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I retired from my counseling practice two weeks ago.
Over the course of 35 years, I literally met with thousands of men, women, boys and girls; perhaps as many as 4,000 - 5,000 total.
There were any number of variables involved in the significant number of people with whom I have counseled.
The youngest person I ever "met with" was 11 or 12; (as I never considered myself an elementary age counselor). The oldest person I ever met with was 85. The number of people over 60 I ever counseled with was no more than 8 or 10 max. 99.9 percent of my clients were Caucasian. I counseled approximately 15-20 Spanish people. I counseled a grand total of 2 black, and 2 Jewish clients.
I have encountered every conceivable counseling issue. Marital, financial, sexual, vocational, emotional. (All those issues which end with the suffix "al"). My least favorite counseling topics involved substance abuse, and grief. Speaking of "grief", like many long-time counselors, I "lost" a couple of clients.
Of course, a counselor counsels "whatever walks in his door." We are not in the business of soliciting clients. (They knock on our doors, not vice versa, and we generally counsel whoever does the knocking).
It will be strange not doing extensive session planning on a weekly basis. It will seem odd not "jumping ready" twice a week, and driving to one of my two offices; 7 minutes separating the two locations.
And as I began my little thesis, above, all this has come to a conclusion now, and I am left with the results; be they good, or the lack thereof. (However, I am convinced that I made a significant difference in a myriad of lives).
Post-script
Now, I find myself bereft of a formal ministry, and the wherewithal to impact lives.
Oh, perhaps I just misspoke. I have been placing Christian tracts on random store shelves when I shop, and I often hand out small New Testaments to store clerks, and others I meet along the way.
And I often encourage people whom I interact with on social media. (I once had the privilege of sharing the written word with a young lady in war-torn Ukraine. Later, she told me how much my words meant to her, and buoyed her spirits, as she sat in a bomb shelter, and munitions rained down around her).
While I don't want to downplay the things with which I am currently involved, I am convinced there will be a "next," something I can do on a regular basis to make a difference among those who God sets in my pathway.
There has always been a "next," and I believe God has a next for all of those who have invested their faith in Him; throughout the times and stages of their lives.
by Bill McDonald, PhD