khermani how he felt about taghdir.
That is an old belief. Young people dont think like that any more.
So you yourself dont believe in it?
No.
Would you say that you believe in the importance of the individual
in changing his life?
Yes.
So, how would you like to change your life today?
Khermani seemed to ponder my question heavily but could not
answer.
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CHAPTER 4
When she first came to my office, Hiromi explained that she was thinking
about dropping out of school. Her studies were no longer interesting and
she was thinking that maybe she should quit and start working. She was
also tired of living at home, she said, and wanted to become independent
of her parents.
Hiromi had been a student of mine the previous semesterand a very
memorable one. When I introduced the topic of Koreans in Japan, Hiromi
had spoken up with assertion and a conviction uncharacteristic of most of
the Japanese students I had known. From the emotional tone in her voice
I had sensed that she was close to the issue. She had also utilized a journal
that I required for the class to express herself further, and it was there that
I discovered that Hiromi was of Korean ancestry.
I wondered what, if anything, being Korean had to do with her present
predicament. Since she had written often of her identity conflicts, I assumed that they were part of the picture. But since she was saying that
her problem was deciding whether to quit school, we began there. Although the issue usually comes up eventually, in my experience very few
people come to counseling with a presenting problem of ethnic identity
confusion or conflict. Perhaps people regard it as too insignificant a problem to warrant the attention of a professional consultation, so they wrap
it in a more socially acceptable package, such as the issue of withdrawal
from the university.
So we explored her feelings about her studies. Hiromi realized that
she had been attracted to American education because it offered an opportunity to explore areas that she had never been exposed to in Japan.
She had first thought of studying computers, but became drawn to sociol69
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ogy and psychology. In her classes the treatment of topics of prejudice and
discrimination were especially stimulating, and teachers were eager to
learn from her about the situation in Japan. At first she had been embarrassed by how little she knew, but she used term papers as an opportunity
to research about Koreans in Japan for the first time in her life. She felt
supported by her professors and the minority students in her classes and
was enthusiastic in her searching.
She had felt such excitement and filled her journal with expressions
of profound discovery. As she positioned herself as part of an oppressed
minority, her life took on new meaning. As her understanding increased
of the marginalizing social pressures that produce and maintain minorities as disadvantaged, she felt a building indignation. Her feelings of shame
and reticence were transformed into intense pride and assertiveness.
But Hiromi had also written in her journal about great confusion. Her
awakening had brought realization of not only what she had gained, but
also what she had lost. Joys of finding herself were accompanied by despair over lost years of living as though half asleep.
Hiromi complained that she had grown weary of her studies. The thrill
was gone. Her desire to become a sociologist was fading rapidly with nothing emerging in its place. So what had happened? What had caused her to
lose her spark? How had her motivation vanished, how was her purpose lost?
I told her that she had made a great impression on me as a student.
Her ability to speak out articulately in class about an obviously emotional
topic was admirable. I also said that her willingness to wrestle with deep
issues and to openly share them in her journal had made me hope that
she would continue to pursue these forms of study and self-expression.
As we explored her disillusionment, she began to talk about being Korean. She said that she had become tired of thinking about it. Her courses
had been great at first and she had felt liberated to deal with such personal
issues in her studies, but she had started to feel burdened by the subject.
I started to feel like I didnt want it to always be on my mind. I just
felt tired of it all. I was spending all this time thinking about it, but I realized, what difference does it make, I mean, who cares if I am Korean? Does
it really matter?
But at first it was very meaningful to you. Do you know what happened to change that? I asked.
Hiromi became silent. I grew impatient waiting for her to answer, but
told myself to slow down and give her time. I reminded myself that Hiromi
had never been in counseling; this was a completely new experience for
her. I glanced at the clock, looked out the window, and took a deep breath
to try to rid myself of the tension that sprang from my need to be doing
something to fill the space.
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73
were no side streets, just walls of houses on either side. I put my head down,
but my friend said something to me, and when I didnt answer, she kept
asking me whats the matter? As my grandmother neared us, I put my
hand up in front of my face to hide even more. After a while, I looked up
but would not turn around. My friends were making fun of me for acting
weird. I felt sick to my stomach and ran home.
Hiromi looked away and said, I loved my grandmother more than
anyone. I wondered if she recognized me and knew what I was doing, but
she never said anything about it.
Despite Hiromis distress, I was not completely there with her. I was
recalling the shame I had felt as a child in the United States when I denied
knowing my mothers Japanese name when asked by some curious inquisitors. I was sure they would make fun of it, pronounce it funny and
laugh. They were incredulous when I claimed that I didnt know her name.
They insisted that I must know. What does your father call her? they
asked. Again I tried to evade them, He just says Hey you. They laughed
and let me off the hook. But I was not so kind to myself; the experience
lingered with me. When we were taught in Catholic school about the sin
of Peter when he repeatedly denied knowing Jesus, I felt that surely I was
as bad and pitiful as Peter.
I attempted to reengage with Hiromi. I wanted to comfort her but didnt
know how. I felt that at least I could show her that I understood the pain
in such formative experiences. I know that those early experiences can
really hurt. Its hard when you feel embarrassed by your own family and
deny them. But its not easy for a kid to face prejudice.
I decided to go a little further. Something like that happened to
me when I was a child and Ive never forgotten it either. It stays with
you.
Hiromi looked at me with a new expression of recognition and I felt
that we were more together than before our mutual revelations.
This was one of the experiences that Hiromi had to integrate into her
evolving sense of self. It was no longer enough to say simply that she was
really Japanese since she had Japanese friends, ate Japanese food, went
to Japanese school, lived in Japanese society, and spoke the Japanese language. Questions burned in her mind. Didnt experiences like the one with
her grandmother make her a little different from Japanese people? But
what could she say was Korean about her? Did eating kim chee make her
Korean? Or was it just the blood that mattered?
I wondered how Hiromi had made sense of such experiences as a child.
Did she just feel different, outside, like she didnt really belong? Did they
make her feel self-hatred? Did she wish that she were not Korean? Or did
she identify with being Korean as a way of preserving her self-dignity?
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I assumed that like all children, Hiromi had felt an intense need to be
like others. To be different can be a painful experience. I remember the
awful feeling of the first day of elementary school. It was bad enough to
anticipate being stared at and called a Jap, but I even became filled with
dread when I realized that the colored counting sticks that I had brought
with me were a different shape from those of everyone else.
It is natural for children to be embarrassed about their differences and
to try to negate or deny that which distinguishes them. For Hiromi it meant
internalizing mainstream standards and rejecting being Korean. This insidious process is unnoticed by the child, because oppressive reality tends
to absorb those within it and acts to submerge ones consciousness. Yet
Hiromis identity was probably shaped by her acceptance of the stereotypes the dominant group holds of Koreans. As a child she would have
lacked knowledge on which to base more liberating images. The price can
be alienation from a true self. But is there really a true self? In Hiromis
case was being Korean her true self or just a past connection?
Is it right to assume that a true self is always an ethnic self and that all
else is phony? Is biology the determining factor in creation of a cultural
self? While we deny scientific validity of race, do we persist in believing
that something genetic remains the overriding factor in forming an authentic self?
Hiromi began to recall other disturbing but revealing memories. Some
of these she related in a journal she was keeping as part of the therapy.
I was asked a few times if I was Korean, but I just smiled and evaded
the question. If people said anything bad about Koreans, I was quiet, so
they wouldnt suspect me. Some friends in high school may have known.
I told some close friends and they didnt seem to care.
But for some reason when I was in high school, some Korean youth
group members came to talk with me. I told them I wasnt interested in
their group. They accused me of being ashamed of being Korean. I blamed
them for trying to separate themselves and acting different. They were the
ones keeping prejudice alive, I charged. They angrily said I was hiding in
an illusion, that I wanted to be Japanese, but I could never be Japanese,
because whether I liked it or not I was Korean! I walked away from them.
I thought they were crazy.
Now I dont know. Was I really ashamed of being Korean? Did I
really wish that I was Japanese?
