Reflections on Facilitator Presence
The unedited version of an article published in the April
2004 edition of the Counselling and Psychotherapy Journal,
published by BACP.
John Gloster-Smith, a group facilitator, uses a
not un-common event in the life of a group, when someone
unexpectedly decides to leave, to explore the qualities of
awareness and presence that a Transpersonal facilitator may
bring to selecting an appropriate
intervention.
I am facilitating a pre-lunch session of an all-day
workshop, and we are reviewing some theoretical aspects of the
work. The group is becoming more relaxed and the discussion is
flowing. People are interacting with each other with some ease
now. We start to look at the issue of completion and I am
sharing my perspective on how people may be uncomfortable with
endings. A group member suddenly speaks and says that he will
shortly be leaving the group for an immediate personal reason
relating to a call he’d received in the last break. He speaks
abruptly, he looks tentatively round the room and his voice
sounds nervous. On hearing this, I too look around the room and
am struck by the expressions on the faces of the others. They
look tense and seem to be holding back and wondering. I am also
aware of tension in my own body and that the atmosphere in the
room has hardened, to a certain stickiness.
I pause for a moment before responding to the man’s
announcement and make a quick decision about a response. I then
ask him if he’d be OK to hear what others in the group might
like to say about his imminent departure. He agrees and then
others start to share how they feel. For example one says how
sorry he is that the man is leaving as he’d just been getting
to know him and had liked meeting him. There are other
sharings, several being deeper, some relating not just to the
leaver but to their own feelings. I ask the “leaver” how he is
doing. In his response he says that he used to be a bereavement
counsellor and that he has difficulty with endings, has left
before the end before and on occasions left without telling
people in the group. In my own mind, I am reminded of when this
too has figured for me. The group is now more relaxed again but
this time different. Feelings have been released and, to me,
people seem closer. Also the man is more able to leave with a
sense of completion both for himself and the others.
Afterwards, we attend to our awareness of the person having
just left, the empty chair, the space now left open, how we
feel and what as a group we need. Only after that can I get on
with considering theory again!
Afterwards, I am reminded of how in other environments I’ve
seen people just leave, without any working through. I am
reminded of how a lot of my work too has been connected in some
way with change and with loss and grieving and I can also own
to having had similar reactions and behaviours to the man who
had left this workshop early, to having left a group
prematurely and having had my own pain about this.
An event like this is a common one in working with groups.
What is of interest to me in this article is to explore how I
as the facilitator work with the immediacy of the event and in
particular how, as evidenced in my pausing and checking the
group, concepts like awareness and presence can be of use in
the quality of the intervention.
Reflecting on the intervention now, as the facilitator, what
was crucial to me was an awareness of group process, of what
was happening in the group, what Yalom calls “the interpersonal
relationship of the participants.” From a
humanistic/transpersonal perspective, I was able to use my
experience and my theoretical understanding, of the data
present, in the “here and now.” Also I am mindful of Yalom’s
reminder, that “physical survival of the group must take
precedence over other tasks.” I paused and checked my
awareness. This was a key action for me. What is happening
right now in the group? What, in this instant, is going on with
individual people as I can observe it? How do I feel, in my
bodily sensation? How does the group “seem to feel?” So I
attend to sensation and awareness, at a multiple of levels, my
own, other individuals, the group, relationships in the group
and so on. My experience and my knowledge of theory tells me
that, if a pressing figure of interest, a Gestalt, is not
attended to, it will in some way impair the functioning of the
group. One way this can show up is that the tension in the
room, and with individuals, remains. Individuals are less
likely to share, people feel less safe and particularly the
emotional climate is damaged. We all know that something just
did not get dealt with. The Gestalt needs to be worked through,
in this case with reference among others to retroflection of
feeling within the group, deflection of feeling within the man
leaving and perhaps ownership of his confluence/isolation
issues. Emotion is relevant not just for individuals but for
whole groups.
I am also reminded of the importance of facilitator
presence. To me this is the fundamental aspect to my
facilitation. This is in part about awareness, about being as
fully aware as I can be and about attending to the present
moment, the “here and now”, rather than, say, talking “about
something”. To me, the present contains all the gems of life,
which we usually miss by living mostly in the past or the
future. The present connects us with our deepest selves. Also
presence is about being connected to myself, being present to
my own sensations and feelings, to my own core of being and
beingness. Here, from a humanistic/transpersonal perspective, I
connect with my centre of being which I have come to know is my
anchor and support and source of calmness in my work. My own
journeying has brought me to know that place more and more. As
Hycner says, “Being fully present is already a hallowing. It
underlines our connectedness with Being” (Hycner’s italics).
What I am meaning here is the quality of beingness, of being
“right there” for another, fully “with” their experiencing,
fully “in the moment”. In the case described above, it was a
matter of being right there and fully attentive to the moment
and to the energy of the group.
