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My therapist told me she wanted me to try a solution focused therapeutic technique called "the miracle question." She asked me, “Let’s say we could have a miracle happen, and you felt fully safe and able to let go in therapy with me and everything turned out ok? What would that be like for you?”
She then asked a more generalized and common version of the miracle question.
“Let's just pretend a miracle happened, and the trauma had never happened. What would your life look like if trauma had never happened and you had never had PTSD?”
I told her that was an upsetting question. She asked me to journal this week about what my answer would be to both questions anyhow. What would it be like? What would it feel like? How would things be different? She said I could give a complete fantasy answer.
I looked up the miracle question technique, and I understand where she is going with this a little better. It can be used to help a therapist better understand a client, help a client get unstuck, help to think about a positive future and better plan how to get there, even if we have to do it through “waiving a magical wand” kind of fantasy. (Which honestly seemed really stupid to me at first.) There are a lot of ways this “miracle question” technique can be used.
It seems strange. I’m giving it a try anyhow.
“What would your life look like if trauma had never happened and you had never had PTSD?”
- I managed to write my answer to this question. I’m fighting back tears. I described my fantasy house, with a porch, overlooking a few acres… I wrote out what my fantasy job and family would be like. What could have happened if trauma and PTSD had not thrown my life off track from the day I was born. What I wrote out was not idyllic, but realistic account of what a life without PTSD might be like… and it all seems impossible. It seems almost cruel to ask me to write this out. At the same time, I get why she is asking. I struggle to think of a positive future, and when I was writing out what my answer would be, it started to shift something for me.
I'm not sure what to make of all of this.
What would be your response to someone if they asked you the “miracle question”? Would you answer it? What would your answer be?
Three articles on the miracle question:
Link Removed
http://www.unk.com/blog/miracle-question-examples/
http://mentalhealth.about.com/od/psychotherapy/fl/How-the-Miracle-Question-can-Get-You-A-Miracle.htm
She then asked a more generalized and common version of the miracle question.
“Let's just pretend a miracle happened, and the trauma had never happened. What would your life look like if trauma had never happened and you had never had PTSD?”
I told her that was an upsetting question. She asked me to journal this week about what my answer would be to both questions anyhow. What would it be like? What would it feel like? How would things be different? She said I could give a complete fantasy answer.
I looked up the miracle question technique, and I understand where she is going with this a little better. It can be used to help a therapist better understand a client, help a client get unstuck, help to think about a positive future and better plan how to get there, even if we have to do it through “waiving a magical wand” kind of fantasy. (Which honestly seemed really stupid to me at first.) There are a lot of ways this “miracle question” technique can be used.
It seems strange. I’m giving it a try anyhow.
“What would your life look like if trauma had never happened and you had never had PTSD?”
- I managed to write my answer to this question. I’m fighting back tears. I described my fantasy house, with a porch, overlooking a few acres… I wrote out what my fantasy job and family would be like. What could have happened if trauma and PTSD had not thrown my life off track from the day I was born. What I wrote out was not idyllic, but realistic account of what a life without PTSD might be like… and it all seems impossible. It seems almost cruel to ask me to write this out. At the same time, I get why she is asking. I struggle to think of a positive future, and when I was writing out what my answer would be, it started to shift something for me.
I'm not sure what to make of all of this.
What would be your response to someone if they asked you the “miracle question”? Would you answer it? What would your answer be?
Three articles on the miracle question:
Link Removed
http://www.unk.com/blog/miracle-question-examples/
http://mentalhealth.about.com/od/psychotherapy/fl/How-the-Miracle-Question-can-Get-You-A-Miracle.htm