Hiromis identity as Japanese had always seemed so natural, but now
she was recounting examples of being deeply affected by prejudice. She
recalled times when she actively rejected being Korean and faced the challenge of incorporating these experiences and awareness into her selfnarrative. Hiromi became intensely involved in trying to integrate these
75
previously disavowed experiences of shame, fear, ambivalence, ambiguity, and conflict. She recognized how she had internalized a negative image of being Korean that had been presented to her by majority Japanese.
Although Hiromi may have denied having had traumatic experiences,
she was remembering the fear of suffering discrimination if her Japanese
friends and colleagues found out about her secret. Hiromi had never wanted
to confront the problem that she had known such fear; that she had felt
the contemptuous gaze of others; that she had experienced identity conflicts. She had not wanted to realize that she had been scarred by the prejudice around her and the conflicts within her family.
She had always known that however much she had become Japanese,
she was still different in some ways from her Japanese friends; her family
was different, her experiences were different, and she wondered if perhaps even her ways of thinking and feeling were different. She questioned
if these differences were important, or any more significant than those
between two Japanese.
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citizen. Most of those who have maintained Korean nationality have chosen the path of maintaining an official alias that they use in their social
life. These aliases are commonly used names in Japan that allow the person to pass as mainstream Japanese. But there is another group of persons who insist on going through life with their Korean names.
Hiromis family was one of those who chose to naturalize. Her father
had explained to her that it made much more sense to become a citizen of
the country where they lived and would always live than to remain a citizen of a country they could never call home. They might never be really
Japanese, but at least they could say Japan was their home. And they
would be less vulnerable to discrimination if they were citizens.
Hiromi had been persuaded by his argument, but was learning that
many young people of Korean ancestry no longer believe that an alias is
necessary to avoid discrimination. She noticed more people emerging in
various fields with recognizably ethnic names. I told her that naturalizers
are no longer subjected to forced assimilation policy and that Japanese
citizens with names like Lee or Kimu (Kim) or Howaito (White) are
reconstructing the definition of what constitutes a Japanese or a Japanese
name.
Hiromi began to confront various conflicts. Sometimes she felt angry
and blamed Japanese people for her problems. Because of their racism I
have had to suffer. Why do they think they are better than Koreans?
At other times she said that she felt guilty that she wanted to continue
to be invisible. She questioned if she should go through life as she had,
hiding her background. Or should she be defiant and change her name as
a way of protesting discrimination? But on the other hand, was she really
Korean? Even her parents were born in Japan. She didnt speak Korean,
couldnt write it, and didnt know much about Korea. How could she claim
to be Korean? If she learned some folk songs or dances and put on ethnic
dress would that make her Korean?
And if she did change her name, what would happen? Would old
friends abandon her, and new ones avoid her? Would potential lovers
evaporate and possible jobs disappear?
She knew that if people wanted to find out her roots they could investigate her family register, which would reveal all. The suicide of Arai
Shoko, a nationally prominent politician of Korean ancestry, shook Hiromi.
Like her, he was a naturalized Japanese, and she wondered if it was her
fate, too, to be encumbered and tortured by her roots forever.
As a way of helping her to deal with her struggles, I introduced Hiromi
to a group I had met who were dealing with this very issue. They were
actively pursuing the return of their ethnic names in the courts. All
members were the offspring of naturalizers who had done as they were
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told by authorities and surrendered their Korean family names and adopted
more Japanese names. Now adults, these individuals were asserting their
right to live as Japanese citizens who publicly acknowledge being of a different ethnic background from the majority. Their actions were a direct
challenge to the state ideology of a monoethnic nation and a myth that
all Japanese citizens come from the same ethnic background.
I personally detest this ideology and have devoted part of my professional and personal life to challenging it. But I became disturbed that perhaps I was following my own needs, rather than Hiromis. I questioned
whether I was perceptively following her lead by proposing that she attend the meetings of this group or introducing my own agenda. How much
was I pushing her? Did I worry that Hiromi was resisting my efforts to
change her?
No doubt influenced by this group, Hiromi began to assert that living
under a Korean name is tough but living under an alias is tougher. When
I asked her why, she said, Its easier to bear the difficulty of presenting
yourself honestly. By using an alias you are silently agreeing that being
Korean is bad so it must be hidden. Its better to be honest and open by
revealing all and confronting reality together with the Japanese.
I struggled to understand the realities of her situation as a young
Korean-ancestry person better. Through my study, I realized that the situation has changed immensely over the years, and that much conventional
knowledge was no longer true. While Hiromis Korean grandparents were
forced to change their name, her parents were only pressured into using
a Japanese alias. For their generations, it was a common understanding
that prejudice in Japanese society made it impossible to use a Korean name
without suffering discrimination. But Hiromis generation increasingly uses
Japanese-like names as much out of a sense of familiarity as necessity.
Many claim to no longer feel inhibited by the threat of discrimination.
As I explored more on the topic of names, I began to understand that
it was not simply a matter of Korean name or Japanese name. People had
come up with various creative means of constructing names. Some used a
Korean reading of their name. Others took a common Japanese name and
wrote it in Chinese characters Korean style. There is a great variety of
individual expressions revealed in names, each an attempt to name ones
world and to transform it.
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I told her, There is a Native American saying that a mans life proceeds
from his name in the way that a river proceeds from its source.
Hiromi smiled so I decided to say more.
I went through something similar to what you are going through
when I was a student. I changed my name to reveal my background.
She gazed at me intensely and asked, Are you glad you did it?
Yes, it was very important for me at the time.
Hiromi seemed lost in thought for a moment, then said, I feel very
different to say Young Mi Lee than Hiromi Nakamura. It helps me to feel
more Korean. It expresses who I really am.
Therapy was moving along nicely, I thought. She was not just reflecting, but also engaging in actionnaming her world and changing it. But
still I questioned my approach. Were my standards too American and nave
and inappropriate in Japan? Was I assuming that asserting a Japanese
identity in the United States, as I had done, was equivalent to asserting a
Korean identity in Japan? Wasnt I mostly ignorant of the social realities
of being Korean in Japan? Was I too involved in an image of myself as a
liberator of oppressed Japanese minority youth? Did I take myself too seriously as a role model?
In other words, how much was my self-narrative influencing therapy?
I believed that no one should hide their family origins. My awareness of
the importance of names to minorities had come not only from my encounters with others, but from personal experience. I felt that I had boldly
asserted my ethnicity when I was younger by changing my name to reveal my ethnic origins at all times, should anyone care to know. Did I
therefore feel that Hiromi should do the same?
Actually, to be honest, her identity struggles were more disturbing to
me than that. Now that I had entered middle age, my identity problems
were something that I wanted to put into the past. I was embarrassed to
be reminded of the tormenting and consuming conflicts I had experienced,
and the way I had publicly announced my crisis through several name
changes in my student years. I had been comforted somewhat when I
learned that even some of the most famous psychologists, such as Harry
Stack Sullivan and the founder of the concept of identity himself, Erik
Erikson, had done the same. But as I moved away from the self-absorbed
stage of my life into engagement with my new family and career, I began
to trivialize identity problems even as I taught about their importance and
counseled youth who were going through them.
With Hiromi I wanted to be supportive, but I also felt an impatience,
a desire to push her away from what I sometimes felt were frivolous concerns. I recalled a poem that my father, perplexed by my suffering, had
written to me in the midst of my identity crisis:
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Again, I had to deal with my own identity. Mixed ethnic identity was
my professional specialty. I had turned my own identity struggles into a
clinical and research career that continued long after my dissertation on
that topic was completed. I wondered how she could treat being mixed as
such an unimportant detail of her life. And I questioned how much I resented her denial of being mixed, when for me it was such an assumed
area of similarity that should be mutually acknowledged.
Here too I had to confront my American expectations. The multiracial movement in the United States was in full force and previously denied multiple identities were being asserted. But there were few signs of
activity in Japan, where social custom still dictated that if you were part
Korean, you were Korean and not Japanese. Hiromi had not felt the space
to assert more complex and multiple identities. This is despite the fact
that while the existence of discrimination in marriage continues, the vast
majority of Koreans today marry Japanese, not Koreans. The mixed
Korean-Japanese population may number nearly half a million, yet discussion of their existence is rare.
