Perspectives on
THE EXPRESSIVE ARTS THERAPIES
Adam Blatner, M.D.
Supplement to a presentation given on September 19, 2012, at the
California Institute for Integral Studies in San Francisco.
(Note, I kept making changes and this
paper is thus provisional, not fully polished. Bear with me and
use this to ask questions in person or via email.)
A number of books about different approaches to psychotherapy
neglect the power of the arts to bring people out in ways that
more word-oriented therapies cannot. Some people---maybe you---do
better in expressing themselves through various non-verbal,
non-languaged media. Poetry has words, but they draw on images
rather than abstract logical constructs. Drama partakes of the
immediacy of both nonverbal and verbal modes and also is more in
the form of dialog rather than presentation. Indeed, many
associated with the field of narrative psychology argue cogently
that people experience their lives more as stories than as case
studies. The problem is that few people have encountered
significant others who have noticed, accepted, and validated
non-languaged forms of expression. But you have recognized how
valuable all this can be, and so I view you not just as
therapists, but also as pioneers. I'm a physician and I've been
interested in the history of medicine. (I went to U.C. medical
school only a few miles from here at the beginning of the 1960s.)
Many breakthroughs in anesthesia, bacteriology and germ theory,
the idea that some diseases can be caused by nutritional
disorders---all are examples also of the way a field might need to
open to a relatively unexplored side-field in order to advance. I
believe that psychology and psychotherapy need to open to the
power of the constructive non-rational modes of experience and
expression.
What this offers is not just communication to others: More, what
people discover is that they themselves have sources of imagery
and inspiration, movement and vitality that transcend standardized
modes of education. If no one notices or validates these
modalities---and for many---perhaps most people---they are not
validated---then their value cannot be integrated. They seem to
the person to be oddities, eccentricities, quirks, and are either
stifled or enjoyed alone. What if we can acknowledge these facets
as values! Wow!
I've looked through your textbook on multicultural counseling;
it's on the whole pretty good, but it omits the potential of the
creative arts as a vehicle to promote mental health. The closest
it comes to it is a vague mention of creativity within the section
on positive psychology. So I’ll say something about creativity.
Many people don’t think of themselves as creative. And in truth
they aren’t, at least to their way of thinking. Actually in a
subtle way they are creating all the time insofar as improvising
variations to ordinary tasks and conversations. But creativity to
most folks implies truly impressive performances.
So in my role of psychiatrist and mainly psychodramatist, I want
to zoom-in on Moreno’s philosophy of creativity, because the
promotion of the true spirit of creativity through psychodrama was
in fact only one of many methods to this end. In his journals were
some of the earlier papers on art and dance and poetry therapy.
The thing was to be creative—and to do that one improvised.
So part of the misunderstanding of creativity was the focus on the
product as impressive. Another part was to focus on the product at
all, rather than the process. In fact, most creativity in the
world does not result in a product that is really even effective.
Part of the creative process is doing it again, persistence,
revision, fiddling with it, or as Edison put it, 1% inspiration
and 99% perspiration.
Aside from the product, to focus this on therapy, most people
don’t know what it feels like to channel genius—not big genius,
but just in the original Latin—the tutelary spirit that inspires,
in- spirit— the feeling of the flash of what Moreno called
“spontaneity.” Many of you have had this experience of losing
yourself and being in what Csikszentmihalyi calls “flow.”
What you allow people to do, help people to do, is to experience
the action of the creative subconscious, to be filled with a
certain kind of spiritual energy that is essential creativity.
People don’t know they have this. There are few or maybe no other
theories that talk of it. It’s pretty obvious.
The Axis of Inspiration
In Kundalini Yoga they have the chakras, and you probably have all
seen these diagrams of the seven chakras. The logo of the CIIS
captures that in a sense, the shree yantra viewed from the top. A
discourse on the chakras is irrelevant at this point and
undoubtedly incomplete, but there’s a hint of a frame here: People
learn to love at second chakra and to become competent at third
and to open their hearts to include at 4th—but what you help
people do is open to the spirit at 5th, to surrender to being
inspired.
My point is that this offers a powerful root of healthy
self-esteem. Sure you mess up, sure you’ve got a lot to learn in
life, but most people don’t know and maybe you partially
know—you’ve got a friend, as the song goes. You’ve got a part of
you that heals and glows and gets glorious and this is what Moreno
sensed, too. When you open to your creativity, it’s as if you’ve
got a team of angels devoted to you and they want to and are able
to help you. It’s partly a healing of the gap of uncertainty that
people have about parental love or other people love and whether
or not you deserve it. It charges you energy field and everyone
can do it; but very few people know that they can and know how to.
