Deepening Trauma Practice: A Gestalt Approach to Ecology and Ethics

Patricia Norris
{"title":"Deepening Trauma Practice: A Gestalt Approach to Ecology and Ethics","authors":"Patricia Norris","doi":"10.5325/gestaltreview.27.2.0190","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Miriam Taylor’s latest book was published during a time of global pandemic, climate emergency, cultural conflict, and resource inequality, so it is both timely and apposite. It is best read as a follow-up to her previous volume (2014), although readers new to the concepts discussed are provided with succinct summaries of the ideas underpinning the Gestalt approach and the neurobiological perspective on trauma. As Taylor readily acknowledges, many of her arguments are ones that have already been well-rehearsed in both Gestalt and non-Gestalt literature. The list of writers advocating an embodied, relational approach and a move away from an anthropocentric approach to an ecocentric one is long and distinguished. Yet, Taylor argues that psychotherapy practice and the structure of its provision frequently remain rooted in a Western, capitalist, individualist model.Adding her voice to those challenging this paradigm, Taylor urges us to make an “ecological turn” (4) and widen our understanding of not just the concept of trauma, but the embodied experience of it in our own lives. Foreground for her in this volume, she says, is the cultivation of “an embodied, almost second-nature felt sense” (9), in which theory is important but not necessarily figure. Complex and wide-ranging theoretical arguments calling for cognitive processing sit side by side with a demand to stop thinking and turn one’s focus to exploring embodied process. Accepting her invitation to leave temporarily the intellectual argument and prioritize embodied feelings rather than thoughts can be uncomfortable. Taylor’s metaphor of the Trickster aptly encapsulates the disorientation that ensues when habitual ways of thinking/seeing are disrupted, when everything is turned upside down and boundaries move. Trickster stories (Hyde 1983), retold at the beginning of each of the book’s three parts, speak to the way the disruptive intelligence of the Trickster expands the field and illuminates new perspectives. The image of a Möbius strip is used to illustrate the flow and connection between the shifting perspectives and experiences that we will be introduced to. In all three parts (Situating Trauma, The Space Between, and Ecological Perspectives), clinical examples and spaces for reflection encourage the reader to move from certainty to uncertainty, from cognitive understanding to felt experience. To facilitate the shift, the author continually moves among theoretical arguments, clinical examples, and practical experiments in a sequence described by Laura Perls (Rosenfeld 1988) thus: “First comes the awareness and then the de-automatizing and bringing it more into the foreground. . . and out of that develops experimentation in different directions” (22).In Part One (Situating Trauma), the focus is on raising awareness by contextualizing and exploring ways in which our society is organized around trauma. The evidence is all around us: migrant boats full of refugees, polarized and often violent political discourse, burgeoning numbers of people presenting with mental health issues, relentless destruction of precious natural habitats. Taylor argues that because we are enmeshed in Western capitalist culture, it is almost impossible to avoid imbibing the “something in the air” (Harris 2011, 21) that shapes us. The result she says is, despite the evidence, we frequently fail to register what is “hiding in plain sight” (11). Taylor argues that if we fail to make the shift in awareness necessary to transcend this dynamic (Parlett 2015), “what remains in the dark can continue to do its toxic work unabated” (22). She challenges herself and the psychotherapy profession about complicity in maintaining the oppressive structures that Hosemans (2020) refers to, but acknowledges that separating ourselves from the context we are inevitably embedded in is far from straightforward. She considers the proposition that trauma is part of a culturally acceptable symptom pool and describes the evolution of “a whole industry” (73) around the topic. Pointing out that our livelihoods depend on this “industry,” and we are therefore compelled to compromise with it to some degree, she includes herself as “very much a part of this system” and asks “who profits from trauma?” (73). Criticism of mental health services and psychiatry often strike a chord with psychotherapists, but questioning our own profession’s complicity might sit less comfortably. Nevertheless, the question is a pertinent one and raises the issue of how much compromising is possible and permissible if we are to remain true to our philosophical and theoretical approach.At times, the range of information and number of complex concepts offered for consideration seemed overwhelming. I could identify with Taylor’s revelation that thinking and writing about situating trauma was very challenging, took many months, and