These conditions and other factors that may be out of our control (e.g., reimbursement from insurance carriers) constitute a recipe for emotional exhaustion. We need self-care strategies to prevent the harmful effects of these stresses and to help ourselves when we start to feel detached, overwhelmed, and burned out (Jevne & Williams, 1998). We need to be on guard for the telltale signs of such stress, like fleeting hopes that our clients call to cancel their appointments, impatience with our clients, and musing between sessions about going back to school to study geology or taxidermy. You need to be your own best friend and make a strong commitment to take care of yourself. Those who need your help—your clients—won’t be asking you if you are getting good rest at night, taking periodic vacations, exercising regularly, or are involved in healthy personal relationships. You need to be checking in on yourself and seeking assistance from colleagues. Ask yourself questions such as these: How do you know when you are stressed? What are your telltale signs? What are your first reactions when you feel stressed? What are some ways you try to cope with stress? Would you characterize these as healthy, unhealthy, or ineffectual? What might you do differently to cope better with stress?
Myers et al. (2000) describe the concept of wellness as “a way of life oriented toward optimal health and wellbeing in which body, mind and spirit are integrated by the individual to live more fully within the human and natural community”(p. 252). Personal wellness is critical for our own wellbeing so we can draw from our core and pursue professional excellence. Spending time and effort on ourselves is part of our ethical obligation, in addition to the time and effort we spend on behalf of our clients. As Skovholt and Trotter-Mathison (2016) state, “Maintaining oneself personally is necessary to function effectively in a professional role. By itself, this idea can help those in the caring fields feel less selfish when meeting the needs of the self” (p. 161). In an important sense, wellness and self-care are to stress reduction as positive ethics is to ethics—it allows us to go beyond the minimum and reach a higher level.
As a way to evaluate your self-care, consider the following list of categories. For each category, give yourself a rating of 0–5, with 0 meaning “no self-care” and 5 meaning “good self-care” in the category.
_____I encourage myself to experience emotions—all kinds of emotions.
_____I have my finances in good to great shape.
_____I laugh at least once during each day.
_____I give other people, as well as myself, a compliment most every day.
_____I have a healthy diet when it comes to food.
_____I walk and/or get exercise sometime during my day.
_____I hydrate regularly with water.
_____I get sufficient sleep on a regular basis.
_____I have hobbies or activities that I do only for fun.
_____I keep my life’s priorities front and center and don’t let the tyranny of the urgent draw me off course.
_____I stop and just breathe when my day starts to feel stressful.
_____I give myself permission to be alone when I need solitary time.
_____I turn my phone off.
_____I take time to foster my spiritual or religious self.
_____I have at least one healthy relationship in my life.
Now go back over your list and see if there are any scores you wish to change. If yes, write an action plan for one of those items. Keep this list handy so that you can retrieve it on a regular basis. We would suggest that you do this activity at least twice a year.
In spite of the inherent stress of psychotherapy, there are ways to stay vibrant in the profession. Skovholt and Trotter-Mathison (2016) encourage professionals to seek out those experiences in their personal lives that promote happiness, fervor, energy, and tranquility. Of course, the list you develop to experience these will likely look different from your colleagues’ or classmates’. That’s fine. The key is to make the list and then implement your list on a regular basis. It is also important to remember that your list will change over the years as you develop as a person and a professional. And remember to have lots of items on your list that are not connected to your professional activities! Your list should be a personal one, not a professional one.
How to Get the Most Out of This Book
We have written this book to be different from other ethics books, some of which you may be using along with this one. The first difference is that this book is not discipline-specific. We have written it for all who are or will be performing psychotherapy, including counselors, marriage and family therapists, psychiatrists, psychologists, social workers, and others. Thus, we will not provide as comprehensive a guide to discipline-specific ethical situations.
The second difference is that this book is not a set of rules to follow in every situation. We will provide some answers about what to do in some situations, but we are more interested in helping you develop your ability to (a) recognize ethical issues because you are more sensitized to them, (b) think about ethical issues from a knowledgeable position, (c) integrate what you read in the ethics codes with who you are as a person and professional, and (d) develop the character strengths to act in concert with your convictions. To the extent that we achieve these goals, you will be more likely to follow your ethics codes now and as they evolve in the future.
Third, we wrote this book with you in mind. We want to help you accurately know yourself, successfully acculturate to the world of psychotherapy, and be prepared to actualize your ethical ideals in practice. You can think of this approach with three A’s: activity, awareness, and aspiration.
Activity
We don’t know you. We don’t know the courses you have taken or the disciplines you have studied. Regardless, we want to help you uncover, explore, and articulate what is in your core and consider how to integrate your ethical and professional selves in some systematic, integrative, and fulfilling ways. Although we focus on universal ethical issues that all psychotherapists face, your professional/ethical identity is yours alone. We invite you to be partners with us and to explore your identity actively. Indeed, the key to your learning experience will be your reactions to what we have written. To this end, we have provided three types of activities throughout the book.
The first activity is titled Journal Entries. This activity offers the most formal way to explore and take more responsibility for your learning from this book. You can keep your journal in a hard-copy notebook, a computer file, or on Instagram. The format doesn’t matter—what matters is taking the opportunities to self-reflect and explore. We will make some suggestions for journal entries, but we encourage you to be willing to write down some of your reactions and thoughts about what you read. Some of you might do this already in various aspects of your life. Or, you may never have tried writing stuff down. You might feel more comfortable talking through your thoughts. You may want to record your thoughts via voice and transcribe them later. The point is, we think it’s important for you to reflect, to think more intentionally, mindfully, and deeply about the issues we’re exploring. We encourage you to avoid the human tendency to read a passage and immediately say things like, “Got it,” or “Yep, that’s me!”
The second type of activity we call Food for Thought. These are opportunities