When I expressed my surprise that she had not told me earlier about
her mother, Hiromi seemed equally perplexed that to her I was making a
big deal out of it. It didnt seem important to mention, she said.
But I persisted, We are talking about your identity, and the fact that
your mother is Japanese is not important? I asked incredulously. Hiromi
defended herself well. Her mother always talked negatively about Japanese, as though she herself was not Japanese either, she explained. By
marrying a Korean, she had left the Japanese and entered the Korean
community. I wondered about the hardship her mother had endured.
These were certainly social realities that I needed to understand.
But Hiromi also began to reflect on her lack of attention to her Japanese ancestry. Perhaps it was just too complicated. Just being Korean is
difficult enough. And she faced some painful memories. My Japanese
grandparents never really accepted us. They never completely rejected us,
but when we were together with our full Japanese cousins, we could feel
the difference in the way they treated us. . . . But our Korean grandparents also sometimes said hurtful things about us.
Being of mixed ancestry was something that Hiromi began to deal with
in her journal. I remember once my Korean grandmother said when I
did something she didnt like, she said to me, You are bad because you are
Japanese.
Hiromi was reading some writing by Japanese-Koreans who referred
to themselves as double as a way of accepting both parts of their background. She returned to signing her name Hiromi Lee, perhaps a sign of
her acceptance of a mixed identity. The two always seemed so antago-
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nistic to me. I always felt, if you were Korean, then how could you be
Japanese? But I know that both are a part of me.
I told her, That is something that I have learned too. It can be hard to
hold on to bothto claim to be both. But thats mostly because others cant
see you in that way. They want it black or white. Or in Japan, they want
you to be Korean or Japanese, American or Japanese. It just makes it easier
for them. When you insist that you are both, it creates incredible confusion and discomfort for other people.
Yeah, Hiromi answered. I noticed that people really dont know how
to treat us. If they find out I am Korean then they see me as Korean. But
if I tell them my mother is Japanese, then they feel uncomfortable to just
call me Korean. And if I insist that I am Japanese I can tell that they cant
really think of me as Japanese since I am part Korean.
So where does that leave you? I asked
I guess I just have to figure it out for myselfwhat it means to be
mixed, both. And decide whom to tell and when and how much about
myself. Everyone doesnt need to know everything.
I wanted to share my experience with her. You know I have thought
a lot about this myself. It still continues today. I think you have to choose
your battles carefully. Otherwise, you will get tired of fighting. When its
inconsequential, it may be better to just go for simplicity, just tell people
whatever is easier. But when its important sometimes you have to assert
yourself.
Yeah, I dont think I can go around telling everyone Im both Korean and Japanese. Japanese people just dont know what that means.
The timing seemed right so I returned to an old theme. You once asked
if perhaps you didnt wish that you were Japanese, when the Korean students questioned you. But you were Japanese, not just because of your
mother but also because of the way you grew up.
I realized that this was something that I could not have said years
earlier when my thinking was more rigid about ethnicity. In the past, I
would have felt that she needed to identify more as Korean and not as
Japanese. I was learning that the accentuation of a minority self was not
necessarily more authentic than the expression of other possible selves for
any individual.
INTEGRATING NARRATIVES:
ENGAGING IN SELF-DEFINITION
Around this time the school year was ending and I was leaving for a
trip abroad. Hiromi had decided to return to school in the fall full time
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and appeared to be doing well. She was still using Lee as a name, saying
that going by a Japanese name was no way to live. Its just an escape,
not a solution to the social problem, she said. That way we lose the opportunity of allowing Japanese to face the situation too.
I thought counseling was very successful. Identity conflicts had been
confronted. Hiromi had embraced and integrated her secret background
and emerged with an assertive identity as Korean. She had been able to
acknowledge the importance of being mixed, as well.
But when the fall semester began, I was surprised to find the name
Hiromi Nakamura on a class list. Wasnt that her former name that she
had officially changed in the spring? When I called off the names in class
she raised her hand for Hiromi Nakamura, but I still assumed that it was a
clerical mistake that would be corrected.
Hiromi came to see me and explained that a lot had happened during
summer vacation. She had recognized some conflicting truths and complex realities.
In the United States, to Americans, I am Japanese. It doesnt make
sense to claim to be Korean. In the eyes of others in daily social life in Japan
too, you are Japanese. In the minds of others who know your background
you are Korean. In your own mind you are both and other things as well,
she explained.
When I asked about her name, she said, I realized that it is only natural
to live with the name you have used your whole life. My parents dont
like getting mail addressed to me in my Korean name. They have worked
hard to maintain secrecy and they feel that my actions jeopardize their
safety. And my parents would never address me by my Korean name.
Besides, she continued, the days are gone when we had to work in
restaurants or game parlors. Japanese society has changed. If we have the
ability, we can get jobs anywhere. Success depends on the individual. Now
we young Koreans can do anything we want, Hiromi asserted.
Fighting discrimination every day through my name is just not necessary. My political awareness has grown, but my Korean name just doesnt
feel familiar . . . like its somebody else, not me. Maybe I am afraid of discrimination, thats true, but the more important reason is I just want to
live naturally. It is convenient and familiar to use a Japanese name; it
doesnt mean anything.
Of course, if anyone needs to know, I will tell them without hesitation that I am Korean, but I know that there is a lot more to me. I am also
Japanese, and a lot of other things as well. I am really bothboth Korean
and Japanese. I know that Korea is not my homeland; maybe Japan isnt
either, but it is more than Korea. Now that I am more strongly Korean, or
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I mean, feel more confidence, I dont need to use a Korean name. I cant
limit myself just to Korean friends. Nationality doesnt matter. What matters is how an individual thinks and acts in life.
Hiromi was just reporting to me; therapy had clearly ended. We talked
of how much she had changed since we had first met. Then I wished her
well. She thanked me and said, See you in class.
At first I felt like therapy had failed. My own involvement in issues of
personal and social change and a philosophical stance of therapy as liberation inspired me to want to encourage Hiromi in certain directions. And
I had to admit that I was disappointed by her eventual choice.
But why should I feel defeated? Hiromi had come a long way. I had to
accept that it was perhaps the best choice for her. My awareness of the
important therapeutic function of revealing secrets about ones identity
motivated me to encourage honesty and self-revelation as more positive
than assimilation achieved through disguising ones background. But still
I knew that such encouragement must be done with an awareness of the
social situation that clients face. In a society like Japan in which being
different and being Korean are reasons for exclusion, coming out of the
closet is greatly feared. The degree to which an individuals decision involves ones whole family also makes decisions about revelations of ethnic secrets an extremely heavy burden.
Taking seriously my role as a reflexive participant in therapy meant
learning to care less about such issues as whether Hiromi changed her name
and more about supporting the movement she initiated. I was reminded
that identity resolutions are very individualistic; we are not all required
to aggressively assert our ethnic background as the main aspect of our
identity.
I learned to question more deeply my assumptions that the ethnic
aspect of an individual was somehow more important and authentic than
anything else. Hiromi was teaching me that this belief is just another form
of the essentialism on which discrimination is based. Is adopting a Korean
name to recover a Korean identity necessarily the right thing to do for all
Korean Japanese? Or for some people, is it a denial of the Japanese aspects that they have acquired through socialization in Japanese society?
Must a Korean Japanese forever be Korean to be authentic?
After all, I told myself, I cant possibly know what is right for her. What
I had done in my own life was in another place, in another time. And what
of my own children, who unlike their father live very much like Hiromi,
their Irish American ancestry not revealed in their name or face? How
could I know what is best for them? It was after all my decision to have
them go through their childhood with a completely Japanese-like name.
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CHAPTER 5
We all have skeletons in our closets. But for some people these skeletons
are not remnants of their own actions but are ghosts of the ancient past.
