Redmond Christian Counseling Logo

  • ServicesRead about the expertise available
    • Individual ServicesAddress your personal concerns confidentially
      • ADHD
      • Aging and Geriatric Issues
      • Anger Management
      • Anxiety
      • Autism Spectrum Disorder
      • Bipolar Disorder
      • Chemical Dependency
      • Coaching
      • Counseling for Children
      • Codependency
      • Counseling for Teens
      • Depression
      • Eating Disorders
      • EMDR
      • Grief and loss Counseling
      • Individual Counseling
      • Infidelity and Affairs
      • Lifespan Integration Therapy
      • Men’s Issues
      • OCD
      • Personal Development
      • Professional Development
      • Psychological Testing
      • Relationship Issues
      • Sex And Porn Addiction
      • Sexual Abuse
      • Spiritual Development
      • Trauma
      • Weight Loss
      • Women’s Issues
    • Christian Couples CounselingWork through challenges together
      • Couples Counseling
      • Marriage Counseling
      • Premarital Counseling
    • Family CounselingEstablish the peaceful home you desire
      • Couples Counseling
      • Counseling for Children
      • Counseling for Teens
      • Family Counseling
    • Group Counseling
      • Men’s Sexual Addiction Recovery Group
      • All Counseling Groups
  • LocationsWe have offices at various locations
    • Bellevue 5Bellevue
    • Bothell 4Bothell
    •  1Monroe
    • Redmond Christian CounselingRedmond
    •  1Online (WA only)
  • CounselorsFind out more about our counselors
  • CareersJoin our team of Christian Counselors
  • (425) 250-6282Please give us a call, we are here to help
header-image

Embracing Uncertainty: The ‘Waiting Room’ of Christian Counseling, (Part 2)

Redmond Christian Counseling
https://redmondchristiancounseling.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/Image-110-300x200.jpg 300 200
https://redmondchristiancounseling.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/01/redmond-3.jpg
8195 166th Ave NE, Suite #204
REDMOND, WA 98052
United States
8195 166th Ave NE, Suite #204
REDMOND, WA 98052
United States
Photo of Chris Lewis

Chris Lewis

May
2014
27

Embracing Uncertainty: The ‘Waiting Room’ of Christian Counseling, (Part 2)

Chris Lewis

Individual Counseling

Part 2 of a 3-Part Embracing Uncertainty Series

Image 1It is the glory of God to conceal things, but the glory of kings is to search things out. (Proverbs 25:2 ESV) Proverbs has a way of getting right to the heart, and the mind, of a matter. This is not to suggest that Proverbs is an easy tip-sheet for life. It is more like the tip of an iceberg, in that the answers it provides can point us to underlying mysteries. As I suggested in my previous article, an experience of anxiety, or of having to wait for something, can point us to a presence that we need to pay attention to, or to a new self that needs to emerge.

New Life Stirs in the Dimness of Doubt

In Scripture, we discover a God who both reveals and conceals  – often at the same time, and in unexpected ways. Recall for a moment the disciples’ initial response in the Upper Room after the Crucifixion. They were alone, afraid, hiding out. They were reliving the very real post-traumatic stress of what they’d heard about or witnessed first-hand at Golgotha. Consider the trauma and anxiety produced by their shattered kingdom dreams and expectations: there had been no triumphant Messiah on a flaming  white horse. New life was stirring, not in the light of certainty, but in the dimness of doubt.

Like us if you are enjoying this content.

In this holy darkness, our finite minds bump into more existential questions, such as:

  • What are we are actually searching for?
  • How do we go about seeking it?

I would suggest that our drive to understand and explore is a mark of the imago Dei (image of God) in us. But it can also become distorted by a “need ” to know, by an agenda of head-figuring in place of deeper soul-searching. And it is the latter that resonates more with the original Greek sense of the word knowing, which is an intuitive, experiential, mind-body-soul sort of awareness of what is happening in the here-and-now.

Brain Boggle: Balancing Your Mind

So let’s apply a little brain science to our own Upper-Room uncertainty.

