Unlearning to Reach a Clean Slate
My journey through life coach certification has
taught me that learning to coach is less about adding new techniques and more
about unlearning old habits. Experience initially felt like an advantage, but I
soon realized it could also narrow what I noticed. Confirmation Bias showed up
in how I listened, giving more weight to what aligned with my assumptions while
overlooking what did not. I am learning to hold my past lightly so the client’s
reality can emerge without being filtered through my own. This is less about
erasing what I know and more about suspending it long enough to remain
genuinely open.
Awareness and Regulation of My Emotions
Life coach certification brings up reactions in the moment. If unnoticed,
they shape how I respond. Affect Heuristic plays out when feelings subtly guide
responses, especially in moments that feel charged or personal.
The work is to notice what I feel, name it silently, and
create a pause. That pause allows me to respond with intention rather than
impulse, keeping the focus on the client rather than my internal state.
Developing this level of awareness reflects the standards encouraged by the ICF
coaching federation.
Detaching from Personal Experience
At times, a client’s situation feels familiar. The instinct
is to relate using my own story as a bridge. Yet Projection Bias can lead me to
overlay my experience onto theirs.
What looks similar on the surface often carries very
different meaning underneath. Coaching asks me to stay with their perspective,
explore their context with curiosity, and resist the urge to connect too
quickly through my own lens.
Keeping the Client at the Center
It is easy to slip into guiding rather than exploring,
especially when I believe I can help. Egocentric Bias can appear in subtle
ways, shaping the direction of questions or nudging the conversation toward
what I think matters.
I am learning to check this instinct and return to the
client’s agenda. True presence means allowing their priorities, pace, and
thinking to lead. This mindset is essential for coaches pursuing an ICF
certification.
Self-Reflection Over Direction
Insight lands differently when it is discovered, not
delivered. IKEA Effect explains why advice often fades while self-generated
clarity stays.
When clients articulate their own thinking, they build
ownership and conviction. My role is to create the space and structure for that
reflection, trusting that the most meaningful answers are the ones they arrive
at themselves.
Peer Coaching as a Mirror
Practising with peers has made my blind spots visible in
ways theory never could. Early on, it is easy to feel more capable than we are.
Dunning–Kruger Effect shows up as confidence that is not yet calibrated.
Through repeated sessions, feedback, and reflection, that
confidence becomes more grounded. I am beginning to see both what I do well and
where I still need to grow. For many aspiring coaches, a certified life
coach online program offers opportunities to combine structured learning
with regular practice and feedback.
What I Am Learning
What I am learning is that coaching is less about adding
expertise and more about refining presence. It is a continuous practice of
noticing biases, stepping back, and creating the space for someone else to move
forward with clarity and ownership.
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-Ruta Aniruddha Patel |


