Finding a counselor that can help navigate life’s challenges can be an overwhelming process. There are many disciplines and practices committed to the helping profession, and as a client, it may be hard to know the differences in each and how to find a good fit. Scout has sought to define elements of our practice that make us who we are and we share them here in the hope that it can make it easier to know if we are the place to come for healing, growth and change in your life.
Training the trainer: Are you equipped to provide premarital counseling?
The date is set. Plans are being made. Excitement is filling the air, except it is not your enthusiasm, but the wide-eyed, hand holding, “lovey dovey” couple sitting before you in your office. They cannot wait to get married, and you, perhaps, maybe cannot wait to get them married. Whatever role you have, and in many cases, I suppose a pastoral one, you are attempting to garner the attention of these two lovebirds over the pushy mothers and mother-in-laws, the wedding planner, and a number of other things pulling on these two. Perhaps you hope to give them one or two magical “nuggets” that will set them on a course for success, but you feel that your efforts may even fall short, as it can be difficult to articulate what has worked for you if you are married yourself and have experienced some marital success, but that may not even be true. So my question is- are you desiring to be better able to effectively deliver premarital counseling to the number of couples you engage with annually who are seeking to make the walk down the aisle to marital bliss?