Dr. Daniel Siegel, a renowned psychiatrist and pioneer in the field of interpersonal neurobiology, agrees that we live in a culture conditioned towards cognitive resolution – what Siegel terms “top-down learning.” In the book Healing Moments in Psychotherapy (2013), Siegel describes how this conceptual part of our mind that processes facts, ideas, and knowledge is quite different from the neural circuitry that processes direct experience.

The problem is our over-reliance on the “top-down” function of our brain. This top-down mode relies on labeling, categorizing, perceiving, and filtering mechanisms that size-up and define our present reality based on past events. This “top-down” dominance not only keeps us one step removed from our experience, it also limits our access to the brain’s equally important “bottom-up” process of sensing and feeling. Often, we rush to control our real-time sensory experience or emotion by seeking explanations “about” it.

Your Brain Can Trap You in a Rut of Suffering

For example, Siegel notes that the word “anger” may be a powerful trigger for someone, “but relying on labels can be imprisoning in the sense that we are, in essence, retrofitting the current moment with all that the state of anger has meant to us in the past.” Top-down brain input is important, for sure. But in the case of painful past events, its ingrained response of learned adaptations and patterns can actually trap a person in a rut of suffering.

Siegel likes to use an inner reflection taken from neuroscience . He quietly repeats to himself, “I invite top-down to take a break. I invite language to move to the side. I invite myself to go into a place of awareness that I cannot control with language and the certainty of prior experience. I embrace the uncertainty of bottom-up” (italics mine).

 Embracing uncertainty – as a sign of health? It’s enough to boggle the mind.

Or … could it help heal the mind?

Bottoms Up: The Science of Letting Go and Tuning In

Image 2Siegel describes how the mind is regulated by and moves along an energy curve of “probability.” It moves from peaks of high certainty (defined thoughts, emotions, and  images), down to the less-than-certain plateaus of thinking, emoting, and imaging, to then bottoming out into zero-probability, otherwise known as “the plane of possibility.” This is the place where deep awareness emerges and “consciousness happens,” Siegel says. It is here that we become more present people who are informed by our fixed ideas and habits, without being controlled by them.

For Siegel, “letting go of top-down expectations means enhancing the bottom-up experience of the raw, spontaneous present moment.”

In other words, we need a healthy injection of uncertainty to maintain a nimble and flexible mind – to open us to our own potential, and to the possibility of being more fully ourselves.

Siegel suggests that people often enter therapy because of their “rigid or chaotic patterns of plateaus and peaks.” Healing is promoted through the integration of top-down and bottom-up brain functions, and by the mind’s ability to move fluidly between peaks, plateaus, and planes.

This neural-elasticity is known as mindfulness, a reflective state in which your “observing self” and your “experiential self” are actually listening to one another, sharpening your inner awareness and decision-making. Mindfulness means that these two selves are “internally attuned” to each other with openness and acceptance instead of judgmental critique.

We Need the Presence of Another to Lead us into Mindfulness

This is where the real work of counseling begins, for often we cannot “internally attune” ourselves. Indeed, Siegel refers to the mind as both an “embodied” and a “relational” process. In therapy, we come to know ourselves through an “attuning” relationship of trust and emotional resonance with a trained other, who helps to reflect our own experience back to us.

This different yet shared awareness not only grows our neural pathways and brain fibers, it also promotes stress-reduction in the body, in part by disrupting old dysfunctional patterns and wired-in defenses. Moments of surprise and uncertainty erupt as the “plane of possibilities” unfolds in a person’s life. In the safe space that counseling provides, body, brain, and mind are regenerated and develop transformative ways of relating to oneself and others.

My point is that it takes the mindful presence of another to enable us to become more present to ourselves and to grow our own coherent mind.

Awareness, like healing, is a co-created act. And it’s at the very heart of our seeking.

Christian Counseling Can Help You to Embrace Uncertainty

This recognition that we need the presence of another person is at the heart of the Christian counseling process. In my next article, I will describe how waiting in uncertainty can help us in our relationship with God and in our relationships with those around us. But if this article has raised any issues for you, or if you struggle with a top-down brain that cannot handle uncertainty, you may want to consider speaking to a Christian counselor. A professional Christian counselor can help you to discover how uncertainty can be a doorway to the “plane of possibility” in your life.

