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CASE EXPERIENCE: 'DANCING SHOES', A BUDDHIST PERSPECTIVE

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This article aims to stimulate discussion about relationships between the lives of professionals and of service users. The idea is that when parallels are explored and developed, power dynamics between professionals and social workers are reduced, the quality of interaction and work with service users can be improved, and professionals can also be helped in overcoming difficulties in their own lives. I start with an outline of my own personal background and highlight my development throughout, including my emerging identity as a Buddhist. I discuss a case study involving 'Sally' and her family and our work together while I was a social work assistant in a Children and Family's team. I try to show the interconnections between the different difficulties that we faced and how that informed my work. I look at some of the benefits, pitfalls and boundaries of working from the point of view that service user and professional are both working to overcome their problems. I also interweave interactions I had at the time with Carlos, a drug user friend in a crisis and the impact he had on me. Because I include my own situation I have called this article a 'case experience'. Throughout I refer to Buddhist and psychoanalytic thinking and particularly to agreement between the two around ideas that inner-resistance is the main barrier to personal evolution. I argue that faith is the key to unlocking resistance, and that faith should be understood as the development of a belief within people that they are able to progress rather than be destroyed in the face of inevitable problems.

Keywords: Buddhist; social work; Nichiren Buddhism; faith; human revolution; inner-resistance; interconnection; obstacles; parallels; psychoanalysis

Document Type: Research Article

Affiliations: Social Worker, Leaving Care Team, Twickenham, Middlesex TW1 4EU, UK

Publication date: 01 March 2007

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