They are not the shadows of individual sin but of stigma assigned by others. The phantoms are passed along from one generation to the next, surviving along with the social attitudes and beliefs that created them and
keep them alive. And sometimes we dont even know that the skeletons
are there until we open the door one day and discover them hanging there.
In our very first session, Ayako told me the story of the discovery of
her family secret. When I was 14 I was at home one day alone. There
was an opened letter from the city hall on the table. I looked at it and
realized it was a copy of my family register. I had heard about them but
had never seen one, so I opened it and read it. I noticed the names of my
father and my mother, their marriage, and my name at the bottom as the
oldest daughter. Then I read through the notes and noticed that my father had once changed his permanent address. The old address seemed
strangely familiar and I suddenly realized that it was in a part of the city
where burakumin live. I just kept staring at the address.
I knew very little about burakumin, except that they were people with
some connection to an outcaste group in feudal times and that this connection was shrouded in secrecy. My ignorance is not unusual in Japan.
Although there are a few million people who might be designated burakumin, public knowledge is extremely limited and discussion of the issue
muted by an unspoken taboo. Those who do speak out have often been
silenced by those who attempt to control the words and images portrayed
in the media. All Japanese know a little about burakumin but few people
talk openly and it is rare that people tell you they are burakumin.
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Since they tell no one about their ancestors, and appear no different
from majority Japanese, they are largely invisible. The document Ayako
had discovered, the koseki (family register), is the way that burakumin origins can be traced. In this system of social control, all citizens are registered in a document that contains numerous details about family members and their origins, including permanent address, previous permanent
addresses, former nationalities, adoption, illegitimacy, and so on. Since
certain areas are recognized as burakumin communities, a permanent address can identify an individual as burakumin.
What were your feelings and thoughts? I asked her.
I just couldnt believe it. It was like a wave of heat swept through my
body and flooded my head. I can still remember it. I was numb and felt
dizzy, like I had to sit down. I just couldnt believe that my father was from
a discriminated hamlet. Because that meant that he was burakumin. And
if he was burakumin, that meant that I was part burakumin! I felt like I was
in shock. After a while I put the letter back into the envelope and shuffled
slowly to my room. I lay down on the floor and just stared at the ceiling.
I dont remember that part. It was like I was in a daze. I guess several hours
passed, because I heard my mother come home.
After a while I got up and waited till she was sitting down at the kitchen
table sipping tea before I approached her and blurted out, Mom, I saw the
koseki and dads old address. Does that mean daddy is a burakumin? She
looked at me strangely and said Yes. And so am I half burakumin? I asked
her. My mother shook her head, No, she said, you are all burakumin; I am
also from that buraku.
I couldnt believe it. I said to her, Why didnt you ever tell me? She
just said, I always assumed you knew.
How did you feel about your mother at that moment?
I dont know, I was a little confused, but mad too. I felt like maybe
she had tricked me, by not telling me. But I dont know if I really wanted
to be told.
So that was the great awakening?
Yes, I guess you could call it that.
Until then Ayako had gone through her life aware that burakumin
existed but never imagining that she herself was considered to belong to
that group. Her father had moved from the old address before she was
born and had moved his permanent address to the present one. When
he married, his wife was moved from her parents register to his. But
the family register still recorded the fathers old address as well. Ayako
had never had a reason to look at her family register before and so the
family roots remained unknown to her, and no one had mentioned it
either.
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But what had she discovered? The knowledge that she was considered to be a member of the group who were descendants of people designated as social outcastes in ancient times mostly because of their occupations dealing with the flesh of animals or dead humans and religious
prohibitions against such unclean activities. There is also the theory
that they were discriminated against because they came from Korea,
although in actuality early settlers from Korea were aristocrats revered
by the Japanese. Later outcastes were officially designated by the Tokugawa government as a special segregated class at the bottom of society.
The Meiji government put an end to this caste system that placed samurai at the top and abolished discrimination in 1871, about the same time
as the abolition of slavery in the United States. Since then their special
status has survived only through the determined efforts of individuals
to maintain class distinctions with an emperor at the top and others at
the bottom, and by linking descendants to their ancestors and discriminating against them.
Ayako explained, At my high school we had special burakumin education, and so I learned about the history of discrimination and how people
were treated as animals rather than human beings. Because they did special jobs like with leather or handling dead bodies they were segregated
and discriminated against. Even today some people still think there is something polluted about burakumin and try to avoid them in marriage or even
in hiring employees.
How did you react to that education?
It was strange to hear all that. Because I hadnt grown up thinking
there was anything wrong with me. So I kept wondering, are they talking
about me? It didnt seem real at all. I mean, it seemed like something so
removed from my life and I couldnt really relate to it at all. It didnt seem
to represent my life.
That was 5 years ago, and Ayako had pushed thoughts of her background aside until she had come to a branch campus of an American university in Tokyo. Far from her hometown, she probably would have continued to ignore this issue for several years, but for her encounter with
the subject of burakumin in her college courses. Unlike at a Japanese university where the topic is taboo, at her American university professors
considered the subject an interesting and relevant illustration of prejudice
and discrimination for sociology or psychology classes. For Ayako it was
an unexpected opportunity to explore the meaning of her background.
Despite my limited knowledge of burakumin, I was one of those professors
who raised the issue in my classes. But I had never actually met a person
who admitted to being burakumin, and wondered how helpful I could be
to her.
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But the color of my Japanese blue blood had been driven into me
since childhood in America. When I had first been able to cry and admit
to my father that kids had been bullying me for being Japanese, he had
told me the stories of my samurai background. He no doubt hoped to
empower me to resist my tormentors attempts to degrade me by instilling in me a pride that I had come from noble roots. And I had delighted in
my grandmothers tales of my great-grandfather, a high-ranking samurai. No reason to feel ashamed, they said, you are high class, you are better than they are. And so I was a prince in disguise! How many of my
snotty-nosed Italian and Irish tormentors could say that?
I had always felt secure in my minority identity, and my ability to
empathize with the oppressed. But I was forced to face the question of
how my own attempts at achieving dignity and self-respect had rested on
affiliations with the elite background of my ancestors. Did I still feel the
need to counter the look in peoples eyes that said that a mixed-blood kid
born during the Occupation must be the son of a lower-class woman, and
probably was illegitimate? Of course I could show off my Tokyo University professorship or my Harvard education as signs of my worth, but my
real source of pride was not worldly achievement but a more basic biological claim of bloodsamurai blood.
But I had to reflect on difficult questions: How had my self-narrative
inadvertently prejudiced me toward others like Ayako? How could I guide
her toward self-respect? Could our backgrounds possibly be considered as
equally valid and rich sources of dignity? My ancestors had been at the
top of society, hers at the bottom. I needed to find the answersto join
her in a search for understanding. And so we began.
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something that they dont even care about. Maybe they are thinking, Why
is this girl telling me this? Have you thought about how you would like
them to react? What would you want them to say?
Ayako was unsure.
I struggled with my position here. Why was I encouraging her to conceal her background? As a psychologist with a social conscience, I believed
in the importance of her coming out and challenging the consciousness of
oppression. I believed that self-assertion is liberating to the spirit and a form
of true living. If she had nothing to be ashamed of, why could she not tell
anyone and everyone that she was burakumin? I wanted her to decide what
was authentic for her, although I questioned whether there was one authentic self that she would discover, but rather thought she would find
authenticity in different ways in different situations. I hoped that she could
liberate herself from psychological chains of oppression and also live wisely.
She had nothing to be ashamed of; society would change only by exploding these myths.
And on a more personal level I applauded her efforts to define herself. I too had gone through a period in which I wanted everyone I met to
know I was Japanese and Irish. To my surprise, I found out that some
people could care less, but I persisted in announcing it anyway. Should I
encourage her in the same way? Many of my American friends whose
status was ambiguous by their appearance resorted to various methods of
self-revelation, some by names, others by hair style or clothing that announced their identity.