That’s what the creative arts opens up.
This is difficult to explain because it is sensed intuitively, but
it’s amazing. It’s one of the reasons you often love others and
one of the things that others love about you—that you to some
little or moderate extent at times become transparent to this holy
energy of creativity. How did you do that. You are jaw-dropping-ly
amazing-mentey! It’s so sweet, and perhaps you’ve on occasion
noticed this about your own self.
Helping people to discover it repeatedly until they know they’ve
got the angle of warming up to spontaneity, to a kind of
surrender, and to the magic holy flow that comes with it—this is
hugely therapeutic, and I know of no books on therapy that mention
it. Not having access to this flow is in turn a very subtle,
inexplicable downer—and this is described very crudely as feeling
dry rather than juicy.
The Types of Expressive Therapy
It’s an exercise of your visual imagery to discover that you can
create interesting figures. One approach I encourage is the idea
of the mandala. There are hundreds of these on my website. You
make a circular diagram—it need not be exact. You put a
rough or relatively more exact geometric figure in it in light
pencil and then with that structure you doodle. When it comes out
even roughly symmetrical, it ends up looking good. You’ve made a
mandala. You can do this in pairs, too.
It’s an exercise of musical imagery to hum a melody and then
evolve it improvisationally into a larger simple tune. Maybe you
can do this in pairs, too. It’s nice to start and for the other to
discover how to make it sound like a tune; and then with a little
practice, you change parts. The key is not to have to elaborate it
with great finesse. Most folks have no idea they can do this with
the fragments of tunes that come to them.
Dancing can be like this, improvised. If that’s too much, just
learn a few steps and find a partner who likes to explore. It may
be a circle dance.
Poetry, too, borders on creative writing for kids. Let go of your
expectations that it has to be great or why bother. Get innocent
and open to letting the words come, and being a little surpised as
they flow in. And so forth, you’ve got a wealth of tools to
discover that you’re pretty amazing. None of this has anything to
do with doing it right.
People-Helping
Expressive Arts Therapists bring to the table a number of
viewpoints that are insufficiently appreciated by most
psychologists, teachers of counseling, or practitioners. You are
learning a number of modes of people-helping that other approaches
either don’t know at all about or only in a very crude fashion.
You are learning that empowering people to access their sources of
creativity, their non-rational sources, their creative arts
resources, can deepen their sense of self-esteem and open the
sense of what life is about.
I use the term people-helping to note right off that what you are
learning transcends the context of therapy, of helping people who
are aware they are troubled or are referred for help because they
are insufficiently aware that it is they who are troubled. This is
the sick role. But people helping transcends that, includes
teaching, educating, group leadership, coaching, facilitating
social action, promoting various forms of adult education and
professional training, recreation, spiritual direction, and so
forth. I am suggesting that these people-helping roles will expand
in the next few decades and the skills you’re developing speak to
contexts broader than treatment.
In short, you are offering more ways to raise consciousness.
Related to this, realize that the fields we are developing are by
no means fully developed, and it is possible or perhaps even
likely that you will add to what is know, techniques, ideas,
perspectives, over the course of your career. Empower your own
creativity. You are not merely pupils, but potential co-creators
who may well reveal in time the limitations of your teachers’
awareness.
Considering Expressive Therapies
Expressive therapists bring to the psychotherapy a number of
perspectives not widely appreciated by most counselors and
teachers of counseling:
- An emphasis on being creative, and learning to recognize,
enjoy, and cultivate those elements in yourself and your
surroundings that foster creativity
- An awareness of the kinds of things that inhibit
creativity
- Appreciating the nature of improvisation and spontaneity
in all this. (Many practitioners of the arts are sadly lacking in
this awareness.)
- Giving yourself permission to take it over, to not
achieve full success, to revise, to fool around, to play, to
explore in safety
- Setting up small learning teams so that each individual
need not feel overwhelmed with all the role components in
creativity. One facilitates; one explores; one offers
supporting-role functions and audience; maybe a fourth offers
audience roles. This differs from the hyper-individualistic demand
that people must create on their own.
- Setting up specific places and equipment and perhaps
people or role functions for experimentation and, then, evaluation
and re-planning. This breaking down the process makes it more
workable. The laboratory differs from the office.