References
Siegel, D. J., & Solomon, M. (Eds.). (2013). Healing Moments in Psychotherapy (pp. 217-268). New York, NY: W.W. Norton & Company.

Photos
“Foggy Uncertainty” by Matthew is licensed under CC BY 2.0; “Day 34” by Nina Matthews is licensed under CC BY 2.0

DISCLAIMER: THIS ARTICLE DOES NOT PROVIDE MEDICAL ADVICE

The information, including but not limited to, text, graphics, images and other material contained on this article are for informational purposes only. No material on this site is intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Please contact one of our counselors for further information.

  • Share on Facebook
  • Tweet it
  • ↑ Back to top
Photo of Chris Lewis
Schedule with Chris
  • Appointment Info

  • Your Info

  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Chris Lewis

Licensed Counselor
(206) 330-0419 chrisl@seattlechristiancounseling.com

Psalms 107:29 tells us, “He caused the storm to be still, So that the waves of the sea were hushed.” If the waves of your life are crashing down around you, come seek shelter in Christian counseling. It saved me when I found myself caught in the storms and it can save you, too. I will work with you to first get your head above water and eventually teach you how to swim with confidence. With Jesus’ help, you can overcome your fears, let go of losses, and grow in God to walk on the water of your faith. Read more articles by Chris »

Other articles that might interest you...

Embracing Uncertainty: The ‘Waiting Room’ of Christian Counseling, (Part 1)
Photo of Chris Lewis

Chris Lewis

Embracing Uncertainty: The ‘Waiting ...

Part 1 of a 3-Part Embracing Uncertainty Series In my own life, and in my experience as a Christian counselor,...

continue reading »
Christian Pre-Marital Counseling and Conflict
Photo of Benjamin Deu

Benjamin Deu

Christian Pre-Marital Counseling and ...

Eyes Wide Open Ben Franklin advised those considering entering into matrimony, “Keep your eyes wide open before marriage and half-shut...

continue reading »
Embracing Uncertainty: Entering the ‘Waiting Room’ of Christian Counseling, (Part 3)
Photo of Chris Lewis

Chris Lewis

Embracing Uncertainty: Entering the ...

Part 3 of a 3-Part Embracing Uncertainty Series Rabbi Irwin Kula, in his book Yearnings (2006), uses the image of...

continue reading »

About Chris

Photo of Chris Lewis

Chris Lewis, MA, LMHC

Licensed Counselor

Psalms 107:29 tells us, “He caused the storm to be still, So that the waves of the sea were hushed.” If the waves of your life are crashing down around you, come seek shelter in Christian counseling. It saved me when I found myself caught in the storms and it can save you, too. I will work with you to first get your head above water and eventually teach you how to swim with confidence. With Jesus’ help, you can overcome your fears, let go of losses, and grow in God to walk on the water of your faith. View Chris's Profile

Recent articles by Chris

  • May 29 · Embracing Uncertainty: Entering the ‘Waiting Room’ of Christian Counseling, (Part 3)
  • May 27 · Embracing Uncertainty: The ‘Waiting Room’ of Christian Counseling, (Part 2)
  • May 22 · Embracing Uncertainty: The ‘Waiting Room’ of Christian Counseling, (Part 1)
See all articles by Chris »

Related Services

  • Individual Counseling

Chris's Office Locations

  • Photo of the Mill Creek office

    Mill Creek

    Washington

    General Office Number

    (425) 329-4464
    16000 Bothell Everett Highway, Suite 200 Mill Creek, WA 98012

    View Office Details
  • Photo of the Online (WA only) office

    Online (WA only)

    General Office Number

    (206) 388-3929
    ,  

    View Office Details
Redmond Christian Counseling Logo
Redmond Christian Counseling
Professional help with faith-based values
We are an association of professional, independently licensed Christian counselors experienced in helping people of all ages find healing for a wide variety of issues.
© 2025 Redmond Christian Counseling. All rights reserved.
8195 166th Ave NE,, Redmond, WA 98052. Tel (425) 250-6282.
Online Counseling About Us Privacy Policy Terms of Use Feel free to contact us!
We are open for business. In person and online counseling are available now.