Yet I wanted to be careful not to impose my ideas on her. I had grown
up in the United States, where my beliefs had fermented. Although many
individuals hide their roots, it is also an openly multicultural society, where
people of diverse backgrounds agree in principle to live together. In contrast to Americas melting pot or salad bowl, pluralist ideology, Japan has
insisted on a homogeneous national identity. I knew little of the pressures
she would be under in Japanese society were she to reveal her background,
nor did I know emotionally the feeling of some majority Japanese toward
those they consider burakumin. In contrast to her situation, I am a highly
visible minority, but one relegated these days mostly to the status of outsider rather than inferior.
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me to study to get good grades to make her happy. But she wanted me to
study because I enjoyed studying. She said that because I was an only child
she thought I needed to be strong. Because there was no father she had to
also act like a father.
Ayako was crying now. I realized how hard it had been for her, raising a child all by herself. She had to be strong. It wasnt that she didnt
love me.
Ayako understood herself and her mother much better now. She and
her mother developed a new closeness and intimacy as two women, not
only as mother and daughter. I saw her less and less as time went on and
then she graduated and our only contact was through occasional phone
calls and New Years greeting cards.
KEEPING SECRETS
Years later when I saw Ayako she had clearly overcome her adolescent trauma. Perhaps the crisis would never have happened if she had gone
to a Japanese university and remained in a Japanese environment. Her
presence in the American university liberated her to confront her background and experiment with her identity. The atmosphere of openness
and acceptance of diversity along with identification of prejudice and discrimination encouraged her to reveal her background and determine what
that heritage meant.
Ayako achieved an acceptance of her background but lives with a fear
that one day prejudice may appear to bedevil her. Through her searching
for knowledge of her background, she has empowered herself with the
understanding that she has no reason to feel shame or inferiority. Therapy
was one safe place in which she revealed her secret to another individual
and found that it had no negative impact on the relationship. Now she
decides on a case-by-case basis to whom and when she will talk about her
background, although she feels that it should not be kept from anyone
with whom she becomes intimate. She no longer struggles constantly with
these issues but lives quietly with her secret while most of those she meets
consider her just another ordinary Japanese.
Among the few people she eventually revealed her secret to, she encountered no negative reactions. This acceptance may have convinced her
that her background was, in fact, a nonissue to most people, at least to
those she cared about the most and who care about her as well. In the
years since, she has told no one but her present husband. She has still
experienced no discrimination. As almost no one ever discusses the topic
openly, she has not been exposed to any prejudicial attitudes.
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But the issue remains in the shadows. Now she worries about her own
children. What should I tell them? she asked.
But you dont have any children, I chided.
Ayako laughed, I know, but if I do, Im just wondering what do I tell
them about my, or their, background.
Or by telling your children do you perpetuate something that has so
little meaning?
Thats what my husband says. He says, Whats the point of telling
them? They are no different than anyone else.
But you know that if someone wanted to, they could find out about
your kids background.
Yes, if they wanted to go to the trouble.
Maybe its as simple as telling them that some of their ancestors were
discriminated against, like Jews would tell their children about the Holocaust, or African Americans tell their kids about slavery?
Ayako gave me a look that said that we both knew it should be as
simple as that, but somehow isnt. A burakumin past is shrouded in mystery. Its power lies in the taboo, the unspeakable.
Ayako has no other worries now. She is not and does not intend to be
employed by a major company so the only other likely way of discrimination would be marriage. But she had told her boyfriend early in their relationship and it had made no difference to him. And now they were
married.
When my husband proposed to me, I was so happy I immediately
called my mother to tell her. But just like with my previous boyfriend,
she put a damper on my feelings right away by telling me that I had to
force him to tell his parents right away. With a heavy feeling I hung up
and called him and said, You have to tell your parents. He was at their
house at the time and promised he would do it right away. But I called
him a few hours later and asked him, Did you tell them? He admitted
that he hadnt. I insisted he do it and hung up again. I waited, and some
time later he called back. He had told his mother, he said. She said that
she didnt care, but told him Dont tell your father. So they decided to
keep it a secret from him. I felt strange, but thought that I had to go along
with whatever they decided as a family. He told me that his father would
not attempt to investigate my family because his older brother and older
sisters partners had not been investigated.
My husbands father is really nice to me, so I feel bad not telling him.
He is embarrassed by their financial condition now. We are much better
off than they are. We own land and a house and my relatives have their
own businesses. But his father clings to his samurai background as a symbol of his worth.
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Epilogue
103
CHAPTER 6
Epilogue
If I knew the way, I would take you home.
(Garcia & Hunter, 1970)
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Multicultural Encounters
lives may be deeply flavored by their cultures, but they are still human
dramas and personal stories.
The narratives illustrate an integrative approach that requires balancing various theoretical perspectives of therapy. Although this approach
might be called existential, constructivist, or multicultural, there is no
certain technique or style advocated but rather a belief that what we do
should be based on the uniqueness of the persons with whom we are
engaged. The stories lack clear directives of how to do counseling, instead
teaching through the demonstration of particular interactions with particular clients.
Repeated throughout the narratives is the view that multicultural
counseling demands a consciousness more than a set body of knowledge
or techniques. Training calls for the development of character rather than
the acquisition of external labels of achievement. Counselors are challenged to see each person as a unique individual with human characteristics deeply flavored by particular cultural influences. Each counselor must
develop his or her own way of working, creating a unique approach for
each person with whom he or she is fortunate to engage.
I believe that it is important for each reader to derive his or her own
meanings from these stories. However, many of us do not come from traditions in which storytelling is regarded as a valid form of teaching. Some
readers may want more explicit explanation of what is being illustrated.
And I realize that the concepts here may be difficult to grasp, as they lack
the simplicity of approaches that claim that culture is either all or nothing. An integrative approach may seem like taking the best of all worlds,
but synthesizing seemingly conflictual theoretical approaches may be confusing, and certainly lacks the clarity of following a particular style from
one school.
Therefore, in this chapter I explain more specifically what occurred
in these encounters by three themes. One is the attempt to understand
the clients worldview. Another is the striving for a greater awareness of
ones own worldview. And then there is the challenge of balancing these
worldviews.
Counselors are continually trying to understand what clients are experiencing and feeling in the moment, as well as in what Kahn (1997) calls
Epilogue
105
the gradually unfolding coherence of the themes of their lives (p. 168).
The word diagnosis in its original and profound meaning of thoroughly
knowing teaches us that the most important aspect of all healing is the
effort to know our clients fully (Nouwen, 1966). Knowing is being able to
observe and comprehend what is going on in the present in accurate, concrete, and complete detail.
However, just as our own pains are hard to touch, so are those of
others, and just as we like to take the easy way ourselves, we also prefer
to offer advice and treatment to others without having known the wounds
that need healing. Still, it is not in the desire to change or to fix but in the
willingness to know the other that we reach out and become healers.
Therefore, counseling encompasses the creation of an empty and compassionate space where those who suffer can tell their story to someone who
can listen with care (Welwood, 1983a). This is more than just a technique,
and requires the full and real presence of the counselor.
Multicultural counseling presents the challenge of appreciating the
worldview of those whom we consider culturally differentand the greater
the differences, the greater the struggle (Pedersen, Fukuyama, & Heath,
1989). But apparent differences can make us more aware of the danger of
assuming that we know and motivate us to ask our clients for their help
when we dont understand. Although we may begin by naturally applying our own cultural standards as if they were universal, we can gradually refine and adapt them to identify culturally different worldviews
(Segall, Dasen, Berry, & Poortinga, 1990).
Understanding the clients worldview helps us to construct stories that
make sense of his or her behaviors and feelings and offer a resonant emotional response (Omer & Alon, 1997). This awareness also enhances the
power of the stories that counselors tell to clients by enabling us to use
metaphors based on shared experiences and understandings. Our attempts
to use metaphors based only on general cultural knowledge are likely to
be unconvincing or inappropriate. In my work with Hideo (Chapter 2), a
city boy, nature metaphors fell flat, while those of shared racial experience resonated deeply.
Our attempts to understand a clients worldview are a form of respect.
