Collaboration, Not Manipulation
In Inception, Cobb and his team navigate the subconscious of Mr. Fischer, diving deep into his emotional landscape. They don’t just implant a thought, they reconstruct his worldview. In one of the film’s most powerful moments, Fischer opens a symbolic safe, confronting the false belief he carried about his father. That moment represents a shift at the core of his identity.
Counseling is not about manipulation, but this visual metaphor is striking.
When we join clients in exploring their inner world, we often confront the beliefs they hold at their spiritual core. At the heart of every person are deep narratives about who they are, what they’re worth, and how the world works. Through relationship, curiosity, and spiritual insight, we help clients gently re-engage at the heart level and rediscover the purpose and direction God has authored for their lives. At this level, life is re-awakened, patterns are changed, and new directions are formed.
When the Box Breaks
Mr. Cobb knows inception is possible. Why? Because he’s done it before, he once planted the idea in his wife’s mind that the dream world wasn’t real. This decision had devastating consequences. In counseling, we don’t push people to conclusions. But we do offer space for clients to ask the most profound questions:
What if this story I’ve told myself isn’t true?
- What if this isn’t all there is?
- What if the life I’ve settled for isn’t the life I was created for?
- What if there’s more to me than my wounds?
- What if God is calling me beyond my comfort zone?
- What if healing isn’t just possible—but necessary for what comes next?
Depression, trauma, and anxiety, all of these conditions, can put people in a mental box. It’s the counselor’s job to gently ask: What’s outside the box? What is beyond the place where you have been stuck all this time? What if healing is possible?
The Existential Task of Counseling
Inception is also deeply existential. Cobb knows the risks. He’s been hurt. He’s lost his family. But when Mr. Saito offers him a second chance, a way to return home, to live again, Cobb hesitates.
“How do I know you can deliver?” he asks.
“You don’t,” Saito replies. “But I can. Are you willing to take a leap of faith… or become an old man, filled with regret, waiting to die alone?”
It’s a decisive, real, and profoundly human moment. A moment that is metaphorical to the journey one takes as a counselor.
We are entrusted with people’s pain. We step into difficult stories. Sometimes we wonder if change is really possible. And yet, every day, we show up with faith, not just in technique, but in the process. We step into the spiritual depths of a relationship. The place where God is forming and transforming.
Counseling as a Calling
At Christian Counseling Associates, we don’t believe counseling is just a job. It’s a calling. It’s a sacred responsibility to help people explore the deepest parts of themselves, to get in touch with deeper levels of reality, and to discover what’s possible beyond the worn-out wounds of the past.
Like Cobb, we know the process is daunting. But we also believe in redemption. And we believe that every great change begins with getting back in touch with a deeper reality, at just the right time, searching for God’s grace and with courage.
Are You Ready to Take the Leap?
At Christian Counseling Associates, we believe true transformation happens at the heart level where beliefs, dreams, and identity reside. This is where God often works in our broken humanity. His design is to use people, relationships, and deeply sacred and formative spaces of counseling to bring about change.
Like Cobb in Inception, counselors are called to walk with others into the deeper, often hidden, places of the soul. But unlike the manipulation portrayed in the film, we trust in God’s redemptive process worked through relationship, transparency, and faith. At these depths, God meets clients with truth, opening their hearts to healing and new purpose.
Counseling is not just a job, it’s a leap of faith into the unknown places where God is already at work, forming and transforming lives. Are you ready to take that leap?
About the Author

Alex Hoffman, M.A., L.A.P.C.
Alex Hoffman is a Licensed Associate Professional Counselor and Project Manager at Christian Counseling Associates of Western Pennsylvania. He provides individual and family counseling to clients across the lifespan, specializing in faith-based care for anxiety, addiction, depression, trauma, and mood-related challenges. Drawing from evidence-based approaches such as Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), Reality Therapy, and Existential Psychotherapy, Alex helps clients navigate their struggles and pursue growth.
Alex works with children, adolescents, and adults, including individuals with Substance Use Disorders. He is particularly passionate about helping clients find meaning and wholeness through the integration of biblical principles and psychological insight. Each session is tailored to incorporate prayer, Scripture, and the client’s faith journey as central components of the healing process.