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Encyclopedia > Focusing

"Focusing" has been referred to as "a procedure for attending to, and being aware of, the body's 'knowing' of the various situations we live in." This way of describing Focusing can be misleading. It's perhaps more accurate to say that Focusing is what you are doing, any time you pay attention to the feel or quality of what you mean and enter into the murky, unclear "edge" of "all that", opening it up by the use of different kinds of questions or suggestions and describing what you find in words, images or actions.


Focusing was named by philosopher Eugene Gendlin while he was working with psychologist/psychotherapist Carl Rogers at the University of Chicago in the late 1960s and early 1970s. Thus the practice of Focusing grew up with the ambience of the Person Centred Approach, to which it has remained close. Eugene T. Gendlin is an American philosopher who has developed ways of thinking about and working with the implicit. ... Carl Ransom Rogers (January 8, 1902 – February 4, 1987) was an influential American psychologist, who, along with Abraham Maslow, was the founder of the humanist approach to psychology. ... The University of Chicago is an elite and prestigious private university principally located in the Hyde Park neighborhood of Chicago, Illinois, founded in 1890 and opened in 1892. ...


Focusing is not a technique, but a naturally occurring human process. When we are focusing, we are intending to establish an interaction between our rational understanding and our somatically rooted “knowing”.


In order to help people use Focusing any time they want to, Gendlin and others (Ann Weiser Cornell and Barbara McGavin, Ed Campbell and Peter McMahon, Elfie Hinterkopf, Neil Friedman) have evolved a number of effective introductory teaching models, some of which use steps - for example these different variations.


Gendlin's "Philosophy of the Implicit" grew out of his experience and observation of focusing, as it occurs naturally. As always in Gendlin's thinking, experiencing comes first, and the forming of his philosophical system depended on the experiencing - and not the other way round.


According to Gendlin, Focusing is possible because 1) the universe is more intricate than our concepts about it, and 2) we are part of the universe and are literally interacting with it: we eat, breathe, excrete, work at jobs, etc.


Because we are interacting with a universe which is more intricate than our concepts, we have an implicit knowing "in the areas in which we interact", which is more than our concepts. Thus, for example, we "know" how to ride a bicycle, although we would have a hard time teaching someone else to do it if we used only words without demonstration or practice. This is because the activity of riding a bicycle is more intricate than our concepts about it, so the "knowing" is more than conceptual. In the same way, much of our knowledge of the world is implicit and more than conceptual; and yet this implicit knowing can be very useful in situations (including theoretical problems) where we are stuck. In Gendlin's philosophy, this bodily knowing is often called a felt sense.


For many years, Gendlin offered a course at the University of Chicago on "theory construction". This formed the basis of a second, more recent practice (which he has developed with Kye Nelson and Mary Hendricks) known as "Thinking at the Edge" or TAE. This is used for developing an implicit knowing (or felt sense) into an explicit and coherent body of related concepts. Thus if one had an inchoate knowledge of some field from years of experience, one could use Thinking at the Edge to explicate that inchoate knowledge into a coherent and explicit theory. The University of Chicago is an elite and prestigious private university principally located in the Hyde Park neighborhood of Chicago, Illinois, founded in 1890 and opened in 1892. ...


Focusing was originally described in the course of an attempt to understand what is happening in the client, when psychotherapy is working. However, Gendlin and his colleagues, especially Mary Hendricks, Jim Iberg, Allan Rohlfs were committed to a "politics of giving therapy away". So they began to teach people to do Focusing with each other.


Focusing is now practiced by thousands of people all over the world (who need have no professional training in psychology or psychotherapy).


There is now also a developing school of "experiential psychotherapy", within which Focusing-oriented psychotherapy takes its place. The Focusing-oriented psychotherapist attributes a central importance to the client's capacity to be aware of the meaning behind her words or images, the ability to sense into feelings and meanings which are not yet formed.


Important contributions to the development and dissemination of Focusing and TAE have been made by many people besides those mentioned above, including Mary McGuire, Doralee Grindler-Katonah, Bala Jaison, Nada Lou, Akira Ikemi, Mako Hikasa, Mieko Osawa, Tadayuki Murasato, Johannes Wiltschko, Dieter Muller, Teresa Dawson, Elena Frezza, Shirley Turcotte, Frans Depestele, Janet Klein, Fred Zimring, Les Brunswick, Kathy McGuire-Bowman, Zack Boukydis, Linda Olsen Webber, Robert Lee, Rob Foxcroft, Melinda Darer, David Rome and others. Robert Lee is the name of several people: Robert E. Lee, Confederate general Robert Edwin Lee, playwright Robert Lee, Mayor of Edmonton, Alberta Rob Lee, English footballer Robert Lee, Australian sportsman Robert Lee, Councillor, A Liberal Democrat councillor in the Royal Borough of Kingston upon Thames John Robert Lee, St...


Bibliography

  • E. T. Gendlin. Focusing. Second edition, Bantam Books, 1982. ISBN 0553278339.
  • John J. Shea. Religious Experiencing: William James and Eugene Gendlin. Rowman and Littlefield, 1987. ISBN 0819161365.
  • E. T. Gendlin. Focusing-Oriented Psychotherapy: A Manual of the Experiential Method. Guilford Publications, 1996. ISBN 0898624797.
  • E. T. Gendlin. What happens when Wittgenstein asks “What happens when...?”. The Philosophical Forum Volume XXVIII. No. 3, 1997.
  • E. T. Gendlin. A Process model. Unpublished manuscript, 1997.
  • Helene Brenner: I know I'm in there somewhere. Gotham Books; Reprint edition (May 2004)ISBN: 1592400604

External links


  Results from FactBites:
 
Focusing book (700 words)
Focusing, the technique described in the pages of this book, is uniquely suited to our turbulent times when so many old forms are crumbling and old roles are vanishing.
Focusing is a key to personal momentum and unfolding, a dynamic process that can guide us through the tricky mazeways of a new world.
Focusing grew out of the observation by Gendlin and his co-workers that many people were not being helped by traditional therapy.
THE FLAW IN ALL AUTO-FOCUSING CAMERAS (2077 words)
In fact, they all have a built-in, unavoidable error that makes accurate focusing impossible in all photographs except those in which the most important subject-point is in a flat area that is parallel to the camera, and in the center of the picture.
If the lens is focused so that the focal-plane is exactly on the pupil of that eye, the whole picture will take on a quality called "plasticity" (the effect of three-dimensionality on a two-dimensional surface), the apparent depth-of-field will be greater, and there will be less impression of graininess.
All manual focusing systems that are located in the center of the ground-glass suffer from this same built-in error because of the inability to focus and frame the picture simultaneously.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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