left her with a feeling that she had “barely scratched the surface” (40). My image was of a sheepdog trying to collect a herd of lively sheep into a confined pen, as multiple concepts from a wide variety of Gestalt and non-Gestalt sources were gathered together with some left hanging with a promise to return to the themes later. I sometimes found myself echoing Bednarek’s (2018) question, “How Wide Is the Field?” and identifying with the latter author when she asks “whether working on a client’s feelings is not more or less therapeutic than working on cleaning a local riverbank” (12). As long ago as the 1990s, Hillman and Ventura (1992) were posing the same kinds of questions and criticizing the assumption that more psychotherapy, situated in the same individualist paradigm, would automatically lead to a better world.Taylor asks similar questions, but for me, her most important contribution to the debate lies, not so much in the conveying of ideas and information, detailed and well-researched as these are, but in her invitation to become actively involved in responding to the important issues she raises. She intersperses complex discussion with clinical examples and regular “dropping in” spaces where readers are invited to stop thinking, ground themselves in breath, and register embodied sensation. I chose to accept the invitation. With journal to hand I allowed myself to feel, record, and reflect on my embodied responses as I explored the impact of colonialism, slavery, racism, power, class, resource distribution, and ecocide on my attitudes, thoughts, and therapeutic interventions. It was tempting to engage with the argument on a cognitive level and move forward quickly to think about the next theoretical concept rather than stop to allow feeling. The Trickster had many opportunities to do his work (Taylor uses the male pronoun), as a complex and dynamic intersection of the personal, historical, social, political, and economic was animated. Many of the common threads Taylor identifies as human responses to trauma were evoked in this process; an impulse to disconnect, the presence of shame, a tendency toward “othering” in the service of self-preservation, and a retreat into role. At times I was aware of the potential for overwhelm, exacerbated no doubt by the precariousness of the current global situation. The offering of the “SOS model” (Denham-Vaughan and Chidiac 2013) as a tool to assist reflection and navigate through confusion was useful, but it was Taylor’s own crystal clear commitment to personal transparency that enabled this reader to feel accompanied when attempting to embrace a potentially infinite field.In Part Two (The Space Between), the focus narrows to explore the dynamics of the therapeutic dyad. Expanding some of the issues raised in a recent article, Taylor (2019) reminds us that when thinking inserts itself into the intersection between Denham-Vaughan and Chidiac’s (2013) “Self and Other (SOS)” model, the possibility of presence is reduced. Taylor encourages us to stay with the tension of both knowing and not-knowing as we commit to feeling our way toward the “unthought known” (Bollas 1987, xviii). Describing the potentiality of this space, the German theologian Bonhoeffer (1995) said: “[T]o the extent the emptiness truly remains unfilled one remains connected to the other person” (41). In this place of “cultivated uncertainty” (Staemmler 1997, 40), an opportunity for connection and intimacy resides cheek by jowl with the threat of fear and pain. It is here that the opportunity for the kind of transformation Francesetti (2012) describes is present. This is, however, also a place where unaware prejudice, personal history, and enduring relational themes (Jacobs 2017) can intrude with the potential for desensitization, distortion, and flight into premature sense making. To explore the former, we are invited to log into Harvard University’s (2011) Project Implicit, which this reader did do with some personally revealing results.Taylor adds two new dimensions to Lichtenburg’s (2001) four corners of contact model: “You are and I want to tell you who I am, what I want and how I react to you” (94, emphasis added). With courage and almost breathtaking honesty, Taylor takes up her own challenge and tells us something of who she is by sharing her own trauma history, remarking that seasoned therapists will recognize her story as “grindingly common” (100). Grindingly common or not, the impact of suffering is always visceral if we allow ourselves to be open to it. My own initial response was a complex mixture of shock, horror, anger, and admiration. My breath and body tightened and then, as I grounded myself and allowed my exhalation, my body softened and my heart began to ache.Like Perlman (1999), Kepner (2003), and Cozolino (2004), Taylor considers that resonating with, and being activated by, another’s trauma is evidence of connection and not of failure or inadequacy on the part of the therapist. She quotes Geller and Greenberg (2012), who argue that the response of the client is strongly influenced by the inner state of the therapist, and pays attention to