From Inner Healing to Outer Harmony: Spiritually Oriented Counselling as a Pathway to Sustainable Well-Being in the Indian Context
摘要
In the context of rising mental distress, economic pressures, and environmental degradation, there is growing recognition that well-being must be understood as a multidimensional and systemic phenomenon. Contemporary perspectives increasingly emphasize the interdependence between personal flourishing, social harmony, and ecological balance, giving rise to the concept of sustainable well-being. Building on this foundation, this study examines the role of spiritually oriented counselling in promoting sustainable well-being by employing the means-end chain (MEC) theory and laddering interview technique to explore three key research questions—identifying attributes of spiritually oriented counselling, the benefits individuals derive, and the fundamental values they support, while exploring how these elements collectively contribute to sustainable well-being. Thirty-two individuals were approached, of whom 25 consented and completed participation (response rate = 78%). The analysis, conducted through content analysis and hierarchical value mapping, revealed that spiritually oriented counselling is grounded in key attributes such as nature immersion, mindfulness, yoga, gratitude practices, ethical living, and spiritual practices. These contributed to multiple benefits, including stress reduction, emotional resilience, mental clarity, inner peace, conscious consumption, and compassion. Ultimately, these experiences led participants to affirm core values such as personal well-being, interconnectedness, harmony, sustainability, and personal growth, central to the concept of sustainable well-being. The findings underscore the potential for counsellors, educators, and healthcare providers to integrate spirituality into counselling frameworks, aligning personal growth with collective and environmental well-being to create a regenerative, balanced future.