Clients‟ experience of counselling within a narrative framework
parts of myself that emerged through trauma (Etherington 2004) I
Download 1.47 Mb. Pdf ko'rish
|
Beauty and the Beast ( PDFDrive )
1.3.2. Reflexivity
As I discovered and met raw parts of myself that emerged through trauma (Etherington 2004) I was able to make conscious choices to change. In turn this allowed me to see that using a type of poetic writing might enable participants to create such transformation for themselves and demonstrate that movement in their writing. Marshall (2004) suggests that looking back over time adds to perceptions. In this way the journey through personal trauma may be investigated and fully integrated (Thorne and Lambers 1998). Yet it is also an unending process, which pursues its own seasons as understanding and experience, are brought together and informed by reflexive processes. Such processes enable past experiences to be re-experienced in the safety of the counselling relationship (Etherington 2004). This reflexive re-experiencing helped me discover meaning in past events which I had been unable to access during the original 17 experience. Reflexivity as it is used and perceived in this study is more than reflection. Reflection is understood as looking at an experience as if in the mirror; the experience is re- viewed. But to reflexively re-experience is to go through the mirror and enter the “stream” (Rennie 1998;3) of the experience as it were again; to discover feelings or thoughts that were present at the original time but not accessible to awareness. After this kind of re-experiencing the meaning or understanding of the original experience may be added to or changed because new information is discovered through re-experiencing. The method used to collect data as described in chapter 3 demonstrates how crucial it is to the study as does the analysis of both the pilot and main study in chapters 4 and 6. The poetic reflexive stance that emerges over the course of the research is also a key aspect of the findings in chapters 7 and 8. Reflexivity emerged through several aspects of my story, through personal counselling, counsellor training, the search for meaning and creative writing. Reflexivity seemed to emerge from a willingness to examine my internal world. The whole effect of trauma as taken to personal therapy is too much to record in a chapter, but may be summarised as shock, anguish, a murderous self, and the need to howl. There was both torment and relief in attending personal therapy. The torment of the amount of affect there was to experience stood against the relief that there was already a secure base in which to do this work (Bowlby 1988). 1.3.3.Shock Shock, did not need to be discovered as it had been felt in awareness from the moment of hearing that my sister had been murdered. But the effects of shock needed to be examined. My world was suddenly different, nothing was recognisable, and it would never be able to return to what it 18 had been before. My known self seemed utterly lost so that nothing about myself was recognisable (Siegel 1996). Even the reflection of my face in the mirror looked nothing like the self I knew. This was an unbearable symbol of the unknown realm of being that was now inhabited. But I had gained enough knowledge from therapy and psychodynamic training to know that staying with the unknown and chaotic (Lees 2001) was part of the grieving process. However from this chaotic unknown some kind of order (Godwin 1994) needed to evolve, so that movement out of such chaos became possible. Re-experiencing feelings aroused by trauma and then reflecting on those feelings began what Marshall (2001) sees as the process of researching the self. This helped provide movement towards a felt sense of order. If the concept of reflexivity (Rennie 1998; 2001; Etherington 2004) had been encountered before the trauma of murder it might have been understood at a cognitive level but not experienced at a feeling level. Caught in shock, where time appeared to stop, feeling was re-experienced, brought into awareness, dwelt upon and cognitively investigated, in order to find some understanding of the processes that followed. In a sense I discovered my own reflexivity but had no name for it. Being able to name this process helped give credence and position to what felt like an alien world. Although in shock, this stuck place was like a platform. I was able to look around and see where I was. A stuck place was also discovered in the participants‟ journals and they were able to use it in the same way which can be seen in the analysis of the narratives and the participants‟ feedback. Download 1.47 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
Ma'lumotlar bazasi mualliflik huquqi bilan himoyalangan ©fayllar.org 2024
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling