Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Can spiritual directors help in these times?

- ANDREA COOPER

Last spring, after a divorce, Qadeera Ingram needed someone to talk to. Specifical­ly, she wanted to be able to speak about spirituali­ty and the bigger picture of her life.

Although Ingram, a 33-year-old government contractor in Goose Creek, S.C., is Christian, she isn’t a member of a church. So she hired Susan Pannier-Cass, a spiritual director and ordained minister, to talk about what she was experienci­ng, including raising her 6-year-old son in a pandemic at a time of widespread unrest.

In some of the virtual sessions, Ingram talked about her dreams, and Pannier-Cass would help her analyze them. In others, Ingram discussed elements of the natural world, how they made her feel closer to God. Pannier-Cass would encourage her “to go outside more and take my shoes off,” Ingram said, “put my feet on the ground, just to reconnect with my center and what brings me peace.”

Spiritual companions, also known as spiritual directors, are guides whose purpose is to listen deeply to clients and help them explore their spirituali­ty, usually in a nondenomin­ational capacity.

What they offer is not therapy; according to Spiritual Directors Internatio­nal, a nonprofit in Bellevue, Wash., the goal of meeting with a spiritual companion is to take a “meaningful step to help you find wholeness and balance in life, not to mention a sense of connection with however you might refer to God, Allah, The Universe, or the Ground of All Being, that which connects us all.”

The practice has roots in many faiths, particular­ly the Jesuit branch of Catholicis­m, but contempora­ry spiritual directors come from a variety of religions.

“Most people come to spiritual direction looking for ultimate meaning, however they might define it. We don’t define it for them,” said Seifu Anil Singh-Molares, a Zen Buddhist priest and the executive director of Spiritual Directors Internatio­nal. (While spiritual direction is the more familiar term, he said, he favors “spiritual companion” because it is more inclusive.) “We support you in finding your own way to God, if that’s how you describe it,

or Brahman, or Tao.”

SPACE FOR SEEKING

“Spiritual but not religious” is how 27% of Americans define themselves, according to a Pew Research Center survey from 2017. But one-quarter of American adults in an April survey from Pew reported that their religious faith has increased because of the pandemic.

For some seeking spiritual connection, this results in a hybrid approach. Alissa Ballot, 65, another of Pannier-Cass’ clients and a retired lawyer in Chicago, was already a member of a synagogue when a retreat introduced her to spiritual companions­hip. She has found greater self-understand­ing by writing poetry at Pannier-Cass’ suggestion, she said. Spiritual direction is helping her “become the me that God intended and created me to be.”

Lucinda Clark, a spiritual director in Charlotte, N.C., said that in her experience, more Black clients, including clergy members, are seeking spiritual direction after George Floyd’s death and the anger and protests that followed.

“That has been one of the main issues,” said Clark, 51. “‘How can I operate and work in my ministry in an environmen­t that is unknowingl­y sometimes rejecting me and sometimes knowingly?’ And so, some people are coming because they’re hurt. They don’t know how to move forward.”

Clark, who completed a three-year spiritual direction program at Charlotte Spirituali­ty Center, became a spiritual director after what she describes as “a dark night of the soul” in which she questioned certain ideologies in her church. She concluded that while she is rooted in Christiani­ty, there are many paths to God.

Afterward, “I just knew that I needed to journey with other people, to partner with other people, so they didn’t feel alone,” she said. “I thought, ‘I don’t know the name of this thing that I’m supposed to do.

I just know that I’m supposed to do it.’”

BOUNDARIES AND BEYOND

Spiritual directors, unlike therapists, are not licensed clinicians. They are not regulated by any agency. Nor does Spiritual Directors Internatio­nal, one of the biggest organizati­ons dedicated to spiritual companions­hip, or smaller organizati­ons like Spiritual Directors of Color Network, offer any kind of independen­t certificat­ion.

Training can vary depending upon the practition­er’s faith background or educationa­l preference­s, but there are certificat­e programs through spiritual direction organizati­ons and nonprofit ministries, including the Shalem Institute for Spiritual Formation in Washington. Emily Malcoun, a clinical psychologi­st in Philadelph­ia who has worked with a spiritual director, noted that while therapy “can provide expert help with healing from mental health symptoms,” spiritual direction “focuses on your relationsh­ip with God or the divine” through prayer or reflection.

Some advocate for more accountabi­lity in the profession. Andree Grafstein, a spiritual director in Avon, Conn., described an incident of sexual harassment from a director about 40 years ago in an article she published last fall in Presence, a journal published by Spiritual Directors Internatio­nal; Grafstein said she has received supportive emails from other spiritual directors since its publicatio­n. “I look forward to a day when the reality of a spiritual director’s sexual harassment becomes as visible as other forms of sexual abuse have become,” she wrote.

Directees can be vulnerable, especially because, for some, rejection of organized religion or a former religious community is what brought them to a spiritual director in the first place. Kristabeth Atwood in Burlington, Vt., a spiritual director and former United Methodist minister, calls herself a pastor for people who don’t go to church. Most of her directees “just don’t resonate with being part of a traditiona­l or formal religious community,” she said.

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