therapist activation in a revised window of tolerance model, which includes the need for co-regulation when trauma is present. The need compassionately to include ourselves, our personal history, and our embodied responses is not presented as a merely cerebral concept. Taylor challenges herself and her readers to feel viscerally the impact of staying with another’s suffering while simultaneously being present to their own. Agreeing with Denham’s (2006) positioning of authenticity as a clear requirement of deep contact, she acknowledges that the process of becoming authentic is not straightforward or pain free. I was reminded of Williams’s (1922) children’s book, The Velveteen Rabbit. Rabbit wants to be real but asks, “Does it hurt?” (8). The Skin Horse, who has been through the experience and, as his name suggests, has “skin in the game,” replies “Sometimes . . . for he was always truthful” (9). Like the Skin Horse, Taylor is truthful; sharing her own hurts, describing how she resources herself, and encouraging us to do the same. To respond to this book only on a cognitive level would be to miss the major point that Taylor is making: that it is including ourselves, acknowledging our role in the maintenance of the traumatic field both personally and professionally, and being appropriately vulnerable that enables us to be truly in relationship. As Margherita Spagnuolo-Lobb and Donna Orange respectively comment in reviews included in the book: Taylor “gets to the heart of the therapist” and “teaches us to inhabit our personal trauma so that we can accompany the Other” (praise page).Part Three (Ecological Perspectives) reprises some of the content of Taylor and Duff’s 2018 article. Themes of inclusion, connection, shared ground, and therapist authenticity are drawn together into what Taylor describes as new territory, which involves seeing and responding to the natural world “not as a resource but as a relationship” (150). That this is not really new territory for Gestalt practice, as pointed out by Bednarek (2018). The concept is foundational in our theoretical framework. Perls, Hefferline, and Goodman (1994) say that “it makes no sense to speak . . . of an animal that breathes without considering air and oxygen . . . or to speak of eating without mentioning food, or of seeing without light or locomotion without gravity and supporting ground” (228). This concept can easily get neglected or forgotten as we imbibe the “something in the air” (Harris 2011, 21) of an acquisitive, Western capitalist culture and are encouraged to focus on doing about rather than being with. It is the reestablishment of that connection, that location-in rather than dominance-over, which Taylor is arguing for.She is not alone in making this argument; the call is global, it crosses disciplines, and it is getting louder all the time. The recent pandemic, rapid escalation of the pace of climate change, and mass migration of populations from areas of famine, war, or economic deprivation all highlight the interconnectedness of our planet and the need for us to focus on relationship rather than alienation if we, and the world we inhabit, are to survive. Speaking of her own experience of Gestalt training, Bednarek (2018) says: “Sociopolitical issues were not part of what was deemed to be a relevant focus for the aspiring psychotherapist” (9). Taylor makes a powerful call for these issues to be not simply a relevant focus but an absolutely essential one for training organizations, individual practitioners, supervisors, and service providers. She points out that the vast majority of psychotherapy students are self-funding, men are generally underrepresented, and most students are white. Those particular demographics can mean that the collective lens is narrowed unless active and experiential steps are taken to locate Gestalt training and practice firmly in a sociopolitical field.There is no easy solution to these issues. Taylor’s insistence that we not only think about them but commit to making the time to feel their embodied impact, both personally and professionally, offers a possible pathway to moving forward. Heightening embodied awareness of the wider field in which trauma is situated, and taking “an ecological turn” (4) in thinking and practice, prepares the ground for the kind of action needed. The issues raised by Taylor will not be resolved by words alone. For this reader, the impact of the book resides not so much in words and argument but in the felt experience provided. In 1991, James Hillman said, “Personal growth doesn’t automatically lead to political results” (Hillman and Ventura 1992, 6); and with Margherita Spagnuolo-Lobb (2014), we might well ask what is the “Now for Next”? What needs to change in practice, pedagogy, training curricula, and student recruitment if we are to work together to really make a comprehensive ecological turn? Laura Perls, referring to Paul Goodman’s contribution in Perls, Hefferline, and Goodman (1994), remarked: “You don’t get it by just reading through it quickly” (Rosenfeld 1988, 21). The same can be said of Taylor’s current volume.","PeriodicalId":499147,"journal":{"name":"Gestalt review","volume":"42 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-10-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Gestalt review","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.5325/gestaltreview.27.2.0190","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

