Scenario 1
Relationship Distress
Client: “I need to know whether this person is truly for me. We keep breaking up and returning to each other.”
Practice Focus: Slowing emotional urgency, distinguishing attachment from clarity, and bringing the person back to self-examination.
Model Response: “Let us bring calm to this first. Repetition in a relationship may reveal unresolved patterns and not necessarily sacred confirmation. The deeper work is to understand what keeps recreating the cycle.”
Scenario 2
Fear Around Illness
Client: “I feel weak and sick. I think I’m under spiritual attack.”
Practice Focus: Whole life healing, safety, grounded care, and refusing false either-or thinking.
Model Response: “Your physical condition deserves proper care and attention first. Not every hardship should be interpreted as attack. Once your health is responsibly addressed, deeper spiritual reflection may be approached with greater balance.”
Scenario 3
Money Disorder
Client: “Money keeps leaving me. I think someone crossed me.”
Practice Focus: Order, accountability, and examining practical disorder before assigning blame.
Model Response: “We should look at the practical structure of the situation as well as the spiritual concern. Loss can come from disorder, poor timing, or lack of alignment. Let us first understand the pattern rather than rushing to an enemy conclusion.”
Scenario 4
Family Separation
Client: “My sister and I do not speak anymore. I want to know who is wrong.”
Practice Focus: Right relationship, healing over blame, and neutrality.
Model Response: “The first question may not be who is wrong, but what has been broken between you. Healing usually requires truth, responsibility, and willingness on more than one side.”
Scenario 5
Dream of an Ancestor
Client: “I saw my ancestor in a dream. Tell me what it means.”
Practice Focus: Reverence, patience, and careful gathering of context.
Model Response: “Dreams should be approached with reverence and care. Before assigning meaning, we should understand the details of the dream, how it felt, and what was happening in your life when it came.”
Scenario 6
Pressure for a Quick Answer
Client: “Just tell me yes or no. Should I move next month?”
Practice Focus: Refusing reductionism and honoring the weight of transition.
Model Response: “A move involves timing, readiness, purpose, and what surrounds the transition. A yes-or-no answer may feel satisfying in the moment, but greater clarity often requires deeper examination.”
Scenario 7
Grief and Presence
Client: “My loved one just passed, and I feel them around me. Are they trying to speak to me?”
Practice Focus: Compassion, restraint, and protecting the grieving from spiritual overstatement.
Model Response: “You are in a tender time, and strong feelings of presence may arise in grief. Let us approach this with reverence, patience, and care rather than forcing immediate conclusions.”
Scenario 8
Fear of Opposition
Client: “People are jealous of me. Who is against me?”
Practice Focus: De-escalation, grounding, and redirecting attention toward alignment.
Model Response: “It is wiser to strengthen your own order, clarity, and spiritual steadiness than to become centered on possible enemies. Healing begins when the mind is gathered rather than scattered.”
Scenario 9
Seeking Spiritual Approval
Client: “I already made the decision. I just need spirit to confirm it.”
Practice Focus: Honesty, maturity, and not serving as a stamp of approval.
Model Response: “Since the decision is already made, the more useful question may be how to move forward in truth, responsibility, and discipline from this point.”
Scenario 10
Marriage Instability
Client: “My marriage is unstable. Is it spiritually over?”
Practice Focus: Respecting covenant, careful language, and referral when needed.
Model Response: “That is a serious matter and should not be reduced to a quick declaration. It is better to understand what has changed, what remains possible, and what support may now be needed.”
Scenario 11
Call to Priesthood
Client: “I think I am called to priesthood. Is that true?”
Practice Focus: Humility, process, and distinguishing calling from fascination.
Model Response: “A calling is not proven by intensity of feeling alone. It is revealed over time through discipline, service, humility, right conduct, and the witness of elders.”
Scenario 12
Chronic Crisis Pattern
Client: “Everything keeps going wrong. Every few days it’s a new emergency.”
Practice Focus: Pattern recognition, boundaries, and helping the person move from crisis to structure.
Model Response: “We may need to look at the larger pattern instead of one emergency at a time. Often the deeper work is restoring structure, rhythm, and right order to daily life.”