The Latin origin of the word, respicere, means to look at and see. Seeing someone as he or she is, and not as we would like him or her to be, is respecting
that person (Fromm, 1956/1989). Without being seen where we are, humans find it hard to move and no matter how good the advice may be we
defy the determined efforts of others to change us. Perry (quoted in Morimoto,
1993) describes how a battle for power and control ensues in which defenses
go up and options disappear, resistances arise, and creative efforts to prevent annihilation burst forth in a fight for ones existence (p. 1).
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When counselors think they know better than their clients what they
should be doing in therapy, we consciously or unconsciously impose our
cultural values on them. We move ahead too quickly in our desire to
change the clients and abandon them in their struggles. But until they feel
understood, clients cannot give up their battle and put their energy into
moving on.
Our assumptions that clients are resisting, acting out, or defending
against our best efforts to teach them may disappear when we consider
the possibility that they know better than we do (Taft, 1973). If our efforts are directed instead toward allowing ourselves to feel what they are
feeling, to enter their world as if it were our own, the possibility to learn
about them and their cultures emerges. Sensing the clients tolerance for
and capacity to integrate novel experiences of therapy is a skill complicated by cultural differences. Respect is expressed as patience, such as when
we ask something we really need to know but are sensitive when the client does not wish to respond.
Counselors struggle to avoid reductionism, ridicule, denial of confusion, and other defenses of arrogance (Katz, 1999). But it is only to the
degree that the counselor respects the person with whom he or she is
working that the counselor can begin to understand the experienced reality of that person. Seeing the value and significance of an experience
from within the world of the participants requires suspending our judgments and allowing the experiences to speak to us.
Counselors attempt to show their understanding through techniques
like reflection, which are safe and give us the assurance that at least we
are doing something. But techniques seem mechanical unless they have
been integrated into the counselors own self (Leitner, 1995). It is from
the commitment to values such as truth, caring, respect, and humility that
techniques derive their healing power.
Verbal techniques like reflection also do not work well in some cultural settings where it would be more appropriate to show understanding
with silence, a nod of the head, a sigh, a smile, a joining of hands, fleeting
eye contact, the shedding of a tear, or a warm touch on the shoulder rather
than through verbal reflection or a penetrating gaze. With a client from
any culture, empathy is felt most deeply and conveyed most convincingly
when we put aside our own agenda and open ourselves to the clients
experience. Our spontaneity may then emerge in a creative and personal
way of communicating empathy at that moment (Welwood, 1983a).
Understanding the clients worldview means learning directly how his
or her life is affected by a myriad of cultural experiences and sociopolitical
influences of immigration, poverty, racism, stereotyping, and powerless-
Epilogue
107
ness (Sue et al., 1998). Awareness of how these factors impact the lives of
our clients is a first step. However, textbook knowledge is unconvincing
to clients who want to know if we have any life experience that enables
us to at least begin to understand.
Ayako (Chapter 5) presented a formidable challenge of understanding the experience of an outcaste heritage that was to me only something
I had read about. I had to draw on my own minority experience and general knowledge of minority psychology without presuming I understood
her particular experience as a burakumin. I had to be especially careful with
Hideoa fellow mixed-bloodto not assume that I knew what he was
experiencing.
Understanding the worldview of our clients includes reading the cues
they give us and understanding the depth of emotionsprocesses that are
complicated by different cultural norms (Neimeyer & Fukuyama, 1984).
We may need to learn new cues, signals, and patterns of emotional expression because without knowing culturally learned criteria counselors
cannot accurately interpret or evaluate behaviors and recognize emotions
(Ivey, 1988).
Counseling is complicated with clients for whom the management and
control of emotions is highly valued. Persons in many cultures have been
socialized to believe that acceptance in a stoic and cheerful manner of the
sad, even the tragic dimensions of life is admirable. Emotional distance is
orchestrated in different cultures with dramatic variations in styles of experiencing and expressing emotions verbally and nonverbally.
Assuming that sadness is shown only by a dark countenance will lead
us to mistake a smiling face for happiness. Yet people in some cultures commonly smile when talking about something painful or tragic. Ayako often
giggled when uttering expressions of anguish. More than once I failed to
recognize the extent of her emotional suffering, deluded by her smiles and
verbal assurances that she was okay. Anger also has many faces, and we
may not recognize it when it is hidden behind a calm demeanor. Khermanis
(Chapter 3) anger was obvious, but when Hideo denied that he was upset
when I cancelled an appointment, I didnt understand how angry he was
until much later.
Understanding the clients worldview includes awareness of individual
and cultural differences regarding authentic relationships. Counselors may
lack an appreciation of silence and nonverbal forms of communication,
having been trained in a method that is a verbal dialogue. Our professional
training influences us to experience discomfort with some clients, wanting
them to speak more and to move quickly through therapy. We value the
articulation of the highly verbal client, yet nonverbal forms of communica-
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tion as expressed in subtle gestures and powerful silences are greatly valued in some cultures where words are regarded as inadequate to express
the deepest human emotions (Kameguchi & Murphy-Shigematsu, 2001).
Introspection and self-disclosure are expected parts of therapy but the
ability of clients to engage in these activities varies greatly. Cultural norms
are dramatically different for the expression of an inner self in a spontaneous and open manner. The appropriate level of intimacy for counseling
will therefore also vary as well as the kind of intimate reflections and revelations we might expect (Roland, 1989). While there are those who can
quickly and easily express the private, inner, intimate world associated with
deep personal and family relations, others cannot. Those from more collectivistic cultures are socialized to submerge the self in the interest of the
group and a personal focus is considered selfish or impolite. The expectations of the counselor that the client reflect deeply and reveal intimate
events and feelings may therefore be alien and inappropriate and cause
considerable anxiety for some clients (Vontress, Johnson, & Epp, 1999).
This requires regulating our level of openness and spontaneity and modifying our expectations for openness in clients according to their comfort
and readiness.
Establishing appropriate levels of intimacy in counseling is a complex,
culturally mediated process that requires understanding different worldviews. Counselors may try to adopt an informal stance that invites intimacy,
but this style may cause us to lose esteem with some clients. A formal style
in manner and dress may enhance our appearance of professionalism and
earn respect, especially with clients from more collectivist cultures who have
hierarchical expectations. However, this same style may create distance with
other clients. The challenge with each client is to establish a style that would
lead him or her to want to have a close relationship with you.
With bilingual clients it is important to understand how different languages are connected to worldviews. Speaking in Japanese to Hideo involved associations of formality, respect for hierarchical status, emotional
distance, and expectations of nonverbal understanding. English evoked
very different associations of autonomy, freedom, equalitarian relationships, and verbal expressiveness. The use of English in therapy therefore made it easier for us to communicate directly about issues dear to
him.
In our encounters with clients of various cultural backgrounds, differences inevitably emerge. Our efforts to overcome these differences can
be guided by a belief that cherishing each persons uniqueness, separateness, and wholeness transcends all other concerns (Morimoto, 1999). But
it is often our own fears that keep the person at a distance, forcing us to
reflect on our inner world.
Epilogue
109
Through these stories I have tried to show how counselors bring their
own worldviews to the relationship and how these affect the way they
conduct therapy. Ideally counselors are actively engaged in the process of
becoming aware of our own assumptions, values, biases, and preconceived
notions about human behavior. We should be seeking a greater understanding of our cultural background, experiences, and worldview.
However, many of us have been trained to focus on the presumed
defects of our clients rather than to look inside ourselves to see what we
can offer (Breggin, 1997). Courage is required to confront personal issues
when they arise in our work and to use them as opportunities for our
personal growth. We need to find within ourselves the way to relate with
interest, enthusiasm, and empathy to the person we are trying to help.
Counselors also need to recognize the limits of our comfort with differences and how prejudice affects us in our work.
Acknowledging the feelings, beliefs, and stereotypes that we hold toward others is not easy, but must be done in order to recognize the impact we have on clients. Certain types of people antagonize us and certain
styles of communication make us uncomfortable. We are challenged to
actively foster self-awareness of negative emotional reactions and projections around race, gender, and culture that are detrimental to counseling
and are reflected in our work with culturally different clients.
