What is Motivational Interviewing? It’s begins with Your Presence of Being
I was talking with someone recently who worked as a chaplain at a hospital. They were talking about documentation, and in their electronic chart for case notes, there was a drop down menu that offered “presence of being” as an intervention that they could select.
Presence of being as an intervention.
What a beautiful way to think about what we are doing as Motivational Interviewers!
We are first and foremost focused on our presence of being, sitting with someone with our whole bodies and mind, practicing deep curiosity and empathy for that person, tuning in and listening to what they are saying.
We approach clients with curiosity, non-judgment, compassion and acceptance of who they are and where they are in their journey.
The spirit of Motivational Interviewing includes having the heartset and mindset as a provider of acceptance, compassion, partnership and empowerment.
Embodying the spirit of Motivational Interviewing is our “presence of being.” And of course, Motivational Interviewing is more than just a presence of being. Motivational Interviewing is a conversation style used to help someone move from being stuck in ambivalence to moving towards the growth and change that they want.
Still, I love this anchor– to think first and foremost as providing our clients with a presence of being– in this garden we can begin to help them grow the change they are seeking.
MI Tip of the Week: One of my favorite slogans is, “Let it begin with me.” Motivational Interviewing begins with the quality of presence you bring to the conversation. It’s about deep listening, attuned presence, and empathy. Consider the qualities of presence you bring to encounters with your clients that relay compassion, acceptance, partnership and empowerment.
Related Posts
When in Doubt, REFLECT!
Training participants often name the helpfulness of practicing reflective listening. It reminds us to sit back, drop our shoulders, and just listen! It pulls us out of problem-solving, persuading, and arguing for change. When YOU are getting pulled into trying to...
Related Posts
Ask-Offer-Ask Motivational Interviewing example in a convo with my teen when she pierced her bellybutton with a safety pin!
Ask-Offer-Ask is a Motivational Interviewing tool that is used when exchanging information or advice. The goal is to support client choice and autonomy as we first evoke their knowledge and thoughts on something before imparting ours! So, when my daughter pierced her...
Let’s Learn Together!
Hi, I’m Hillary Bolter. At MI Center for Change, Motivational Interviewing is our passion. Motivational Interviewing will help you become more effective and efficient as you support clients’ change!