one of the simplest and most useful exercises that Psychotherapy has gifted to us is known as the empty chair technique a client who's been wrestling with their feelings towards someone is gently requested to stop discussing them in the third person and is instead invited to face a chair and start talking to this bit of furniture as if it were to all intents the specific troubling person in their life perhaps a long dead absent father a neglectful mother or a traitorous so-called friend many of us spend a good deal of time ruminating on difficult people in
the recesses of our minds we say that so and so really deserves a comeuppence or that we'd love to give x or y a taste of what we actually think we find ourselves returning to them again and again late at night and on the journey to work their offenses interrupting our sleep and spoiling our digestion and yet we rarely speak with any degree of Clarity or sincerity out of a fear of Retribution a dread of vulnerability a pessimism as to the chances of being understood or perhaps stubbornly ingrained good manners the feelings remain in us
in a latent form contributing to a layer of static frustration that damages our health and lends a compulsive quality to our moods now under the egis of a therapist we can give form to our cloudy annoyance once we move past the hesit itation at the particular strangeness of discoursing with a seat we may find that we are a great deal more eloquent than we supposed far more sure of what we needed to say far more at home with letting the world energetically know how things look through our eyes dad why did you have children if
you couldn't even be bothered to get to know them why did you think that your responsibility stopped at providing for them materially Chris why do you pretend that you don't want to be intrusive when in fact you just never taken interest in me despite the hours that I've listened to your troubles all this might not seem so different from previous remarks like I'm pretty angry with X or Y but the impact of a concrete articulation and a public audition is of a different order anger is a poison and to speak it is to drain it
of its malevolent Force we forcely imagine that the only speeches we can ever usefully make are to Flesh and Blood attentive listeners in truth it May matter far less that we are heard than that we have a chance to speak the empty chair technique is liable to be especially helpful to those of us who had to grow up to be extremely good boys and girls there may be few opportunities to be anything but when Dad is an alcoholic or has a violent temper mom is neglectful or a sibling is very ill we may lack any
knowledge of how to complain because in our formative period we sensed correctly that our survival depended upon meekness and Good Humor we learned to smile and appease when we would have needed a long whale at the unfairness and cruelty of it all our silence may have won us a safe enough passage into adulthood its ongoing nature threatens to ruin the remaining years we may fear that we won't be able to get too far into a speech without either collapsing into humiliating tears or escalating into unmanageable Fury the empty chair technique can reassure us on both
fronts there can be ways of speaking without shouting of saying no without being alarming of standing up for ourselves without coming across as entitled or unworthy we can assert our needs without bringing about the catastrophy we fear and we can start right now without even waiting for a psychotherapist by looking across the room to the nearest available chair and asking who should be sitting there and what have I needed to tell them for the longest time