Presence is a plugging in to consciousness, and this can be
at several levels. Partly this may refer to the atmosphere in
the room. It is as though the group has a collective “energy”,
something that at a sensing level has a feel to it. This energy
can fluctuate and shift, from a warm glow to a tense, icy
condition, back to being relaxed and calm, to vibrant, and so
on. What I noticed with the event described above is that the
atmosphere of the group was changed by the experience and was
in some way closer. I am, as a member of the group, both
involved as a human being in the process myself moment by
moment and I am also periodically pausing and checking,
attending to my own process but also that of the multiplicity
of agendas around me and to their needs. Sometimes, it seems
like I am in the midst of some wonderful flow of human
expression: warm, loving, alive, embracing, cherishing. At
others, it may be awkward, tense, anxious, angry, resentful,
apologetic, embarrassed, repressed or denying. I am both part
of this gorgeous wave of humanity and I am also holding the
space, providing the steer, being an anchor, a point of
reference. What is key though, is that I am a witness to what
occurs. I am both a witness to my own experience and I am a
witness to what goes on in the group. And the space that I hold
is a centred one, as much as I can be there. I am not attached
to my experiencing, just the witness of that experiencing. In
transpersonal language, this is often referred to as being
“un-egoic.” The quality of experience of the witness is often
seen as very calm, contented, peaceful and accepting and this
has obvious benefits for facilitating all sorts of things that
can occur.
A group can have a collective “life” and many would see this
as one of groupwork’s most precious features. However, group
leaders can fear this life, which is why they may collude with
some serious areas of disfunctionality within the group.
Working with fear is key, both in himself and within the group.
The traditional image of the group leader has been one where
the leader is the expert, who manages and controls what occurs.
This sometimes leads to potentially authoritarian behaviours,
which immediately put participants in touch with their inner
child! When emotions are heightened, the impulse is to exert
control, to “do” something. I have very frequently observed
facilitators do just that, for example “take control” and
consciously exert a controlling influence on the process of the
group. This behaviour, when done out of awareness, interrupts
the flow of the group process and is obviously coming out of
the leader’s agenda. Alternatively, the leader will do what the
group wants, and thus collude, a common example being overly
concerned that the group is getting what it needs. This can be
powerfully destructive when working in organisations, where the
organisation has an expectation for the outcome of the event.
The real issue that is bugging the group does not get dealt
with. We can be so eager to please, to “perform”, to “get a
result”, that in trying to meet the group’s perceived need we
fail to offer an intervention that addresses the
disfunctionality. The group may take part in “group flight”,
for example when it avoids what is uncomfortable or has an
exaggerated response to an issue and strongly shuts off from
possible exploration. A typical example may be deflection, when
the group may persist in talking about something that is
tangential to the actual and painful experience that is in
front of them. Recently I led a group, which, despite several
comments from me, insisted emphatically in discussing
organisational issues rather than focusing on the painful
reality that change was threatening their very livelihoods. The
conversation had an artificial air to it and as the witness I
was aware that I was feeling baffled as to where they were
going. Of course, that was just it! They were too! In the end I
very firmly stopped them, shared my own experience and
described what I had observed the group doing, so that they
were able to become aware of their process and own the pain
they were feeling.
In being present, the facilitator needs a strong sense of
self, to be able in the middle of whatever is happening to
pause, check himself out and notice how he is feeling and what
is present for him. He also needs to check the group at its
multitude of levels and again his own centredness and also his
awareness of what the group needs right now. From his space of
centredness he can choose his intervention. He therefore needs
to know his own inner space of calm and recognise what can get
in the way for him, noticing too that the group will mirror his
own process. He will not be deflected by fear of other emotions
like anger or upset, or fear itself. I remember facilitating a
group of people who were so angry that they raged, with full
verbal violence, for two hours about what they saw as injustice
and bad treatment. There was no other intervention available to
me than to sit with them, be present and genuinely empathise.
It occurred to me that I could simply reflect back to them what
they were saying. After a while they started to see what they
were experiencing and what had happened to them, almost from
another viewpoint. It was almost as if they were able to join
me in being the witness of the event. At the end several came
up and shook my hand: “thanks, that was just what we
needed”.
In intervening when the leaver said he was going to leave
the group prematurely, I accessed my presence and worked from
that space to help the group deal with the change. In doing
this I believe I model for groups another way in which they can
manage their own process, and in doing this I believe the
facilitator can offer what is one of the most powerful
offerings a group facilitator has in their toolbags. Working
with presence is not about doing things; it is about a way of
being, knowing your space of being and staying right there with
whatever happens. As such it serves as an invitation to others
to literally BE themselves.
John Gloster-Smith, MAHPP.
Bibliography
Yalom : "The Theory and Practice of Group Psychotherapy".
(Basic Books)
Heron : “The Complete Facilitator’s Handbook” (Kogan Page)
(c) The Empowering Partnership
2004
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