Abstract

Miriam Taylor’s latest book was published during a time of global pandemic, climate emergency, cultural conflict, and resource inequality, so it is both timely and apposite. It is best read as a follow-up to her previous volume (2014), although readers new to the concepts discussed are provided with succinct summaries of the ideas underpinning the Gestalt approach and the neurobiological perspective on trauma. As Taylor readily acknowledges, many of her arguments are ones that have already been well-rehearsed in both Gestalt and non-Gestalt literature. The list of writers advocating an embodied, relational approach and a move away from an anthropocentric approach to an ecocentric one is long and distinguished. Yet, Taylor argues that psychotherapy practice and the structure of its provision frequently remain rooted in a Western, capitalist, individualist model.Adding her voice to those challenging this paradigm, Taylor urges us to make an “ecological turn” (4) and widen our understanding of not just the concept of trauma, but the embodied experience of it in our own lives. Foreground for her in this volume, she says, is the cultivation of “an embodied, almost second-nature felt sense” (9), in which theory is important but not necessarily figure. Complex and wide-ranging theoretical arguments calling for cognitive processing sit side by side with a demand to stop thinking and turn one’s focus to exploring embodied process. Accepting her invitation to leave temporarily the intellectual argument and prioritize embodied feelings rather than thoughts can be uncomfortable. Taylor’s metaphor of the Trickster aptly encapsulates the disorientation that ensues when habitual ways of thinking/seeing are disrupted, when everything is turned upside down and boundaries move. Trickster stories (Hyde 1983), retold at the beginning of each of the book’s three parts, speak to the way the disruptive intelligence of the Trickster expands the field and illuminates new perspectives. The image of a Möbius strip is used to illustrate the flow and connection between the shifting perspectives and experiences that we will be introduced to. In all three parts (Situating Trauma, The Space Between, and Ecological Perspectives), clinical examples and spaces for reflection encourage the reader to move from certainty to uncertainty, from cognitive understanding to felt experience. To facilitate the shift, the author continually moves among theoretical arguments, clinical examples, and practical experiments in a sequence described by Laura Perls (Rosenfeld 1988) thus: “First comes the awareness and then the de-automatizing and bringing it more into the foreground. . . and out of that develops experimentation in different directions” (22).In Part One (Situating Trauma), the focus is on raising awareness by contextualizing and exploring ways in which our society is organized around trauma. The evidence is all around us: migrant boats full of refugees, polarized and often violent political discourse, burgeoning numbers of people presenting with mental health issues, relentless destruction of precious natural habitats. Taylor argues that because we are enmeshed in Western capitalist culture, it is almost impossible to avoid imbibing the “something in the air” (Harris 2011, 21) that shapes us. The result she says is, despite the evidence, we frequently fail to register what is “hiding in plain sight” (11). Taylor argues that if we fail to make the shift in awareness necessary to transcend this dynamic (Parlett 2015), “what remains in the dark can continue to do its toxic work unabated” (22). She challenges herself and the psychotherapy profession about complicity in maintaining the oppressive structures that Hosemans (2020) refers to, but acknowledges that separating ourselves from the context we are inevitably embedded in is far from straightforward. She considers the proposition that trauma is part of a culturally acceptable symptom pool and describes the evolution of “a whole industry” (73) around the topic. Pointing out that our livelihoods depend on this “industry,” and we are therefore compelled to compromise with it to some degree, she includes herself as “very much a part of this system” and asks “who profits from trauma?” (73). Criticism of mental health services and psychiatry often strike a chord with psychotherapists, but questioning our own profession’s complicity might sit less comfortably. Nevertheless, the question is a pertinent one and raises the issue of how much compromising is possible and permissible if we are to remain true to our philosophical and theoretical approach.At times, the range of information and number of complex concepts offered for consideration seemed overwhelming. I could identify with Taylor’s revelation that thinking and writing about situating trauma was very