¶ … Self
In Counselor: Know Thyself, Hulnick addresses the laundry list of ideal psychological concepts:
"authenticity, unconditional positive regard, empathy, accuracy in our communications, the ability to express oneself, increased awareness, focus on the NOW, action modes of dealing with problems, psychological independence, the need for healthier concepts, movement toward self-actualization, openness to life's experience, self-worth, meaningful research, a mature value system in general, a spiritual value system in particular, and most importantly, the need for continual, unceasing work on one's own growth" (Hulnick, 1977, pp. 69-70).
While a person with all those qualities may exist, I have not met him/her. Hulnick is wise to speak of the process in which a person gradually attains and enhances those vital qualities while working to become as effective a counselor as possible. The term "process" seems so scientific, (it makes me think of "processed cheese"), that I prefer the term "becoming." I possess all those qualities to some degree but also certainly lack every quality to some degree. That is perfectly fine, because I am consciously "becoming." Am I becoming a person who is stronger in each of those positive qualities? Yes, and to that extent, my sense of self is congruent with...
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