Название: Healing World Trauma with the Therapeutic Spiral Model
Автор: Группа авторов
Издательство: Ingram
Жанр: Медицина
isbn: 9780857007001
isbn:
Fourth Safety Action Structure: Hands-on-Shoulder Sociometry
The clinical purpose of this Safety Action Structure is to expand the sociometry of the group even further so that its members feel safer and more connected. The TL or AL explains the three purposes of the Hands-on-Shoulder Sociometry Safety Action Structure:
1.It is a way to show connection to each other.
2.When in a drama, people will have to choose people to play roles, so this helps them to learn how to begin to make choices.
3.People are always making projections and transferences in the group, and this is a way to make those projections overt and conscious, so we can work with them more safely.
We explain the physical process of choosing someone and then moving along with the first person as they pick someone else, thereby forming sociometric chains.
Continuing our theme of containment, we once again return to the Prescriptive Roles to start off this exercise. A sample of the first set of Prescriptive directions might be as follows.
•Pick someone to be one of your personal strengths and tell them what you picked them to be and why.
•Pick someone to be your transpersonal or spiritual strength. Tell them why you picked them to be this role.
•Pick someone to be your body double and explain how they could help you stay in your body.
This sociometric chain exercise can sometimes get a bit unwieldy so it is absolutely important for Team members to keep an eye out for tight or potentially hurtful situations. For example, the Team pays attentions to who are the “stars” and “isolates” of different criteria, making sure isolates get picked if possible.
After the Prescriptive Role connections, we then give an explanation about choosing someone to play their Trauma-based Roles. We acknowledge that in asking someone to play a wounded child or even Perpetrator role, they are honoring the other group member because they trust them to play these roles safely.
The director encourages the TAEs to announce that they are available to be chosen for Victim and Perpetrator roles and to actually “pull” for them by taking postures and making statements to encourage group members to see them in these roles. For example, a Team member wanting to be chosen for the Victim role would hunch over, hiding his or her face, and say, “Oh, I am so sad. I can’t do anything right. I am such a failure.” While someone wanting the Perpetrator role would project a bombastic or nasty element, saying, “Hey you, don’t be looking at me. I know what is good for you and everyone else in this room. I am in control. Don’t be messing with me.” In this way, TAEs encourage group members to pick them so that other group members do not have to hold these Trauma-based projections.
During these Trauma-based Role choices it is inevitable that people will begin to share bits of their trauma stories, so it is important that the director and Team do not let the sharings go on too long. The Team can also step is as Body and Containing Doubles to help people to stay present and in spontaneous states so they do not dissociate, go into uncontrolled regression, or become overwhelmed by triggered feelings during this exercise. If, in fact, one or more group members are overly chosen for one of the Trauma-based Roles, TAEs must step in to support them with doubling to contain the overflow of energy coming toward them. The director must also help the chosen group members to understand that this does not single them out for these roles, but that they are serving an important function for the group—that the group sees them as being strong enough to hold the roles.
As director it is most important to “de-role” any group member who has been chosen to hold a trauma role!
Since this exercise can quickly go very deeply, and to keep it well contained, it is important to ask for only one or two Trauma-based Roles. Two of the questions could be something like this.
•Whom would you choose to trust to be the role of your wounded, vulnerable self? The part you can honor who has carried your pain, loneliness, and now wants to communicate that to you?
•Whom would you choose to trust to play the role of the person who hurt you, who still lives inside your mind and heart, and who you would like to get rid of?
As a last part of the Hands-on-Shoulders sociometry, the director ends with two or three questions focusing on Transformative Roles in order to spiral up to positive roles and never to end in Trauma-based Roles. These questions may be something like the following:
•Whom can you pick to be your spontaneous sleeping-awakening child? (The director explains this TSM role in which a part of self lays safely sleeping (not dissociated) waiting for the adult self to make it safe enough to awaken and be fully alive to the creative, true self.)
•Who could play your good-enough mother or father? God?
The enactment of this Safety Action Structure often takes a good hour and contains many small vignettes as it progresses. For example, many protagonists emerge to connect with their wounded selves and rescue them in the moment; Perpetrators are confronted early on; vivid repair scenes spontaneously occur with good-enough mothers and fathers emerging with love, compassion, and healing. Our TSM dramas often start here, even though we have not formally moved in to the psychodramatic process. So it is also important for the director to manage time boundaries and not allow any one person to take the full protagonist role or to take over the group space. It is also important to remember that this Safety Action Structure is a group structure meant for all to experience as a warm-up.
Fifth Safety Action Structure: The Creative Arts Project
The Creative Arts Project was originally designed by Francesca (Toscani 1996, 1998) as a Safety Action Structure to be completed for weekend Personal Growth workshops. It is used to provide a body-based, right-brained experience for both creativity and trauma material to be expressed as a thread of containment throughout a TSM workshop. Continuing to follow the Prescriptive, Trauma-based, and Transformative Roles, the Creative Arts Project focuses on each of them in day one, two, and three of each workshop. By the end, the Creative Arts Project shows the progression of true integration of strength building and Trauma-based Roles into a full transformation.
A second purpose of this activity is its collective nature, since elements from an individual’s art project or sandtray can be added to a collective art project. These added elements change during the course of the weekend, just as the person’s project changes. At the end, we have a story that is personal and collective or transpersonal at the same time, helping each person feel less isolated.
Over the 20 years of TSM development and practice, teams have used a wide variety of Creative Arts Projects. They have ranged from simple representations of 17-syllable poetry called Haiku, to collages made from magazines, mask-making, Native American dream catchers, individual and community power shields, and on to more involved collective and personal sandtrays that are also used as warm-ups to full dramas.
Usually, the Creative Arts Project ends on the first day of a TSM workshop, designed to develop safety and containment, and then continues for the remainder of the weekend. It is a long, clinically structured warm-up, far surpassing the less structured warm-up of classical psychodrama. Based on our clinical observations, it is deliberately built upon what has been found subsequently in neurobiology to connect right- and left-brain exercises. The Creative Arts Project activates the entire brain so that experiential methods can be done safely, balancing cognition and emotion.
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