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Tools
for Relationships
Creating a Healing Environment
Content:
What is a healing environment?
A
healing environment is one in which:
-
People are encouraged
to get better and bring themselves to a state of good health.
-
A person is
encouraged to change and grow.
-
Members make a
decision to cease blaming one another for problems; they decide to support one
another's changing and growing so as to mediate problems.
-
A person with a
problem can expect to receive no acrimony, disparagement, rejection, resentment
or revenge; but rather receive support, understanding, caring and encouragement.
-
All parties have made
a commitment to one another to help survive a current crisis in order to
flourish.
-
Human error is
allowed without fear of being condemned, punished, abused, or banished.
-
Courage and bravery
are encouraged; no problem is seen as too big to be overcome.
-
Unresolved anger,
hostility, and resentment is set aside; in their place is forgiveness for all
wrongs (past and present) with a commitment to forget and never bring them up
again.
-
All parties share
unconditional love; no one is required to meet certain conditions or standards
in order to be loved.
-
People with problems
are not condemned and thought of as bad or wrong but are seen as being sick or
ill.

How a healing environment feels
You
know you have encountered a healing environment when you have found a place
where people:
-
Show respect to one
another.
-
Are free to show
physical affection.
-
Use supportive
language and messages with one another.
-
Are willing to
confront their disagreements with open, honest communication.
-
Feel they are among
equals.
-
Have no power
struggles for emotional control of the environment.
-
Play neither the role
of victim nor that of martyr.
-
Feel they have a
chance to reform or change.
-
Can receive critical
feedback without becoming defensive or jumpy.
-
Seek out open, direct
feedback about their personal functioning and performance.
-
Are able to ``bury
the hatchet'' about past abuses or hurts.
-
Are developing a
strong spiritual focus, allowing God to be an instrument in their lives.
-
Are encouraged to
admit their feelings of fear,
anxiety, depression.
-
Are supported as they
explore their past lives and families for the roots of their dysfunctional
behavior.
-
Trust one another
enough to admit their problems, concerns, faults, and feelings.
-
Feel secure, cared
for, and accepted.
-
Are willing to be
vulnerable to growth.
-
Fear no retribution
or condemnation for mistakes, shortcomings, or backsliding (past or current).
-
Are encouraged to
grow in self-esteem.
-
Give love and receive
love unconditionally.

Obstacles to creating a healing environment
Even
if you have a desire to create a healing environment, you or the others in the
environment may be unable to do so because of:
-
an inability to
forgive and forget
-
an unwillingness to
accept personal responsibility or to accept the consequences for one's actions
-
an unwillingness to
admit to personal mistakes, failures, faults, or errors
-
an inability to let
go of anger and hostility over past hurts and pain
a fear of
backsliding, of being hurt again, of being taken advantage of and/or losing more
in the long run
an inability to
understand the need for forgiveness and forgetting; being unwilling to do so
confusion over what
is going on and inability to see the changes taking place
a lack of abstract
thinking skills to deal with the problems, looking at each element of the
problem literally rather than objectively
an unwillingness to
accept apologies and the admission of wrongdoing by others
a stubborn holding to
the idea that ``my way of doing things and no other way will do''
name calling,
belittling, ignoring, condemning and harassing of others
a lack of belief in
others' generosity, good will, and offers of cooperation; lack of trust
severe depression or
other mental health problems so debilitating that participation in a healthy give and take is impossible
a lack of commitment
to the others in the environment
an inability to
accept the elements of your environment that don't fit into fantasies or
idealized expectations of the way things ``should'' be
a lack of belief in
one's ability to meet the challenge to change and grow.
fear of taking a risk
or of accepting change
fear of failure or
fear of success
preferring to be a
martyr rather than a ``healer,'' a caretaker rather than a nurturer
a lack of
communications skills, i.e., inability to

Beliefs needed to establish a healing environment
-
I may be hurt again,
but the risk is worth it.
-
It is not always easy
to forgive and forget the past hurt and pain, and it may happen again, but if
I don't let go of the past I won't be able to live the present or future to
its fullest.
-
I am worth it.
-
I deserve a chance to
heal in this environment.
-
I have nothing to
gain by holding on to my grudge.
-
I've made mistakes in
the past, too. It takes all parties involved to make the problems in
relationships.
-
Listen to feelings
and lead with your feelings.
-
Give reformations a
chance to take hold!
-
Let go and let God!
-
Give the other person
a chance to say, ``I'm sorry.''
-
Be aware of positive
changes; reward and reinforce them.
-
Catch the other
person being good.
-
Laugh and let the
others see your smile and sense of humor.
-
Have fun and play;
try not to be so serious all of the time!
-
Learn to laugh at
your own foibles and idiosyncrasies.
-
Tune into the
"inner child'' in yourself and communicate with the "inner child'' in
another.
-
Use the illness or
sickness model to describe your problems, rather than the morality (black or
white absolutes) model.
-
Accept a ``yes'' when
you are given it, and learn to say ``thank you'' with no qualifications.
-
Accept others for who
they are rather than how you would like them to be.
-
Use humility,
patience, generosity, and honesty as tools in the healing process.