challenging, took many months, and left her with a feeling that she had “barely scratched the surface” (40). My image was of a sheepdog trying to collect a herd of lively sheep into a confined pen, as multiple concepts from a wide variety of Gestalt and non-Gestalt sources were gathered together with some left hanging with a promise to return to the themes later. I sometimes found myself echoing Bednarek’s (2018) question, “How Wide Is the Field?” and identifying with the latter author when she asks “whether working on a client’s feelings is not more or less therapeutic than working on cleaning a local riverbank” (12). As long ago as the 1990s, Hillman and Ventura (1992) were posing the same kinds of questions and criticizing the assumption that more psychotherapy, situated in the same individualist paradigm, would automatically lead to a better world.Taylor asks similar questions, but for me, her most important contribution to the debate lies, not so much in the conveying of ideas and information, detailed and well-researched as these are, but in her invitation to become actively involved in responding to the important issues she raises. She intersperses complex discussion with clinical examples and regular “dropping in” spaces where readers are invited to stop thinking, ground themselves in breath, and register embodied sensation. I chose to accept the invitation. With journal to hand I allowed myself to feel, record, and reflect on my embodied responses as I explored the impact of colonialism, slavery, racism, power, class, resource distribution, and ecocide on my attitudes, thoughts, and therapeutic interventions. It was tempting to engage with the argument on a cognitive level and move forward quickly to think about the next theoretical concept rather than stop to allow feeling. The Trickster had many opportunities to do his work (Taylor uses the male pronoun), as a complex and dynamic intersection of the personal, historical, social, political, and economic was animated. Many of the common threads Taylor identifies as human responses to trauma were evoked in this process; an impulse to disconnect, the presence of shame, a tendency toward “othering” in the service of self-preservation, and a retreat into role. At times I was aware of the potential for overwhelm, exacerbated no doubt by the precariousness of the current global situation. The offering of the “SOS model” (Denham-Vaughan and Chidiac 2013) as a tool to assist reflection and navigate through confusion was useful, but it was Taylor’s own crystal clear commitment to personal transparency that enabled this reader to feel accompanied when attempting to embrace a potentially infinite field.In Part Two (The Space Between), the focus narrows to explore the dynamics of the therapeutic dyad. Expanding some of the issues raised in a recent article, Taylor (2019) reminds us that when thinking inserts itself into the intersection between Denham-Vaughan and Chidiac’s (2013) “Self and Other (SOS)” model, the possibility of presence is reduced. Taylor encourages us to stay with the tension of both knowing and not-knowing as we commit to feeling our way toward the “unthought known” (Bollas 1987, xviii). Describing the potentiality of this space, the German theologian Bonhoeffer (1995) said: “[T]o the extent the emptiness truly remains unfilled one remains connected to the other person” (41). In this place of “cultivated uncertainty” (Staemmler 1997, 40), an opportunity for connection and intimacy resides cheek by jowl with the threat of fear and pain. It is here that the opportunity for the kind of transformation Francesetti (2012) describes is present. This is, however, also a place where unaware prejudice, personal history, and enduring relational themes (Jacobs 2017) can intrude with the potential for desensitization, distortion, and flight into premature sense making. To explore the former, we are invited to log into Harvard University’s (2011) Project Implicit, which this reader did do with some personally revealing results.Taylor adds two new dimensions to Lichtenburg’s (2001) four corners of contact model: “You are and I want to tell you who I am, what I want and how I react to you” (94, emphasis added). With courage and almost breathtaking honesty, Taylor takes up her own challenge and tells us something of who she is by sharing her own trauma history, remarking that seasoned therapists will recognize her story as “grindingly common” (100). Grindingly common or not, the impact of suffering is always visceral if we allow ourselves to be open to it. My own initial response was a complex mixture of shock, horror, anger, and admiration. My breath and body tightened and then, as I grounded myself and allowed my exhalation, my body softened and my heart began to ache.Like Perlman (1999), Kepner (2003), and Cozolino (2004), Taylor considers that resonating with, and being activated by, another’s trauma is evidence of connection and not of failure or inadequacy on the part of the therapist. She quotes Geller and Greenberg (2012), who argue that the response of the client is strongly influenced by the inner state of the