‘Respect deeply the otherness of the other.’ (Richard Young) Navigating boundaries is a critical skill in coaching and action learning. Anne Katharine describes this phenomenon succinctly in the subtitle of her book: Where You End and I Begin (2000). Incorporate Psychology provides a useful explanation of different kinds of relational boundaries and what can go wrong if they become blurred, enmeshed or rigid. Khalil Gibran writes poetically on this same theme in The Prophet (1923): ‘Let there be spaces in your togetherness. Let the winds of the heavens dance between you…Even as the strings of the lute are alone though they quiver with the same music.’ In coaching and action learning, a variety of boundaries emerge that we need to pay attention to for this work to be effective. In a coaching relationship, the coach and client learn to navigate these including: their respective roles and responsibilities; their places and times of meetings; their accountabilities to any wider stakeholders; the scope and parameters of what each will focus on, and not; their agreements on what will remain confidential, or not, and to whom. In action learning, further boundaries include those between facilitator and group, and those between different group participants and roles. At deeper human levels, Gestalt psychology speaks of confluence, where a boundary is dissolved and the quality of healthy contact is compromised. The coach and client, or action learning presenter and peers, need to differentiate between, for instance: what’s simply here-and-now and what’s transference from the past; what’s the coach/peers’ stuff and what’s that of the client or presenter; what’s just about the client or presenter and what’s a parallel process of wider systemic or cultural influences. Managing boundaries is, we discover, a key dimension to success in these fields.
30 Comments
Darian Taylor
24/11/2022 12:57:34 pm
Thanks for this, Nick. I sometimes get confused when something happens in coaching. Is it me - or is it them?
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Nick Wright
24/11/2022 12:58:50 pm
Thank you, Darian. I worked with an occupational psychologist, Richard Marshall, who commented that in such circumstances: 'It's about you, but it's not only about you.' I found that helpful!
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Amelia Thomas
24/11/2022 01:01:19 pm
Hi Nick. I liked your link to Just Enough. I sometimes get so involved in the person's story, especially if it reminds me of something in my own life, that I forget to step back from it.
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Nick Wright
24/11/2022 05:26:03 pm
Thank you for such an honest response, Amelia. In my experience, it's a common challenge for coaches and action learning practitioners.
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Derek Brown
24/11/2022 01:05:39 pm
Your mention of The Prophet brings back memories, Nick. I read that years ago!
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Nick Wright
24/11/2022 01:07:38 pm
Hi Derek. Me too. Some of Khalil Gibran's wise insights still come back to me from time to time, even though it must be some 40 years now since I read that book!
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Bridget Waterhouse
24/11/2022 01:10:27 pm
Hi Nick. Thanks for sharing such helpful insights. I hadn't thought that much about boundaries except for groundrules for confidentiality. There's more to coaching and action learning than I had realised.
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Nick Wright
24/11/2022 01:14:31 pm
Thank you, Bridget. Yes, coaching and action learning are certainly multi-dimensional.
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Jon Edwards
24/11/2022 04:40:55 pm
What does parallel manifestation mean?
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Nick Wright
24/11/2022 04:57:41 pm
Hi Jon. That's a good question. 'Parallel process' is where the dynamics implicit in one relationship or context get played out, or replicated, in another. In coaching or action learning, the coach and client-presenter may, say, find themselves re-enacting attitudes and behaviours that reflect (or mirror) what the client-presenter experiences from others elsewhere.
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Patrick Hill ACC
24/11/2022 05:01:10 pm
If a client is ever unsure about what they need boundaries with, I ask what is not present in the relationship we are discussing. For example respect may be missing this is then turned into a healthy positive reframe: I require respectful words and actions in all my relationships. Take the lack and flip it back.
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Nick Wright
24/11/2022 05:08:13 pm
Hi Patrick and thank you for sharing those helpful insights. I like your approach to addressing needs and reframing. 'Take the lack and flip it back' - clever! You reminded me. I worked with some leaders in an initiative aimed at addressing sexual abuse in different cultural contexts around the world.
