How to Coach Yourself and Others Techniques For Coaching | Page 209
3.19 THE MIRACLE QUESTION
The miracle question The miracle question is a method of questioning
that a coach, therapist, or counselor uses to aid the client to envision
how the future will be different when the problem is no longer present.
Also, this may help to establish goals.
A traditional version of the miracle question would go like this:
"Suppose our meeting is over, you go home, do whatever you planned
to do for the rest of the day. And then, some time in the evening, you get
tired and go to sleep. And in the middle of the night, when you are fast
asleep, a miracle happens and all the problems that brought you here
today are solved just like that. But since the miracle happened
overnight nobody is telling you that the miracle happened. When you
wake up the next morning, how are you going to start discovering that
the miracle happened? ... What else are you going to notice? What else?"
Whilst relatively easy to state the miracle question requires
considerable skill to ask well. The question must be asked slowly with
close attention to the person's non-verbal communication to ensure
that the pace matches the person's ability to follow the question. Initial
responses frequently include a sense of "I don't know." To ask the
question well this should be met with respectful silence to give the
person time to fully absorb the question.
Once the miracle day has been thoroughly explored the worker can
follow this with scales, on a scale where 0 = worst things have ever
been and 10 = the miracle day where are you now? Where would it
need to be for you to know that you didn't need to see me any more?
What will be the first things that will let you know you are 1 point
higher. In this way the miracle question is not so much a question as a
series of questions.
There are many different versions of the miracle question depending
on the context and the client.
In a specific situation, the counselor may ask,
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