- Generating a variety of “surplus reality” contexts,
scenes, different frames of reference that have to do with time,
point of view, people involved, etc.
These components derive from psychodrama but apply to all forms of
experiential learning.
— and I’ll note in a bit what those are; and second, what you’re
learning has applications far beyond the context of therapy per
se. You’re learning a technology that with some tweaking to adapt
to the kinds of population and task, speaks to the overall
challenge of facilitating the raising of consciousness.
It’s about more than learning stuff, information, things that can
be acquired now from reading about them on some webpage or blog.
Information was hard to find in the olden days—that phrase may
apply to activities only twenty years in the past—but it’s
immediately available now. Indeed, there’s too much of it and the
skill is filtering out that which is less relevant, useful, and of
course less accurate. But accuracy is not as crucial as one might
wish in a world that is asking just to get oriented.
What the expressive arts as therapy offers is simple and complex.
The simple idea is that people can learn to express themselves
better using a wide range of media, often involving relatively
non-rational or non-languaged elements. You may know in your own
lives or those you’ve encountered that we live in a relatively
logocentric culture—and that big word refers to words, the ability
to come up with words, use them skillfully, be articulate, highly
literate. You can finagle loopholes in the law and still delude
yourself that you’re ethical. People who are skilled with words
are treated as if they’re smarter than people who are skilled with
other media, their bodies (unless they’re fabulous, then they’re
highly paid), their intuitions, their art, or music, etc.
But most folks are somewhat skilled or have talent in a couple of
non-word-saturated areas, and your helping them to discover these
and value and enjoy them is an important function in restoring the
mental health of many people. For those who are good at words,
discovering they can also loosen up and be poetic is empowering.
The key word is empowerment, and what we’re speaking to are folks
who are by no means fully empowered. You yourselves may not have
fully discovered your own talents.
Another poison in our culture is how good you are competitively.
But I live in a community and there are some who aren’t that
great, but they deeply, deeply enjoy themselves at the level
they’re at. Being better than, or living up to external standards,
is not that big a deal. Doing your thing, discovering what you
enjoy doing—this may seem obvious, but lots of people in the world
have hardly discovered this and found others who support them in
their enjoyments.
In other words, it’s more than expressive, it’s also experiential.
It’s dancing and not caring how good you are at it, because you
enjoy it. You may enjoy getting better, and you may enjoy pushing
yourself a bit—you enjoy the challenge. And you may enjoy not
pushing yourself! There’s a concept. And so in this way you
overlap with elements of recreational and occupational therapy and
I’m not at all sure that most folks in these fields have had a
chance to reflect on such matters. This is a very product-oriented
culture, and process for its own sake is less noticed—but I’m
highlighting it right now.
I want to emphasize this because finding what you’re good at that
is also what you like doing is what Joseph Campbell, the
comparative mythologist who died in the late 1980s called
“following your bliss.” It’s important to understand it. There are
people who are good at some things but really don’t like doing
them much—and these folks get channeled into jobs and roles and
clubs where they do well, but they also lose the sense of how fun
life can be. It’s an important diagnostic category: Doing well
because they have some ability in this way but not really liking
it. Not all kids who are tall like to play basketball. Not all
kids who play piano well like it, or they don’t like what they’re
told they should play.
This leads to another category: Our culture also values product
and values copying someone else’s product and calls that
creativity. For some this works, but there are many who want to
enjoy creating from scratch, improvising, opening their psyches
and allowing the muses to create new stuff through them. Many of
you have experienced the joy of improvisation. It’s pretty
obvious—Winnie the Pooh, a bear of very little brain—made up song
lyrics and melodies. They were pretty simple, but there are
concert performers who have never made up zip. Alas for them.
So another of your skills is that you have some special exposure
to people who dare to just make up stuff and it doesn’t have to be
absolutely great right off or even ever. This confronts all the
perfectionists—and for every perfectionist there are ten
subclinical perfectionists—who really don’t know that it’s fun
just doing stuff and not even caring about not being perfect.
Bless their hearts, they’ve been brainwashed, and the culture
needs folks like you to remind other folks that the unspoken rule
that one must be perfect or the best if anything is to be done is
deeply phony.