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Patrick Hill ACC
24/11/2022 05:22:16 pm
Nick, that is so powerful. What a beautiful piece of work.
Nick Wright
24/11/2022 05:23:50 pm
Hi Patrick. Yes, I was incredibly impressed with their insights and approach and the outcomes they achieved - especially with and for people who are so vulnerable.
Robin Cooke
24/11/2022 05:10:16 pm
‘Respect deeply the otherness of the other.’ I love Richard's comment. Perhaps we need to learn to respect, similarly, the otherness of ourselves as distinct from the other.
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Nick Wright
24/11/2022 05:12:19 pm
Hi Robin. I think you expressed that beautifully. That's a good starting place for establishing healthy psychological boundaries in a relationship.
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Torben V.
24/11/2022 05:47:04 pm
Boundaries cage your thoughts, let them free.
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Nick Wright
24/11/2022 05:54:54 pm
Hi Torben and thank you for posing that stimulating challenge! Yes, there are indeed boundaries that constrain us by constraining our thoughts and, say, what we can imagine as possible. On that theme, you may find this short related piece interesting? https://www.nick-wright.com/blog/out-of-the-building
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Torben von Spreckelsen
24/11/2022 06:37:18 pm
Interesting.
Nick Wright
24/11/2022 06:40:13 pm
Thanks Torben. Your comments resonate well with Margaret Mead's comment: 'Children must be taught how to think, not what to think.'
Sandy Webb
25/11/2022 04:27:39 am
Hey Nick, you're a psychological coach, right? How do you stop yourself getting in too deep?
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Nick Wright
25/11/2022 04:46:53 am
Hi Sandy. That's an interesting question. I guess there are at least two ways in which, in my work, I could risk getting in too deep. Firstly, in terms of confluence of experience. Secondly, in terms of what I may bring to a coaching conversation.
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James Henman, Ph.D
26/11/2022 09:41:54 pm
Respecting the uniqueness of both the client and coach, honoring the similarities and differences of each, believing that deep, significant healthy changes are possible for both. It is not rigid but deeply spiritual.
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Nick Wright
26/11/2022 09:47:39 pm
Hi James. Yes, I think 'respecting the uniqueness' is one way of acknowledging and sustaining a healthy boundary. 'Deeply spiritual' - one previous colleague used to describe the coaching relationship as a dance; with each person playing their own part and, between them creating something beautiful. In my view, the Holy Spirit often dances in, between and around them too, whether they are aware of it or not.
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James Henman, Ph.D
26/11/2022 10:33:51 pm
I’ll admit that He does the coaching through me (I receive imperfectly) as I feel His love for both me and the client. His style and perspective draw me to Him, letting Him love the client through me. How could that ever be boring? I love coaching today as much or more than when I started 40 years ago.
Nick Wright
26/11/2022 10:36:40 pm
Hi James. Me too. You expressed that beautifully! You may find that these related short pieces resonate too?
James Henman, Ph.D
8/12/2022 08:08:10 pm
You might enjoy my website www.CAIRforYou.com where I have podcasts exploring Cognitive/Perceptual Reconstruction, the theory behind Therapeutic Life Coaching.
Nick Wright
8/12/2022 08:08:44 pm
Thank you, James. :)
James Henman, Ph.D
10/12/2022 10:48:40 pm
Nick,
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Nick Wright
10/12/2022 10:50:44 pm
Hi James. If you scroll down to the bottom of my ‘About’ page, you will see a short e-booklet attachment called ‘Follower of Jesus’. I wonder if that’s what you had in mind? https://www.nick-wright.com/about.html
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Nick WrightI'm a psychological coach, trainer and OD consultant. Curious to discover how can I help you? Get in touch! Like what you read? Simply enter your email address below to receive regular blog updates!
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