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The Equilibrium of the Social Worker

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 September 2024

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The absence of equilibrium implies the presence of tensions; there are tensions in the life of everyone, but nowhere more so than in the life of those who are trying to live up to an ideal. Experience has proved this to be true. But it is the more true of the Christian, continually responding to the urge of grace or failing to do so. Even the great Apostle of the Gentiles was forced to admit that ‘praiseworthy intentions are always ready to hand, but I cannot find my way to the performance of them. It is not the good my will prefers, but the evil my will disapproves, that I find myself doing.’ Yet such tensions can be an asset, provided we are clear about our goals. We cannot hope to eliminate tensions—trying to suppress or ignore them can only lead to worse effects—because they are due to our human nature wounded by the sin of our first parents. But we can hope to arrive at a state of harmony, a balance of tensions which will sustain us and even carry us forward.

Again it is even more true of the social worker whose function is, by definition, ‘to assess the disturbance of equilibrium in a given handicapped person, in his family, his social relationships, so as to give appropriate help.’ In order to do his job properly, the social worker has to place himself in a situation that is lacking equilibrium, and through empathy to share—at least to some extent—the client’s problems. The social worker is not to be considered as a person safe and dry who throws a lifebelt to somebody struggling in the water. He has himself to jump in the water and to encourage the person in difficulties to make the necessary strokes to remain afloat, and perhaps eventually to make for the shore.

Type
Original Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1964 Provincial Council of the English Province of the Order of Preachers

Footnotes

1

A paper read at the Tench International Congress of the International Catholic Union of Social Service, Nijmegen, August 1963.

References

2 Rom 7, 18f.

3 Report of the Working Party on Socila Workers in the Local Authority Health and Welfare Services, H. M. S. O. (London, 1959), para. 615.

4 Provisional definition in the glossary of the International Conference of Social Work. Cf. definition of Catholic Social casework by Betty Hanigan and Henry R. Evans in The Catholic Charities Review, Feb. 1963, p. 7.

5 John XXIII, Pacem in terris

6 Mouroux, J. The Meaning of Man, pp. 128–9.

7 John XXIII, Pacem in terris. Cf. A Handbook of Christian Social Ethics, Vol. I, by E. Welty, o.p. (tr. and ed. J. Fitzsimons, P. 45–6.

8 Mouroux, J., op. cit., p.134.

9 Evans, Illtud, o. p., One and Many, pp. 72–3.

10 Gilby, Thomas, o. p., Between Commumity and Society, pp. 321–2.