- Discuss the complexity of working with clients who are also pregnant. How would a pregnancy change your approach to treatment? What issues might come up for you as a counselor? How might you talk about these risks with your client? How would you respond if your client continued to heavily drink or use substances while pregnant?
Working with clients struggling with addictions is separate from working with clients struggling with addictions who are pregnant. Once children are involved, born or unborn, the issues become even more complex. A pregnancy would change my approach to treatment in a way where I would feel as though I would need to advocate for the unborn child. It would be very difficult for me to work with this client because of my own personal ethics and values, particularly if the client resists sobriety or maintenance. For a client that does not resist sobriety and wants to get clean, I would help her find her way to a medical professional where the unborn child would get attention and the soon-to-be mother can receive prenatal care. I would explore with the client the risks and harm that could be caused to the unborn child should the client continue using substances, as well as the potential harm that may already have been caused to the baby. Helping the client sift through all of that information can take time as emotions and recovery plays out. Getting the client to a medical professional promptly, would be my foremost concern, though. It would affect treatment as, if the fetus is already dependent on the substance, it may not be best for the mother to completely stop taking the substance. When in doubt – rule out the medical.
- What does it mean to you to advocate for clients and challenge bias? How do you feel about taking on that role? Is that a role you expected to take on as a counselor? Are there some groups for whom it would be harder or easier for you to advocate for? Does that reflect on your own beliefs and values? How so?
Advocating for clients and challenging bias takes guts. It means standing up for individuals that the majority population either does not understand or that the majority population has misconstrued as not needing various services. Becoming an advocate, I feel, is a very important role of a counselor, and one I anticipate needing to take on. Sometimes individuals do not know how to help themselves. Sometimes individuals are unable to help themselves. Advocacy is necessary in both situations. Working with children and adolescents diagnosed with ASD on the weekends has given me ample opportunities to practice advocacy. I have worked with the local YMCAs, helping members there understand that these children are still humans and simply think and interact differently than the majority. Finding ways for this population to become more involved in their community, despite their differences is sometimes a struggle. As advocating for people with ASD is something I already do, this is a population I feel is ‘easier’ for me to advocate for. The harder population for me to provide advocacy, I believe, would be to allow for more services for pedophiles. My practicum experience at the sexual behavior unit has taught me that one of the ways to ensure the protection of children in the future is to help those who either intentionally or unintentionally have harmed or feel the desire to harm children. This is a very controversial issue and one I do not believe there is much public support for, so advocating for this population, I think, would be very, very difficult. This does reflect on my own beliefs, as I do not know of any research that says that the majority population does not want to help pedophiles, this is my own opinion of what the population feels based off of feedback from my friends and family.
- Using the Blog References, find and specifically report on at minimum of four websites that you could use for information regarding gender and/or LGBT issues in addictions counseling. Give a minimum of one paragraph of explanation for each site listed.
The Association for Lesbian, Gay, Bixsexual and Transgender Issues in Counseling website is a fantastic resource. This association has a mission to recognize individual and social contexts that represent the conflusence of race, gender, ethnicity, class, sexual orientation, ability, age, religious or spiritual belief systems and indigenous heritage. It’s purpose it to promote awareness and understanding of the LGBT community among the counseling profession in hopes of improving the standards and delivery of counseling services that are provided within this community. Identifying barriers to the growth and development of LGBT clients and implementing and fostering interest in chartiable, scientific, and educational programs is another purpose of the ALGBTIC. There are resources available for counselors, such as competencies to work with the LGBT community as well as educational sources. Another great aspect about this site is that it gives a list of the competent LGBT counselors for the LGBT community. Another way this list could be used is for counselors interested in working with the LGBT community to get in contact with those who are competent in working with this population.
http://www.colage.org/resources/
Colage is a great resource for counselors to use. It unites lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and/or queer parents together. It fosters empowerment and self-confidence for the LGBTQ community. It has resources available to read for LGBTQ parents and for people with LGBTQ parents. This could be a great site to use when working with adolescents and children and school systems. There are tips for coming out to children and resources explaining what happens and/or what it means when your parents come out of the closet. These resources could be used when working with clients. “In My Shoes” is a fantastic documentary available on this website focusing on the children of homosexual parents which normalizes homosexuality. This is a really fantastic site!
It is, in my opinion, important to consider the different issues Christians face in today’s society. Being a Christian myself, I do not feel free to speak much about my faith because when I do, I am often automatically labeled as trying to convert people. That has never been the case. I feel as though the more I speak on my faith, the more I am persecuted against and the less I am listened to and/or respected. Now, couple being of the Christian faith and being a homosexual. I am not a homosexual, but I have friends who are and some of those friends do align with Christianity. How difficult that must be! Soulforce.com shares a positive view of the Bible as it relates to Christianity. It brings into focus an ideology of what being a Christian and a homosexual is like and how to get connected within that community.
The Human Rights Campaign fights for equal rights. There are current issues shown on this website as for what is happening legislatively. It showcases how people can get involved in the campaign and lists resources to use. There is even a wedding registry for the LGBTQ community, providing a safe place for this population to prepare for and fund their weddings. This would be a great resource to use in the counseling setting.