Symbolic modeling
![]() | Template:Wikify is deprecated. Please use a more specific cleanup template as listed in the documentation. |
Symbolic modeling is a therapeutic and coaching process developed by psychotherapists Penny Tompkins and James Lawley, based on the work of psychotherapist David Grove. Using Grove’s Clean Language, a progressive questioning technique using clients’ exact words, the facilitator works with a client’s internalized metaphors to clarify personal beliefs, goals, and conflicts, and to bring about meaningful change.
Regarding the individual as a self-organizing system that encodes all feelings, thoughts, beliefs, experiences etc. in the mind/body as metaphors, the five stage symbolic modeling process guides the client through an exploration of these metaphors, their organization, interactions, and patterns. Using the client’s internal metaphors, the ones s/he‘discovers’, means you are working in the language of the client’s subconscious, bypassing cognitive awareness and its limitations. These embodied metaphors may be restricting a client’s ways of viewing the world and his/her coping strategies, due to the metaphors’ prescribed inner logic. Without shifting these, lasting change is difficult, as the mind/body continues to work from this old paradigm. By helping the client determine how these metaphors can change to meet their desired outcomes, transformative shifts can occur within a client's “metaphor landscape”, bringing about meaningful change on cognitive, affective and behavioral levels.
This article has not been added to any content categories. Please help out by adding categories to it so that it can be listed with similar articles, in addition to a stub category. (September 2010) |