Theoretical Background
People-helping is a more inclusive, cross-disciplinary term that
recognizes that a fair amount of psychotherapy, coaching,
spiritual guidance, education, management, parenting, and other
tasks involves helping people to make use of their creative
resources. As an ancient writer noted, education is not about
filling a vessel, but lighting a candle. We now live in an era in
which being educated doesn’t mean amassing facts, but rather
learning a wide range of skills for coping with information
overload.
Psychotherapy and spiritual guidance and other forms of being
“brought forth” also notes that some of those skills involve
noting which facts are relevant, which themes deserve attention,
and this in turn involves a more multi-dimensional form of
insight. Insight isn’t just about articulating formulations about
inner processes, but also includes a sense of more and less, what
feels more true for oneself even if many others feel differently;
what feels less so even if many others find that the same thing is
true for them? So we need to add the more feeling elements that
are to some degree mobilized by the various creative arts.
There was a time for departments, compartments, disciplines,
separations, boundaries. Knowledge was still being elucidated. Now
were shifting into holism, integration, trans-disciplinary
endeavors. (This happens in normal cognitive development: There’s
a time for learning that sheep are not cows, and neither are
horses; and there’s a time for learning about the ways that these
animals are alike in certain ways.)
Psychotherapy, counseling, guidance, education, family systems
work, organizational systems work, personal development,
recreation, social action, empowerment, politics, and other
endeavors all have as a common denominator the many-faceted
dynamics of consciousness-raising. More, we are increasingly
becoming aware that this is not just a matter of sharpening the
abilities of the left brain for critical thinking. Learning to
access, integrate, and utilize the non-rational dimensions—the
expressive arts being one set, transpersonal exercises, being
another, and other forms of imagination, intuition, and emotion—is
beginning to be more widely recognized.
It isn’t yet fully accepted because teachers still identify their
self-esteem with what they know, and what they know tends to be
based on their own experience as shaped by what they learned ten
to fifty years ago, which in turn was shaped by what their
teachers thought they knew. Ironically, this whole idea is on the
edge of being overturned by a world-view shift in combination with
a disruptive technology—and one that you will be learning
about—action explorations—a form of collaborative learning that
addresses creativity rather than knowledge. Or, it privileges
knowledge of methods over knowledge of facts.
In the not-too-distant past information was hard to find, acquire,
compile, and much of academic work and status involved how much
was known (memorized) rather than a more subtle skill in noticing
what information was relevant and which methods for exploring
further were indicated—but these kinds of “knowledge” are quickly
becoming more relevant. The word “knowledge” should not be thought
of as one kind of thing, but recognized as involving rather
different skills, perhaps more than contents. Teaching, then,
shifts from mere instruction in information to skill development,
and considering the growing awareness of differences in cognitive
style, learning styles, and other variables of individuality,
teaching becomes less scholastic and more art. The structure of
academia will not change soon, but it will have to as people seek
not teachers who know everything that was known in the field last
year, but rather those who can help them discover for themselves
what is coming to be known or has yet to be discovered or applied
in the field next year!
(This may involve the collapse or re-structuring of major academic
institutions, also because they have become so expensive and
effectively unaffordable—increasingly so in an era in which the
middle and lower classes are becoming squeezed.)
Back to the nature of the task: It, too, transcends single
endeavors. It’s like thinking about how something so basic as
electricity changed every institution! Historically, your
expertise arises out of the endeavor to reduce the impact
personally and collectively of major and minor mental illnesses.
The medical model took over psychotherapy in the 1930s, but really
we should see beyond this context and recognize that even though
you’re in training to be therapists, what you’re really about is
bringing people forth. Exciting, motivating, encouraging,
enticing, exploring, and structuring experiences is becoming as
vitally important than merely transmitting information. That can
be done online, through Google, through books. This is bigger.
In terms of Piaget’s developmental psychology, we’re shifting from
an overemphasis on assimilation to a greater expansion of
accommodation. Filling in the gaps in the mental map with details
is closer to memorization, and the problem is that the details
become often irrelevant or they change. Developing, expanding the
inner maps to include body, spirit, emotion, play, and a
willingness to enjoy stretching—that is an educational act that
you may be doing more of. What is therapy is becoming often too
close to coaching, spiritual guidance, enlightened “teaching,”
good management, ideal parenting, and so forth. Sure, each context
has its own sub-body of information, relevant knowledge, and
sub-skills. But the underlying principles and skills support
people as they clean up this problem in counseling, and then use
the same techniques for addressing other life challenges as they
arise.