When creating a healing environment is needed
If
any of the following problems exist in your environment, a prescription of
healing is ordered for the return of health and vitality.
Problem environments
exist where the member(s):
-
Come from
high stress or dysfunctional family
backgrounds.
-
Have an addictive
problem with alcohol, drugs, food, sex, gambling, money, shopping, etc.
-
Have rigid beliefs in
the religious, political, or social arenas.
-
Are workaholic,
perfectionistic, or obsessively compulsive in getting things done.
-
Have been unfaithful
to the other(s).
-
Do not fulfill the
fantasy expectations of the other(s).
-
Have a permanent
commitment to a relationship in which the parties are neither growing nor
being nurtured.
-
Are rigid
fundamentalists who hold to absolute, right or wrong
beliefs.
-
Were condemned as
``bad'' or ``wrong'' for troubled behavior in the past rather than being
referred to as ``sick'' or ``ill.''
-
Have not been allowed
to think or act independently and have lost all sense of personal autonomy.
-
Are withdrawn,
silent, and unable to deal with personal problems.
-
Have moved out and
have nothing to gain from going back into the ``sick'' setting to clear things
up. Since the former environment members are ``sick'' and not willing to
listen to the enlightened ideas of how to straighten things out, time is
better spent working on a healing environment in your newly established
environment.
-
Have decided the best
course of action is to divorce or separate for the welfare of all concerned
and have gone on to establish a new, personal environment.
-
Are immobilized by
blaming, bickering, fighting, arguing, yelling, bitching, nagging,
threatening, name calling, belittling, and other negative behavior.
-
Are troubled, refuse
to admit to personal problems and remain unwilling to get help for the
problems. The other members need to draw together to create a healing
environment even if it means excluding the troubled member from the
environment after persistent, conscientious efforts to get help have been
offered.
-
Are troubled and
return to the environment from participation in rehabilitation after getting
care for their acute problems.
-
Are in
need of ongoing peer support programming, such as Alcoholics Anonymous, Narcotics
Anonymous, Overeaters Anonymous, or ALANON (for
family members of alcoholics), and the others in the environment encourage such
participation.
-
Admit to contributing
to the conflict in the environment, and ask for support to continue working on
growth and change.
-
Personal rights are
ignored.
-
Desire change but
feel ``stuck'' or immobilized.

Steps to create a healing environment
Step
1:
Before you can create
a healing environment you need to identify why you need one. Answer the
following questions in your journal:
a. What problems in your life bother you greatly?
b. In which environment (work, home, school, community) do these problems
exist?
c. With whom are you having these problems in the specific environment(s)?
d. Are the people in your problem environment willing to work with you on
these problems? How?
e. If they are not willing to work with you, are you willing to stay in
the environment with these people? If yes, why? If no, why not?
Step
2: If the people with
whom you are having problems are willing to work with you, you have the
elements necessary to begin creation of a healing environment. Answer the next
questions in your journal with these people:
a. Why do we need a healing environment in order to address our problems?
b. What healing behavior need(s) to be developed in order to address our
problems?
c. What obstacles exist to our creating a healing environment?
d. What new beliefs need to be developed to have a healing environment?
e. What is in our problem or in our environment specifically that will
benefit from a ``healing approach?''
Step
3: Now that you have
identified the need for a healing environment, you can proceed together to
develop an action plan for maintaining a healing environment. Record this plan
in your journal.
Healing Environment
Action Plan
We
agree to the following healing environment
action plan:
(1) Our problem is:
(2) The solution(s) to it include:
(3) We will treat each other with the following healing behaviors:
(4) We will seek the following outside help for our problems:
(5) We will handle all setbacks, relapses, or backsliding in the following
way(s):
(6) We will assess our progress at regular intervals. Date of evaluation of
or plan:
(7) We will revise our action plan, create a new one, or continue with the
present plan on the evaluation date.
(8) We agree that the plan will be deemed successful when we accomplish the
following:
(9) We hereby commit to the above healing environment action plan.
(Signatures)
Step
4: If you fail to create a healing environment after
the action plan has been in operation for a year or more, return to Step 1 and
begin again. Get outside, objective help if necessary.

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