Therapists Talk Therapy

Ep. 42 | Spiritual Bypassing in the Therapy Room

PCI College

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0:00 | 53:03

Today’s episode explores the concept of spiritual bypassing which refers to the use of spiritual practices and beliefs to avoid dealing with our painful feelings, unresolved wounds and developmental needs. We use the book ‘Spiritual Bypassing – When spirituality disconnects us from what really matters’ by Robert Masters to guide the discussion. I am delighted to be joined by two PCI Faculty lecturers, Ramesh Ramsahoye and Andrew Twomey for this discussion.

Andrew is an IACP accredited integrative counsellor and psychotherapist and clinical supervisor, who works in private practice in Cork and online, since 2010. He holds a BA degree and MA in Counselling and Psychotherapy from CIT (Now MTU). He works with PCI College in various roles including Certificate Programme Leader, Faculty Lecturer, & Academic Team Leader for Cork.

Ramesh works for PCI College as a Faculty Lecturer, module leader and Academic Team Leader for Kilkenny. Before qualifying as a counsellor, Ramesh taught Art and Art History at secondary level and was also involved in student support. He runs a thriving private practice, Wexford Counselling Service, and enjoys writing articles for publication on diverse topics in the fields of art history and counselling and psychotherapy.

In this episode, we spend time with the concept of spiritual bypassing and explore what it means for our work as therapists in terms of how it can show up with clients but also what it means for our own shadow work so that we can fully support clients. We ground ourselves in the purpose of therapy which is integration of all aspects of being human and look at how spirituality, in its various forms, can play an important role in that.