The Psychology of Helping
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Transcript of The Psychology of Helping
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The Psychology of Helping
Alison Hardingham, MA Oxon, C PsycholVisiting Executive Professor , Henley College
of ManagementDirector of Business Psychology, Yellow Dog
Consulting
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Purpose of my dialogue with you today
• To explore and understand what goes on between and inside us when we help each other, and so become better able to help with lasting benefit and no harm
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Structure of my dialogue with you today
• Who I am and what I believe• What do we mean by ‘helping’ here?• Some provoking comments• Some thoughts about the psychology of helping• Some thoughts about the risks of helping• Some practical recommendations for the
development and support of those who help• Open dialogue
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Who I am and what I believe
• Business psychologist
• Executive coach, and teacher/supervisor of coaches
• Eclectic
• Biased towards evolutionary biology and psychodynamic approaches
• ‘The unexamined life is not worth living’ (Socrates)
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What do we mean by ‘helping’ here?
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What does it mean to be in a ‘helping profession’?
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Some provoking comments
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‘With great puzzlement and a furrowed brow he said, ‘I don’t
understand why you are so angry with me. I wasn’t trying to help
you.’
(From Wilfred Bion’s work with groups)
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• ‘(De Gaulle) also had a real hatred of the Americans, and a kind of love-hatred complex about the British. The truth is – I may be cynical, but I fear it is true- if Hitler had danced in the streets of London, we’d have had no trouble with de Gaulle! What they could not forgive us is that we held on, and that we saved France. People, can forgive an injury, but they can hardly ever forgive a benefit.’ (Harold Macmillan, quoted in Charlton’s ‘The Price of Victory’, BBC, 1983)
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The act of helping another person is often not simple and
straightforward. It derives from complex motivations, in both helper and helped, and it has
complex and long-lasting consequences, often unforeseen
at the time of helping.
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Would you rather help or be helped?
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Some thoughts about the psychology of helping:
An evolutionary perspective
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Why do we help?
• Kinship
• To ensure our own survival (physical, social and psychological)
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Why do we seek help?
• Kinship
• To ensure our own survival (physical, social and psychological)
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When we help, we build our own ‘survival credits’ at another human being’s expense, evolutionarily speaking.
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Some thoughts about the psychology of helping:
A psychodynamic perspective
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• Helping and being helped can elicit transfer of emotions and behaviours from those early and most powerful human relations: those between parent and child.
• So the motivation to help taps directly into our ‘inner theatre’ and is often underpinned by powerful, complex and unconscious forces.
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Some thoughts about the risks of helping
• Dependency – genuine and cynical
• Omnipotence
• Exploitation
• Disappointment, despondency, exhaustion
• Avoidance of one’s own issues and, ultimately, loss of self
• Anger is often the ‘presenting symptom’.
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Some practical recommendations
• Those who help need to explore and understand their own motivations for helping.
• Those who help need to ensure a balance between helping and being helped, in their own lives.
• Those who help need supervision.
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Supervision
• A (usually guided) process of reflection and dialogue which enables:
• - self-awareness, honesty and compassion
• - personal and professional development
• - emotional support and re-charging
• - the management of ethical boundaries and the assurance of ‘safe helping’
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Final thought
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‘No man is an island……..any man’s death diminishes me,
because I am involved in Mankind; And therefore never
send to know for whom the bell tolls; It tolls for thee.’ (John
Donne)
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Reading list
• ‘The Coach’s Coach’, Alison Hardingham, 2004• ‘Awareness’, Anthony De Mello, 1990• ‘How the Mind Works’, Steven Pinker, 1997• Leadership Coaching’, Graham Lee, 2003• ‘The Leader on the Couch’, Manfred Kets De
Vries, 2007• ‘Supervision in the Helping Professions’,
Hawkins and Shohet, 1989