therapist, and pays attention to therapist activation in a revised window of tolerance model, which includes the need for co-regulation when trauma is present. The need compassionately to include ourselves, our personal history, and our embodied responses is not presented as a merely cerebral concept. Taylor challenges herself and her readers to feel viscerally the impact of staying with another’s suffering while simultaneously being present to their own. Agreeing with Denham’s (2006) positioning of authenticity as a clear requirement of deep contact, she acknowledges that the process of becoming authentic is not straightforward or pain free. I was reminded of Williams’s (1922) children’s book, The Velveteen Rabbit. Rabbit wants to be real but asks, “Does it hurt?” (8). The Skin Horse, who has been through the experience and, as his name suggests, has “skin in the game,” replies “Sometimes . . . for he was always truthful” (9). Like the Skin Horse, Taylor is truthful; sharing her own hurts, describing how she resources herself, and encouraging us to do the same. To respond to this book only on a cognitive level would be to miss the major point that Taylor is making: that it is including ourselves, acknowledging our role in the maintenance of the traumatic field both personally and professionally, and being appropriately vulnerable that enables us to be truly in relationship. As Margherita Spagnuolo-Lobb and Donna Orange respectively comment in reviews included in the book: Taylor “gets to the heart of the therapist” and “teaches us to inhabit our personal trauma so that we can accompany the Other” (praise page).Part Three (Ecological Perspectives) reprises some of the content of Taylor and Duff’s 2018 article. Themes of inclusion, connection, shared ground, and therapist authenticity are drawn together into what Taylor describes as new territory, which involves seeing and responding to the natural world “not as a resource but as a relationship” (150). That this is not really new territory for Gestalt practice, as pointed out by Bednarek (2018). The concept is foundational in our theoretical framework. Perls, Hefferline, and Goodman (1994) say that “it makes no sense to speak . . . of an animal that breathes without considering air and oxygen . . . or to speak of eating without mentioning food, or of seeing without light or locomotion without gravity and supporting ground” (228). This concept can easily get neglected or forgotten as we imbibe the “something in the air” (Harris 2011, 21) of an acquisitive, Western capitalist culture and are encouraged to focus on doing about rather than being with. It is the reestablishment of that connection, that location-in rather than dominance-over, which Taylor is arguing for.She is not alone in making this argument; the call is global, it crosses disciplines, and it is getting louder all the time. The recent pandemic, rapid escalation of the pace of climate change, and mass migration of populations from areas of famine, war, or economic deprivation all highlight the interconnectedness of our planet and the need for us to focus on relationship rather than alienation if we, and the world we inhabit, are to survive. Speaking of her own experience of Gestalt training, Bednarek (2018) says: “Sociopolitical issues were not part of what was deemed to be a relevant focus for the aspiring psychotherapist” (9). Taylor makes a powerful call for these issues to be not simply a relevant focus but an absolutely essential one for training organizations, individual practitioners, supervisors, and service providers. She points out that the vast majority of psychotherapy students are self-funding, men are generally underrepresented, and most students are white. Those particular demographics can mean that the collective lens is narrowed unless active and experiential steps are taken to locate Gestalt training and practice firmly in a sociopolitical field.There is no easy solution to these issues. Taylor’s insistence that we not only think about them but commit to making the time to feel their embodied impact, both personally and professionally, offers a possible pathway to moving forward. Heightening embodied awareness of the wider field in which trauma is situated, and taking “an ecological turn” (4) in thinking and practice, prepares the ground for the kind of action needed. The issues raised by Taylor will not be resolved by words alone. For this reader, the impact of the book resides not so much in words and argument but in the felt experience provided. In 1991, James Hillman said, “Personal growth doesn’t automatically lead to political results” (Hillman and Ventura 1992, 6); and with Margherita Spagnuolo-Lobb (2014), we might well ask what is the “Now for Next”? What needs to change in practice, pedagogy, training curricula, and student recruitment if we are to work together to really make a comprehensive ecological turn? Laura Perls, referring to Paul Goodman’s contribution in Perls, Hefferline, and Goodman (1994), remarked: “You don’t get it by just reading through it quickly” (Rosenfeld 1988, 21). The same can be said of Taylor’s current volume.