Cultivating greater self-awareness enhances our development as therapists since our ability to understand the experience of our clients is limited by the depth and range of our personal experience and insight. Counselors are given the opportunity to learn valuable lessons not only about
others, but also about ourselves. In this kind of relationship of co-construction of reality two people work together to find new meaning and new
ways of being (Ivey, 1986). Counselors become students and clients become teachers. This kind of therapy involves the counselors working
through and developing understanding about problems that arise from his
or her own self-narratives.
Some of the multicultural literature gives the impression that our
only task is to educate White people to be more aware of their racism
(Wilson, 1994a). However, prejudices and biases are a part of any
counselors cultural baggage and it is important to examine them (Sue,
1993). The multicultural training that I received failed to force minority
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Multicultural Encounters
psychologists to address our own prejudices that arise in our work with
Whites and with other minorities. But any of the multiple selves of a
counselor of any ethnic background involving gender, class, race, or
education may be salient at any particular moment and impact on the
relationship with the client.
Counselors struggle to extend our capacity for understanding and
accepting what is different by integrating foreign ways of thinking and
experiencing. In this way we stretch the limits of self by embracing the
otherness of the exotic, strange, and alien. As I attempted to discover how
to help Ayako become liberated, I was forced to tangle with my own selfconstructions. I became aware that while regarding myself as an oppressed
minority, I had ironically empowered myself through my connections with
a glorious past of class privilege. This narrative clashed dramatically with
her attempt to liberate herself from the chains of this same feudal caste
system. The same reality that empowered me oppressed her. This awareness forced me into a confrontation with one of the fragile narratives on
which I had built my identity.
Self-awareness is also important because good intentions of the counselor do not necessarily lead to good consequences (Ridley, Mendoza,
Kanitz, Angermeier, & Zenk, 1994). I chose a clinical residency in an innercity hospital in a Black community because I romanticized African American culture and poverty. At first I refused to see abuse or pathology even
when it was obvious, while a fellow trainee, who was working there reluctantly, on the other hand, saw pathology everywhere. But I became
troubled when persons I was interviewing told me about terrible experiences of violence and abusive relationships they were in with spouses,
lovers, or children, who happened to be Black, not White. To acknowledge such abuse threatened the claims to moral superiority associated with
the suffering of and discrimination against Blacks. I feared that I might be
mistakenly basing my intuition on a stereotype of chaotic families and
abuse in African Americans, and that it is not right to further stigmatize
an already oppressed minority group. The result was that my clinical intuition was compromised not only by potential cultural misunderstanding but also by a kind of self-censorship.
I tell this story to emphasize that our worldview is damaging to clients in unanticipated ways. My ability to help Hiromi (Chapter 4) was limited by my middle-aged cynicism of youthful identity conflicts. Empathizing with Hideo was made difficult by my own narrative of stoicism in the
face of discrimination.
Self-knowledge brings to awareness our own stories, which may enhance our understanding of the client and also enable us to tell powerful
Epilogue
111
112
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Epilogue
113
114
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115
sense of our own importance in healing our clients will cause us to miss
opportunities to empower them.
With the clients in these stories I try to offer the hope that they might
move in the way they wish, while also admonishing them that much would
remain the same. This message is not given in a negative manner, but as
a balanced and respectful assessment. When I told Hideo that he would
become more able to engage with others, but probably never be the life of
the party, he was finally able to laugh at himself. Khermani was sobered
as I encouraged him to face both the damage to his career that could not
be undone and the joy of awakening to his emotional life.
The Taoist philosophy of Yin and Yang as contrasting but complementary forces of female and male principles is expressed in the concept of
asymmetrical balance that recognizes the necessary presence of both light
and dark to provide meaning (Pedersen, 1997). This view of balance describes a harmonious tension between these principles, and humans as part
of a dynamic order and relational design where all elements serve a necessary function. Applied to our daily lives, a sense of balance means touching the deepest existential questions as well as dealing with the mundane
tasks and developing the full capacity for joy and sadness.
Similarities and Differences
These narratives demonstrate my attempts at maintaining a view that
humans are simultaneously similar and different. This may seem simplistic, but I believe that our sensitivity to clients depends on balancing these
perspectives. An understanding of shared humanity is essential to counseling. At the same time, we must have awareness that a person has something in common with certain other humans, which we call a shared culture. While balancing these perspectives, we must also attempt to recognize
the uniqueness of the person before us. The clients in this book demonstrate how individual, group, and universal levels of identity are fluid. A
client may focus on individual needs at one moment, at another on an
issue related to reference group identity, while at still another time on
universal human experience. The counselor flexibly strives to relate to that
which is most salient at that moment.
Traditionally, counseling is engaged at primarily the individual or
universal levels, thereby negating the important influences of reference
groups. In reaction to this neglect, many of those promoting the field of
multicultural counseling have strongly emphasized the importance of what
is cultural and racial. In so doing, they have usually ignored what is idiosyncratic, although some have argued for the recognition of both perspectives (Locke, 1990). Sue (1990) has contributed heavily to a culture-
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specific approach, but he also warns of the dangers of this method leading
to overemphasis on technique, objectifying clients, and developing racial
and cultural stereotypes. While advocating the crucial importance of culture, Vontress (1979, 1996) has also continually stressed the significance
of recognizing that people are more alike than different and that clients
often consult us about problems in living that transcend culture and have
little or nothing to do with race or ethnicity.
The debate over whether people are similar or different is logical dichotomy removed from reality (Lebra, 1992). Difference and sameness are
not mutually exclusive and both clearly exist and must be understood to
know a clients cultural contexts. There are obviously similarities of shared
values across cultural groups and differences in how each expresses those
values. But counseling, research, and writing are political acts that require
us to take a stand. Which stand we take depends on our purpose and our
audience. As these change, so does our focus. When I envision my purpose as fighting against the cultural biases in psychology and my audience
as Whites who need to be convinced of the importance of race and culture, I must emphasize differences. If I turn my attention to those who
are aware of these issues, my focus may shift to similarities.
Too much focus on either/or dichotomies of any kind can mislead
counselors. The popular individualistic and collectivist duality disguises the
existence of these values in each individual to various degrees. Persons
from collectivist cultures may have learned to submerge a self to conform
to group norms, but there is likely to be another self that longs for expressions of individuality.
I have personally found it helpful to emphasize the belief that we are
more alike than we are different, or more human than anything else. A
basic recognition that humans share concerns about living and dying must
underlie the relationship that we hope to establish with any person who
comes to us for help. Empathy depends on feeling this common ground
and common bond that connects us to all other people regardless of the
apparent differences. I would therefore prefer to err on the side of emphasizing our human commonalties, rather than induce the alienating and
divisive feeling of overemphasizing our differences.
