Rather than emphasizing your conflicts and pain, a strength-based psychologist or counselor helps you to identify your innate potential abilities and the assets that you have unconsciously repressed. From a strength-based counseling perspective, allowing your innate assets to rise to the surface and be fully actualized is the ultimate cure to so much of the anxiety and depression you experience.
Most of us learn when we are kids that the most important goals in life involve the attainment of financial and job security. We are provided with a lot of information that is supposed to enable us to develop the abilities and get the training required to get a stable career and carve out a meaningful role in our life.
The difficulty is that this socialization process often dwarfs our individual genius and personal creativity. The socialization process that is always imposed upon us creates an almost insurmountable obstacle to the unfolding of our unique and individualistic set of possibilities that have yet to be realized.
A strength-based therapist recognizes that this trend is one of the core ingredients which contribute to our many issues, from chronic medical problems to psychiatric illness to financial turmoil to unremitting anger and substance abuse. The good news is that, regardless of our age or how alienated, troubled or anxious we might be, it is never too late to establish an entirely new way of being ourselves.
A psychologist, counselor or psychotherapist can guide you through this process with insight and awareness. The fundamental issue in deciding whether or not to hire a professional counselor is the level of your motivation and commitment to change. If you are prepared to evolve emotionally, financially, in your relationships and your work, then a professional counselor can provide a powerful amount of support. The key is that you enter this remarkable process ready and committed to change.
Most of us have been subconsciously socialized to resist change. This is part of our subconscious conditioning that suggests that change threatens our stability and security.
However, true self-improvement requires leaping into the unknown. At that point, we must be willing to let go of our need for familiarity and stability. Your interest in eliminating your anxiety, depression and alienation has to outweigh your fear of the unknown.
Unfortunately, if you are too stuck on the way you are now and too attached to your prejudices about how things really are, there is very little you can do to become a happier more fulfilled person. Once you are ready to make the leap, however, the quality of life you can create is almost limitless.
It depends on whether or not you are committed to taking responsibility for the quality of your life and then taking the courageous step of deciding to explore a new way of perceiving yourself and your world.