Wikipedia
states that “a metaphor is a literary figure of speech that describes a subject
by asserting that it is, on some point of comparison, the same as another
otherwise unrelated object. Metaphor is a type of analogy and is closely
related to other rhetorical figures of speech that achieve their effects via
association, comparison or resemblance including allegory, hyperbole, and
simile”.
We use metaphors every day but never stop to think how they
are used to mean entire phrases when telling a story, they are also, in many cases
cultural and not universally understood by everyone. Statements like “it’s a cake walk” are understood to say “the
task at which you are about to attempt will be very easy.” If the hearer is familiar
to the metaphor it is understood as semantic links to other words or phrases. I use this example because my colleague who is
from Ethiopia tells his students how easy a test will be by saying “it’s a walk on a cake” It cracks me up
every time. There again, I just used the
metaphor “it cracks me up.” My colleague
clearly knows that the phrase means that something is easy but never would have
used that phrase in his homeland and had to learn what it meant, I’m sure the
first time he heard it he didn’t think someone was going to walk on a cake. A metaphor I commonly use is “you can’t see the forest for the trees”
This means you need to take on what many counselors would call the helicopter view,
meaning to see the bigger picture. If the client is so focused on the problem
then I use this metaphor to help them understand that they need to look at the
situation and see it on a larger scale to fully gain the perspective of the
issue.
We use these in counseling every day and our clients use
them to explain the situation or event to us in a manner that we can understand
how they are seeing the world. I had a client say to me yesterday that the
instructor had “ripped his butt” I knew this to mean that the instructor had
admonished the student for something, leading me to ask the question “tell me
what you did to deserve that?” The student then began telling a
“Story” story telling is as old as
speech its self, it’s how we learn and how we teach; all the way back to
Aristotle there are stories of teaching to help mankind gain wisdom. They are
structured retelling of an event or fictional event, they many times contain such
things as goals, themes, plans, expectations, solutions and explanations. These
are the same things that we as counselors hope to understand from our client as
well as convey or instill. All I would have to say to anyone from my generation
“remember the ant and the grasshopper” and they would instantly realize that
perhaps I perceive that they are being lazy or wasting their time on folly and
were going to find their self in a tight situation.
"You can't see the forest for the trees" is an excellent metaphor to use with clients when counseling. Oftentimes, clients can't see the big picture because they are so absorbed in the obstacles in their path and all of the little details. This is definitely true of college students who are so bombarded with scheduling issues, working and attending classes at the same time, and dealing with financial aid issues that they can't see the light at the end of the tunnel - a college degree and a ticket to a better future.
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