A Place to Sit
An Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Metaphor
It is as if you needed a place to sit, and so you began describing a chair. Letʼs
say you gave a really detailed description of a chair. Itʼs a grey chair, and it has a metal
frame, and itʼs covered in a fabric, and itʼs a very sturdy chair. OK. Now can you sit in
that description.
(No)
Hereʼs the thing, and check your own experience: Hasnʼt you mind been telling you
things like “The world is this way, and that way and your problem is this and that, et
cetera?” Describe, describe. Evaluate, evaluate, evaluate. And all the while youʼre
getting tired. You need a place to sit. And your mind keeps handing you ever more
elaborate descriptions of chairs. Then it says to you, “Have a seat.” Descriptions are
fine, but what we are looking for here is an experience, not a description of an
experience. Minds canʼt deliver experience, they only blab to us about our experience
elsewhere. So weʼll let your mind describe away, and in the meantime, you and I will
look for a place to sit.