Peer Support for Spiritual Leaders

Our goal is to provide a space where peers can safely, openly and vulnerably share and receive support.

Peer Support Project Update - June 2024

We are excited to share some significant updates regarding our Peer Support Project. After careful consideration and thorough analysis, we have decided that the data collected from Peer Support Projects 1 and 2 are sufficient to inform and support the launch of the Peer Support Program as an ASI service. Consequently, we have decided not to proceed with Peer Support Project Pilot 3 and will instead use our energy and time to focus on the launch of the Peer Support Program for the ASI community at large.

Our next steps will focus on refining the program’s structure, identifying and training peer support group facilitators, and ensuring that we have the necessary resources to provide high-quality support to all interested community members. We are committed to fostering a supportive and inclusive environment where everyone can benefit from peer support.

We extend our heartfelt gratitude to all participants and volunteers who have contributed to the success of the Peer Support Project pilots. We truly appreciate and are thankful for your dedication to the program pilots.

Please stay tuned for further updates as we prepare to launch the ASI Peer Support Program later this year.

 

Why Peer Support for Spiritual Leaders

Spiritual leadership is often a complex and isolating role. When faced with challenges, many of us find ourselves with few or no colleagues to lean on for genuine, caring feedback.

At ASI, our mission revolves around supporting the ongoing development of spiritual leaders (i.e teachers, counselors, coaches, guides, mentors, healers, transpersonal psychologists etc.), and we are committed to providing innovative and proven tools that positively impact both the leaders themselves and those they serve.

It’s important to acknowledge that even with the high ethical standards most of us aspire to, spiritual leaders can face challenges involving complex trade-offs, nuanced gray areas, and ambiguity.

Crucial Need

Spiritual leaders need to be supported in the self-reflective journey of living in ever-increasing integrity with their personal values while being of greatest service to their students and clients.We now know that the collective practices of deep listening, loving inquiry, honest feedback, and authentic sharing naturally encourage new and higher standards of integrity in spiritual leadership.In the experience of the ASI, unconscious misuse and abuse of power by spiritual leaders is often a consequence of those leaders not being sufficiently aware of their own needs and not knowing how to respond to them outside of their profession.

Normalization of Peer Support

Our goal in the ASI is to provide spaces where peers can safely, openly and vulnerably share and receive support. Gathering spiritual leaders together in small groups of peers where a new quality of relationship is sensitively guided will offer a new model of peer support appropriate to a broad community of spiritual leadership. We believe that quality peer support for spiritual leaders must be normalized within the culture of spirituality if we are to create new and higher standards of spiritual integrity in our profession.

We've Already Begun

ASI has engaged in researching peer support since 2021, when we launched the first peer support pilot designed to offer quality peer support structure for a selected group of members of the ASI community. In the initial round of peer support groups, spiritual leaders of many lineages, religious denominations, traditions, and healing modalities gathered in a space of trust and safety where they experienced:

  • Giving and receiving caring, honest, heart-centered feedback
  • Being witnessed within a respectful and confidential environment
  • Gaining new insights into personal biases and blind spots in a supportive setting
  • Engaging in open, honest discussions to navigate complex areas in their roles as spiritual leaders
  • Sharing stories of successes and challenges, learning from diverse experiences
  • Celebrating successes and capacities collectively

Second Pilot Key Findings

At the start of this year, ASI launched the second pilot of the Peer Support Research Program. The findings are detailed below.

Throughout the pilot, 37 participants formed seven groups, each consisting of 4-6 peers. The program took place from January to May 2023, with groups meeting at least eight times. Four groups decided to continue their meetings beyond the official conclusion of the pilot, and one of these groups wishes to continue indefinitely.

It is worth mentioning that our first pilot also saw some groups extending their meetings beyond the official program duration, and one group has continued indefinitely.  Their feedback was not included in the data collection for the second pilot to prevent the success stories from the first pilot from skewing the findings of the second pilot.

Throughout the second pilot, participants were asked to provide feedback through online surveys, and one-on-one interviews were conducted with the facilitators of each of the peer support groups.

Here are the key findings from the post-pilot survey, reflecting feedback from 27 participants:

  1. Supportive Relationships: 78% of participants reported that their groups formed supportive relationships that were personally beneficial to them.
  2. Self-Discovery: 78% of participants stated that they learned important things about themselves, including their strengths and challenges, from their group experience.
  3. Learning from Others: 78% found value in listening to how others in the group approached their issues and challenges, learning from their experiences.
  4. Support and Advice: 78% received valuable support and/or advice related to specific challenges they faced during the months of group meetings.
  5. Practical Insights: 44% gained practical insights about the business or professional aspects of their spiritual leadership.
  6. Broadened Perspectives: 78% appreciated hearing perspectives from spiritual leaders in other lineages and backgrounds.
  7. Value of Peer Support: 81% developed a greater appreciation for the value of peer support for spiritual teachers and leaders in general.
  8. Future Interest: 81% expressed interest in participating in a similar peer support group in the future.

Here are three of those points, reflected as charts – the rest are in the attached pdf file.

Pie Chart of: I received good support and/or advice about some very specific challenge(s) that came up for me during the months that we were meeting.
Pie Chart of: I would be interested in joining a similar peer support group in the future.

These results underscore the significant impact of the ASI Peer Support Program Pilot 2 and the positive influence it had on our community members. It is also evident from our findings that matching the right peers and providing training and support for group facilitators significantly contributed to the success of these groups.

Each group had the autonomy to explore professional-related themes or create a space for personal vulnerability and honesty. It’s interesting and exciting to note that receiving personal support was valued more highly and more frequently than learning business skills from each other.

We extend our gratitude to all who contributed to the success of this program, including our team of volunteers who established a supportive online platform, offered training, and monitored ongoing participant needs. We look forward to further enhancing and expanding our peer support initiative for the ASI community.

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