Clients‟ experience of counselling within a narrative framework
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Beauty and the Beast ( PDFDrive )
THE CONSTRUCT
The construct of the containment-freedom Polarity The overall polarity that holds all the categories. Both stillness and movement are contained within it. It could be thought of as the overall shape of a rainbow, the arc which holds all the colours within its shape. Uncontained-unfree The still / stuck place where there is no movement. A place from where both the external and internal world may be viewed anew. Over contained-over free An agitated and confused place full of other people‟s opinions. Internal movement that feels like panic, obsession or hyperactivity. Fighting containment-freedom A fight to change and a fight not to change, an internal battling against the self and others. Desire for containment-freedom A tug of war - wanting to be emotionally held, cared for by the counsellor yet the opposition of feeling irritation or dislike of the counsellor. Towards containment freedom The pull and swing of the pendulum, movement, owning ones feelings, acknowledging what has been hidden. 127 5.3 Containment, freedom and polarity Both containment and freedom within the therapeutic relationship may be understood to be enabling in that the counsellor attempts to provide a safe (containment) space (freedom) where the client can think and feel his/her own experience in the presence of the counsellor. However both containment and freedom as experienced within the internal world of the client may be disabling. Life events may have provided a containment that was confining, even harmful so that any form of containment may be experienced as disabling. Freedom may have been experienced as dangerous or overwhelming so this potential space may also be experienced as disabling. Within the enabling containment provided by the counsellor the client may experience the very opposite of what is being provided. This seems to be demonstrated in the following entry from a main study journal: Extract 8. Entry from WF journal W2. to show client‟s experience Line 1. Still no better! Line 2. Feel restricted! Line 3. No warmth - can I hack this? Line 4. Do I want to?? No! Line 5. Uncomfortable. Line 6. She is so astute! Line 7. Caught like a fish on a hook! Line 8. And I am wriggling. It appears that in the containment offered by the counsellor the participant feels restricted (line1), uncomfortable (line 5) and caught like a hooked fish (line 7). Although in the language of theory this may be described as transference or countertransference these terms do not describe the client‟s experience from her perspective. It seems that from her perspective that she feels caught 128 and hooked as if she is stuck somewhere and can only wriggle but not free herself. This appears to show how disabling containment may feel to the client. The key concepts of containment and freedom in this study are used to discover if these notions are understood and experienced by the client to the extent that the participant feels the analysis and the theoretical constructs fit his/her internal feelings as a client. My experiences that helped form this research enabled me to understand the importance of knowing consciously the effects or impact of particular life events. It was this knowing that in turn provided the freedom to reclaim myself from trauma and create a new life with a changed concept of self. Etherington (2000) states: “Telling our story is a way of reclaiming ourselves, our history and our experiences; a way of finding our voice. In telling my story to others I am also telling my ‟self‟ - and my „self‟ (who is audience) is being formed in the process of telling. So there are witnesses to my story, the „other‟ to whom I recount my story (which is what clients do in therapy), and the self who is growing within me as I hear my story retold as I speak or write it down” (17). To reclaim myself, I told my story in therapy and in poetry. I journeyed through experiences that felt to be, both disabling and enabling forms of containment and freedom where these two concepts appeared inextricably linked. My reflections on the paradox of containment and freedom being both enabling and disabling led to the idea of a containment-freedom polarity. 129 5.4 Polarity A polarity is generally understood to be the tendency to grow differently in different directions, along an axis, as a tree towards base and apex, or roots and branches. It is the opposition that Jung (Bischof 1964; Jung 1969) saw as engendering the movement which leads towards resolution and momentary equilibrium within the client. An extract from a pilot study journal demonstrates the opposing states that may exist within a client during a session: Extract 9. From a pilot study journal to show opposing states Line 1. Happy / content Line 2. Uncertainty Line 3. mild anxiety Line 4. excitement / anticipation Line 5. What do I say? Line 6. Is this the day? Line 7. Fear / high anxiety Line 8. palpitations Line 9. burning in stomach Line 10. confusion The participant moves between various feeling states from „happy/content‟ to „palpitations‟ and „burning in stomach‟. The confusion at the end seems to say how she may really be feeling but the shift between so many feeling states demonstrates the possibility of polarities, of opposite poles of feelings being present. In this study the polarity between containment and freedom is seen as internal growth (which affects the external life), rooting down into internal containment, and branching out into internal freedom. If the client experiences containment in their internal world as imprisoning then 130 containment within the counselling relationship may be experienced as disabling. If the client experiences freedom as overwhelming then the freedom provided within the counselling relationship may also be felt as disabling. In this sense containment with or without freedom may be felt as imprisoning, while freedom with or without containment may be felt as dangerous. It is suggested then that this opposition between containment and freedom forms a polarity (within the client) that may enable and/or disable emotional movement. When the client takes refuge in a disabled way of being that has been (unconsciously) learned through life events and experiences, the opposition between containment and freedom may come into awareness. As the counsellor attempts to provide an enabling and containing environment in the freedom of the space between them the client may discover a way to change by finding a route through this opposition to a new conscious knowing. It seems possible that this opposition provides various but constant emotional movement between containment and freedom. The client may experience this opposition as emotional traps, pitfalls and ways of escape from different aspects of their selves (Etherington 2000) that they find difficult to allow into consciousness. This opposition within the polarity may be understood as enabling the client to grow towards their own containment and their own freedom which may be likened to developing their own mature autonomy (Grotstein 1982; 83) or reconstructing their own self (or the marriage between Beauty and the Beast). The paradox of this opposition is perhaps that containment and freedom also appear to be necessary aspects of each other. But in the process of changing it is suggested that the client splits them apart in order to be able to experience the extremes of each aspect. In the space (between the client and counsellor) where anything can be known or experienced in the mind (Godwin 1991) the client may feel containment and freedom as different and split before then integrating them back together. Jung (1969) suggests that, “just as between all opposites there obtains so close a 131 bond that no position can be established or even thought of without its corresponding negation” (206 ). So the paradox of the containment-freedom polarity may be seen as holding containment and freedom together while also keeping them apart. 5.5 Containment-freedom polarity As the research has progressed containment-freedom has become the overall polarity which encompasses the other categories. It holds the polarity and the paradox together by incorporating both movement and stillness. It holds both containment and freedom, Beauty and the Beast keeping them apart and linking them together so that their split provides clarification; while being held together they become supportive (Twachtmann and Daniell 1997). Beauty may never live fully without the Beast who she needs to protect her yet the Beast cannot live fully without Beauty who he needs to tame his wildness. In the same way internal containment may never appear to meet internal freedom yet freedom cannot exist without containment anymore than containment can exist without freedom. Download 1.47 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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