However, this focus may work for me as a balancing effect, since so much
of my awareness is naturally placed on culture and race. I am a person who
grew up in an extended family in which there were clear cultural differences between the Irish, the Japanese, and those mixed. I have lived much
of my life in communities in which my family and I were strikingly different from others. But for someone without either experience or awareness
of the powerful impact of racial and cultural differences in an individuals
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117
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Epilogue
119
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Index
Abu-Lughod, L., 4, 10
Acceptance, change and, 112
Acculturation theory, 61
Adolescence, developmental tasks of,
3132, 3840
African Americans, 110
Ajase complex, 27
Alienation, of Hideo, 20, 2425, 27, 30
31
Allport, G. W., 6
Alon, N., 105, 114
Alternative counseling, 78
Amae theory, 32
Anderson, H., 12, 113114
Angermeier, L., 110
Appadurai, A., 4
Art of counseling, 1113
Authenticity, in cultural-identity
development, 7579, 8283, 9293
Authority relations, of Khermani, 49,
5053, 5758
Awakuni, G., 2
Ayako (case), 85102, 107, 110
authenticity and, 9293
boyfriends and identity, 9497, 101
burakumin identity of, 8598
follow-up with, 100102
intimacy with therapist, 9293
language use, 92
mother-daughter relationship, 97100
politics of blood and, 8889
search for roots, 8991
Berry, J. W., 105
Breggin, P. R., 109
Bruner, J., 5
Bullying, Hideo and, 1922, 28, 3337, 38
Burakumin identity, of Ayako, 8598
127
128
Dasen, P. R., 105
Depression, Hideo and, 2223, 2528,
3032, 3840, 4445
Development theories, 117118
De Vos, G., 9
Differences, among narratives, 115117
Discrimination, burakumin identity and,
8598
Doan, R. E., 12
Dyson, M. E., 4
Efran, J. S., 9
Either/or dichotomies, 115117
Empathy, in counseling process, 106,
116117
Epp, L. R., 108
Epston, D., 9
Erikson, Erik, 78
Essentialism, 83
Existential counseling, 8
Father-son relationship, Hideo and, 22,
27, 29, 4145
Follow-up
with Ayako, 100102
Foster, S. L., 2
Fouad, N., 3, 107
Freedman, J., 114
Freire, P., 69
Fromm, E., 105
Fukuyama, M., 105, 107
Garcia, J., 103
Gergen, K. J., 9, 113
Gilroy, P., 3
Gnostic Gospels, 17
Goleman, D., 114
Goncalves, O. F., 12
Good, B. J., 4, 12
Goolishian, H., 12, 113114
Gravity, levity and, 114115
Harter, S. L., 13
Hayes, R. L., 6, 12
Heath, A., 105
Held, B. S., 9
Hideo (case), 1847, 105, 107, 110111,
114, 115
bullying and, 1922, 28, 3337, 38
Index
depression and, 2223, 2528, 3032,
3840, 4445
father-son relationship, 22, 27, 29,
4145
intimacy with therapist, 2325, 30,
3337, 40
lack of feelings, 21, 2223, 2931, 33,
34
language use, 22, 2325
mother-son relationship, 2223, 25
29, 3032, 3840, 4445
social isolation of, 20, 2425, 27, 30
31
termination of therapy, 4547
United States and, 3738, 4345
Hiromi (case), 6984, 110, 112
additional identity issues, 7984
correct name of, 7579, 8283
intimacy with therapist, 73, 7879
journal of, 69, 71, 74, 75, 7778
as Korean in Japan, 6984
naturalization process and, 7579
secret identity of, 7273
termination of therapy, 8184
Howard, G. S., 13
Humanistic counseling, 8, 9, 10
Hunter, R., 103
Integrative counseling, 610, 104
Intentionality, 10
Interventions
narrative approach and, 1113, 104
nonverbal, 8, 106, 107108
Intimacy with therapist, 108
of Hideo, 2325, 30, 3337, 40
of Hiromi, 73, 7879
of Khermani, 5355, 6062, 6466
Introspection, in counseling process, 108
Intuition, knowledge and, 113114
Iranians in Japan, 4868
Ivey, A. E., 3, 6, 7, 10, 107, 109, 111
112, 117
Ivey, M. B., 7, 10
Jensen, M., 3, 107
Johnson, J. A., 108
Journal, of Hiromi, 69, 71, 74, 75, 77
78
Jung, C. J., 13, 109
Index
Kabat-Zinn, J., 8
Kahn, M., 11, 104105
Kameguchi, K., 108
Kanitz, B., 110
Kaptchuk, T. J., 7
Katz, R., 7, 15, 17, 106, 111, 117, 118
Kaye, J., 9, 113
Khermani (case), 4868, 107, 114, 115
death of father, 52, 67
empathy of therapist with, 6263
intimacy with therapist, 5355, 60
62, 6466
as Iranian in Japan, 51, 5354, 5658,
6566, 6768
language use, 51, 64
Muslim faith of, 51, 67
obsession with professor, 49, 5053,
5758
responsibility for change, 6368
stigma against mental illness and, 48,
5152, 56, 58, 59
termination of therapy, 6768
victim role of, 4953, 5558
Knowledge, intuition and, 113114
Koreans in Japan, 6984
Koseki (family register), 8586, 95
Kristeva, J., 111
La Fromboise, T., 2, 3, 107
Language use
of Ayako, 92
of Hideo, 22, 2325
of Khermani, 51, 64
Lebra, T. S., 116
Leitner, L. M., 15, 106
Levity, gravity and, 114115
Lipchik, E., 114
Locke, D., 115
Mahoney, M. J., 118
Mainstream-oriented counseling, 78
Manese, J. E., 3, 107
May, R., 8
Mediator role, of therapist, 6062
Meditation, 8
Mendoza, D. W., 110
Mio, J. S., 2
Morimoto, K., 8, 15, 105106, 108
Morita, 112
129
Morita, S., 8
Mother-daughter relationship
Ayako and, 97100
Mother-son relationship
Ajase complex, 27
Hideo and, 2223, 2529, 3032, 38
40, 4445
Oedipus complex, 27
Mourning process, death of parent and,
52, 67
Multicultural counseling. See also
Counseling approaches
as art, 1113
competencies in, 3
counseling approaches and, 610
ethnic narratives in, 36
importance of, 2
as narrative practice, 1213
need for, 3
Multiracial movement, 80
Murphy-Shigematsu, S., 78, 108, 117
Naikan, 112
Name, as issue for Hiromi, 7579, 82
83
Narrative approach. See also individual
cases
art of counseling and, 1113, 104
client stories in, 36, 12, 1617
constructivism and, 89
therapist stories in, 13, 73, 8889,
102
Naturalization process, Hiromi and, 75
79
Neimeyer, G. J., 107
Neimeyer, R., 89, 12
Nonverbal intervention, 8, 106, 107
108
Nouwen, H. J. M., 1, 105
Numbness
of Hideo, 21, 2223, 2931, 3334
Oedipus complex, 27
Omer, H., 13, 105, 114
Oppenheim, R., 12
Optimism, 114115
Parham, T., 7, 117
Parry, A., 12
130
Pedersen, P., 6, 10, 105, 111112, 113,
115
Person-centered counseling, 67
Pessimism, 114115
Pierce, C. M., 2
Ponterotto, J. G., 2, 3, 107, 113
Poortinga, Y. H., 105
Postmodernism, 910
Reflective approach, to counseling, 13
16, 106
Religious beliefs
of Khermani, 51, 67
Resistance, of therapist, 1516
Respect, 105106
Responsibility for change, Khermani
and, 6368
Reynolds, D. K., 8
Ridley, C. R., 110
Rogers, C. R., 8
Roland, A., 108, 112
Sacks, O., 16
Said, E., 4
Sampson, E. E., 2
Sarbin, T. R., 5
Schon, D. A., 14
Schwarz, R. A., 10
Segall, M. H., 105
Shainberg, D., 11, 112, 118
Shorter-Gooden, K., 117
Silence, in counseling process, 106,
107108
Simek-Morgan, L., 7, 10
Similarities, among narratives, 115117
Social isolation, of Hideo, 20, 2425, 27,
3031
Spence, D., 5, 9, 113
Index
Steenbarger, B. N., 117
Stigma against mental illness, Khermani
and, 48, 56, 58, 59
Storytelling. See Narrative approach
Sue, D., 2
Sue, D. W., 2, 3, 6, 9, 107, 109, 115116
Suicidal gestures, 92, 95, 9798
Sullivan, Harry Stack, 78
Sumimasen, 6162
Taft, J., 8, 106
Taghdir, 6566
Taoism, 115
Tatemae, 60
Termination of therapy
Hideo and, 4547
Hiromi and, 8184
Khermani and, 6768
Vazquez-Nutall, E., 3, 107
Victim role, of Khermani, 4953, 5558
Viney, L. L., 16
Vontress, C. E., 5, 8, 108, 116
Welwood, J., 1516, 105, 106, 111
White, M., 9
Whitman, W., 18
Wilson, B., 85, 109
Worldview
balancing different, 111118
therapist self-awareness of, 109111
understanding clients, 104109
Yalom, I. D., 8, 11, 13, 15, 113, 118
Yi, K., 117
Zen Buddhism, 112
Zenk, R., 110
131