|
|
Recovery Bill of Rights
As a Matter of Personal
AUTHORITY, You Have the Right ...
...to manage your life according to your own values and judgment
...to direct your recovery, answerable to no one for your goals,
effort, or progress
...to gather information to make intelligent decisions about
your recovery
...to seek help from a variety of sources, unhindered by demands
for exclusivity
...to decline help from anyone without having to justify the
decision
...to have faith in your powers of self restoration -- and to
seek allies who share it
...to trust allies in healing as much as any adult can trust
another, but no more
...to be afraid and to avoid what frightens you
...to decide for yourself whether, when, and where to confront
your fear
...to learn by experimenting, that is, to make mistakes.
For the Preservation of Personal
BOUNDARIES, You Have the Right ...
...to be touched only with your permission, and only in ways
that are comfortable
...to choose to speak or remain silent, about any topic or at
any moment
...to choose to accept or decline feedback, suggestions, or
interpretations
...to ask for help in healing, without having to accept help
with work, play, or love
...to challenge any crossing of your boundaries
...to take appropriate action to end any trespass that does not
cease when challenged.
In the Sphere of Personal
COMMUNICATION, You Have the Right ...
...to ask for explanation of communications you do not
understand
...to express a contrary view when you do understand and you
disagree
...to acknowledge your feelings, without having to justify them
as assertions of fact or actions affecting others
...to ask for changes when your needs are not being met
...to speak of your experience, with respect for your doubts and
uncertainties
...to resolve doubt without deferring to the views or wishes of
anyone.
Specific to the DOMAIN of
Psychotherapy, You Have the Right ...
...to hire a therapist or counselor as coach, not boss, of your
recovery
...to receive expert and faithful assistance in healing from
your therapist
...to be assured that your therapist will refuse to engage in
any other relationship with you --business, social, or sexual --
for life
...to be secure against revelation of anything you have
disclosed to your therapist, unless a court of law commands it
...to have your therapist's undivided loyalty in relation to any
and all perpetrators, abusers, or oppressors
...to receive informative answers to questions about your
condition, your hopes for recovery, the goals and methods of
treatment, the therapist's qualifications
...to have a strong interest by your therapist in your safety,
with a readiness to use all legal means to neutralize an
imminent threat to your life or someone else's
...to have your therapist's commitment to you not depend on your
"good behavior," unless criminal activity or ongoing threats to
safety are involved
...to know reliably the times of sessions and of your
therapist's availability, including, if you so desire, a
commitment to work together for a set term
...to telephone your therapist between regular scheduled
sessions, in urgent need, and have the call returned within a
reasonable time
...to be taught skills that lessen risk of retraumatisation
containment (reliable temporal/spatial boundaries for recovery
work);(b) systematic relaxation;(c) control of attention and
imagery (through trance or other techniques)
...to reasonable physical comfort during sessions.
© 1995 by Thomas V. Maguire, Ph.D.191 King Street,
Chappaqua, NY
10514.tmaguire@pipeline.com All rights reserved, except that
permission is hereby granted to freely reproduce and distribute
this document, provided that it is reproduced unaltered in its
entirety and distributed free of charge
|
|