查看原文
分享 分享
微信好友 朋友圈 QQ好友 复制链接
本刊更多论文
深化创伤实践:生态学和伦理学的格式塔方法
米里亚姆·泰勒的新书出版时正值全球大流行、气候紧急、文化冲突和资源不平等之际,因此这本书既及时又贴切。这本书最好作为她上一卷(2014年)的后续读物来阅读,尽管对所讨论的概念不熟悉的读者提供了支撑格式塔方法和创伤神经生物学观点的简洁总结。正如泰勒欣然承认的那样,她的许多论点已经在格式塔和非格式塔文学中得到了充分的阐述。提倡体现的、关系的方法,并从人类中心主义转向生态中心主义的作家名单很长,也很杰出。然而,泰勒认为,心理治疗实践及其提供的结构往往仍然植根于西方的资本主义、个人主义模式。泰勒加入了那些挑战这种范式的人的行列,她敦促我们进行“生态转向”(4),不仅要扩大我们对创伤概念的理解,还要扩大我们对创伤在我们自己生活中的具体体验的理解。她说,在这本书中,她的前景是培养“一种具体化的、几乎是第二天性的感觉”(9),在这种感觉中,理论很重要,但不一定是形象。要求认知加工的复杂而广泛的理论争论与要求停止思考并将注意力转向探索具身过程的要求并存。接受她的邀请,暂时离开理智的争论,优先考虑具体的感受而不是思想,这可能会让人感到不舒服。泰勒对魔术师的比喻恰如其分地概括了当习惯的思维/观察方式被打乱时,当一切都颠倒过来,边界移动时,随之而来的迷失方向。《骗子故事》(Hyde 1983)在全书的三个部分的开头都重述了一遍,讲述了骗子的颠覆性智慧如何扩展了这个领域,并照亮了新的视角。Möbius条的图像用于说明我们将介绍的转换视角和经验之间的流动和联系。在所有三个部分(创伤情境、间隔空间和生态视角)中,临床案例和反思空间鼓励读者从确定性转向不确定性,从认知理解转向感受体验。为了促进这种转变,作者不断地在理论论证、临床实例和实际实验之间移动,劳拉·珀尔斯(Laura Perls,罗森菲尔德,1988)描述了这样一个顺序:“首先是意识,然后是去自动化,并将其更多地放在前台……由此发展出不同方向的实验”(22)。在第一部分(创伤情境)中,重点是通过情境化和探索我们的社会围绕创伤组织的方式来提高认识。证据就在我们身边:满载难民的移民船、两极分化且往往充满暴力的政治言论、出现精神健康问题的人数激增、珍贵的自然栖息地遭到无情破坏。泰勒认为,由于我们深陷西方资本主义文化,几乎不可能避免吸收“空气中的某种东西”(哈里斯2011,21),这些东西塑造了我们。她说,结果是,尽管有证据,我们经常无法注意到“隐藏在明处”的东西(11)。泰勒认为,如果我们不能在意识上做出必要的转变,以超越这种动态(Parlett 2015),“留在黑暗中的东西可以继续做它的有毒工作。”(22)。她挑战了自己和心理治疗行业,挑战了Hosemans(2020)所提到的维持压迫结构的共谋,但她承认,将我们自己从我们不可避免地嵌入的环境中分离出来远非易事。她认为创伤是文化上可接受的症状池的一部分,并描述了围绕该主题的“整个行业”的演变(73)。她指出,我们的生计依赖于这个“产业”,因此我们被迫在某种程度上与它妥协,她把自己视为“这个系统的一部分”,并问道:“谁从创伤中获利?””(73)。对心理健康服务和精神病学的批评常常引起心理治疗师的共鸣,但质疑我们自己的职业的共谋可能就不那么舒服了。然而,这个问题是一个相关的问题,并提出了一个问题,即如果我们要保持对我们的哲学和理论方法的忠诚,在多大程度上妥协是可能和允许的。有时,供考虑的信息的范围和复杂概念的数量似乎是压倒性的。我可以认同泰勒的启示,思考和写作创伤情境是非常具有挑战性的,花了好几个月的时间,让她觉得自己“才刚刚触及表面”(40)。 我的图像是一只牧羊犬试图将一群活泼的羊聚集到一个封闭的围栏中,因为来自各种格式塔和非格式塔来源的多个概念被聚集在一起,其中一些被保留下来,并承诺稍后会回到主题。有时我发现自己在重复贝德纳雷克(2018)的问题:“这个领域有多宽?”当她问道“处理客户的感受是否比清理当地的河岸更有治疗效果”时,她与后一位作者表示认同(12)。早在20世纪90年代,希尔曼和文图拉(1992)就提出了同样的问题,并批评了一种假设,即在相同的个人主义范式下,更多的心理治疗将自动导致一个更美好的世界。泰勒也提出了类似的问题,但对我来说,她对这场辩论最重要的贡献,不在于传达想法和信息,尽管这些想法和信息是详细和充分研究的,而是在于她邀请人们积极参与对她提出的重要问题的回应。她在复杂的讨论中穿插了临床案例和定期的“偶然进入”空间,邀请读者停止思考,屏住呼吸,记录具体化的感觉。我选择接受邀请。当我探索殖民主义、奴隶制、种族主义、权力、阶级、资源分配和生态灭绝对我的态度、思想和治疗干预的影响时,我允许自己去感受、记录和反思我的具体反应。人们很容易在认知层面上进行争论,并迅速向前推进,思考下一个理论概念,而不是停下来让自己有感觉。魔术师有很多机会来完成他的工作(泰勒使用了男性代词),因为个人、历史、社会、政治和经济的复杂而动态的交叉点是活跃的。泰勒认为人类对创伤反应的许多共同线索都是在这个过程中被唤起的;一种脱离现实的冲动,羞耻感的存在,一种为自我保护而倾向于“他人”的倾向,以及一种退缩到角色中的倾向。有时,我意识到压倒一切的可能性,而当前全球形势的不稳定无疑加剧了这种可能性。“SOS模型”(Denham-Vaughan and Chidiac 2013)作为一种帮助反思和在困惑中导航的工具是有用的,但正是泰勒自己对个人透明度的明确承诺,使这位读者在试图拥抱一个潜在的无限领域时感到陪伴。在第二部分(空间之间)中,焦点缩小到探索治疗二元体的动态。Taylor(2019)对最近一篇文章中提出的一些问题进行了扩展,他提醒我们,当思维将自己插入到Denham-Vaughan和Chidiac(2013)的“自我与他者(SOS)”模型的交叉点时,存在的可能性就会降低。泰勒鼓励我们在探索通往“未知的已知”(Bollas 1987, xviii)的道路时,保持“知道”和“不知道”的紧张状态。德国神学家邦霍费尔(Bonhoeffer, 1995)在描述这一空间的潜力时说:“在某种程度上,空虚真正保持未被填补,一个人与另一个人保持联系”(41)。在这个“培养的不确定性”(Staemmler 1997, 40)的地方,连接和亲密的机会紧挨着恐惧和痛苦的威胁。正是在这里,Francesetti(2012)描述的那种转型的机会是存在的。然而,这也是一个无意识的偏见、个人历史和持久的关系主题(Jacobs 2017)可能侵入的地方,有可能导致脱敏、扭曲和过早的意义形成。为了探索前者,我们受邀进入哈佛大学(2011)的隐式项目,本读者确实做了一些个人揭示的结果。Taylor在Lichtenburg(2001)的四角接触模型上增加了两个新的维度:“你是,我想告诉你我是谁,我想要什么以及我对你的反应”(94,重点添加)。凭借勇气和几乎令人惊叹的诚实,泰勒接受了自己的挑战,并通过分享自己的创伤历史向我们讲述了她是谁,她说经验丰富的治疗师会认为她的故事“非常普遍”(100)。无论是否常见,如果我们允许自己敞开心扉,痛苦的影响总是发自内心的。我自己最初的反应是一种复杂的混合,有震惊、恐惧、愤怒和钦佩。我的呼吸和身体都绷紧了,然后,当我让自己安静下来,允许自己呼气时,我的身体变得柔软了,我的心开始疼痛。与Perlman(1999)、Kepner(2003)和Cozolino(2004)一样,Taylor认为与他人的创伤产生共鸣并被其激活是联系的证据,而不是治疗师失败或不足的证据。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
求助全文
约1分钟内获得全文 去求助
来源期刊
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
期刊最新文献
Intimacy, Encounter, Tenderness . . . THERE AND HERE Change and Immunity to Change: Personal and Political The Decline of the Self: Est and the Critique of Therapeutic Culture Exploring Masculinity, Sexuality, and Culture in Gestalt Therapy: An Autoethnography
×
引用
GB/T 7714-2015
复制
MLA
复制
APA
复制
导出至
BibTeX EndNote RefMan NoteFirst NoteExpress
×
×
提示
您的信息不完整,为了账户安全,请先补充。
现在去补充
×
提示
您因"违规操作"
具体请查看互助需知
我知道了
×
提示
现在去查看 取消
×
提示
确定
0
微信
客服QQ
Book学术公众号 扫码关注我们
反馈
×
意见反馈
请填写您的意见或建议
请填写您的手机或邮箱
已复制链接
已复制链接
快去分享给好友吧!
我知道了
×
扫码分享
扫码分享
Book学术官方微信
Book学术文献互助
Book学术文献互助群
群 号:481959085
Book学术
文献互助 智能选刊 最新文献 互助须知 联系我们:info@booksci.cn
Book学术提供免费学术资源搜索服务,方便国内外学者检索中英文文献。致力于提供最便捷和优质的服务体验。
Copyright © 2023 Book学术 All rights reserved.
ghs 京公网安备 11010802042870号 京ICP备2023020795号-1