So I’m suggesting that your education partakes of ideas and
complexes that many of your elders and their teachers never heard
of: “integral” appproaches, “postmodernist” ideas, and the
aforementioned “trans-disciplinary” endeavors. Many folks don’t
yet understand what all this is about.
“Systems” Thinking
The term has been around for more than a half century, but it
isn’t yet widely understood. You may be learning about family
systems theory, but you’re also learning a perspective that is a
bit subversive or transgressive of conventional modes of thought.
The relevance of systems thinking has grown in proportion to our
many ways to appreciate the innate complexity of the
micros-systems we explore, and by extension, to realize that we,
too, live in loosely functional larger systems. There’s plenty of
room for small and even medium freedoms in these systems we live
in, but that does not detract from the awareness that there are
implicit guidelines if not strict rules.
Most folks think very little of al this—and only think as much as
they absolutely need to and little more. Systems thinking overlaps
with other approaches, because it notices such thing as the way—in
human systems—there are common patterns of irrational
traditionalism. These patterns involve some subgroups enjoying
more “privilege” than others. Of course, those who are so
privileged rationalize their perks by imagining (often quite
sincerely) that they are taking on a burden of responsibility over
the non-privileged. There’s no admission that a pitifully small
and relatively weak fraction of the privileged actually think and
take true responsibility. Most are involved in getting what they
can in terms of vacations, luxury, and other advantages. So
systems theory in its deepest sense ends up noting that we are all
in this together, and a full appreciation of this bridges over
into philosophy and spirituality.
Intellectual Foundations
There are as yet still not widely known voices, but increasing
attention is given to these thinkers who are looking more closely
at the way people construct their experience of reality through
story, “narrative,” a spate of books dealing with emerging fields
of neuroscience and cognitive science, how whole fields of thought
are affected by political and economic assumptions, gender roles,
and ideas about the nature of consciousness. I’m taken with ideas
about “positive psychology,” given new life in the last decade,
but really having been anticipated by many thinkers before and
after Freud. My own influence by the fellow who developed
psychodrama—Dr. Jacob L. Moreno—was key—he emphasized the need to
build a range of deep skills in imagining, becoming more
spontaneous, playing, and cultivating creativity. These in turn
offset the hegemonic power of pathology—a big word meaning that if
you just focus on what’s wrong and trying to untangle the
knots—the emphasis in psychoanalysis—it won’t be enough. It’s
important—far more important—to build into the system a variety of
skills for emphasizing positivity in many forms.
There’s an assumption that the psyche can—in theory—be known,
understood, and in so doing, brought into consciousness. That’s so
20th century. The mind is a hundred or a thousand times more
complex so that we have to work with the non-rational mind in a
more indirect, nudging fashion. I’m still enough of a product of
my background that I think that a fair amount of exploration is
good—but more than whatever contents are brought to the surface to
be examined is the general idea of “mulching the mind,” generating
a cooking process as part of ordinary living, not just therapy. We
should all get a bit curious and enjoy the process of
self-discovery. We should all throughout our lives play with
looking at that which we hadn’t noticed or had avoided previously.
It’s the equivalent of stretching our body or cleansing our skin.
Another theme that needs to be emphasized because we’re still in
transition is the awareness of the individual in the group and the
relationship of family or group to larger groups. This is part of
the power of systems theory, and it hasn’t been half appreciated
by more than a tiny fraction of people: We are social beings, and
the mind is to some large degree an organ of subtle social
perception—perception of attention, performance, status shifts,
frames of reference, and many other variables. That we pick up and
respond to micro-communications has been only one fragment of this
growing understanding.
The problem here is that we become more sharply aware of the way
we collectively agree to traditions, economic systems, political
establishments. We become more aware also of the many forms of
rhetoric, propaganda, distraction, manipulation, and our own
tendency to lapse into passive acceptance in the face of this
veritable barrage. Nor is it easy to blame one source; everyone
seems to be colluding in if not perpetuating “the system.” Systems
can indeed grow in certain directions when there are fifty or a
thousand different causes and influences—the idea that some one or
some group must be to blamed is again so early 20th century—not
that there aren’t still demagogues wanting to gain our allegiance
by blaming single external “enemies” or, from within, scapegoating
marginalized sub-groups.
Creativity: A Key Dynamic
This elusive quality was at the core of Moreno’s work. Jacob L.
Moreno, M.D. (1889-1974) was the fellow who invented psychodrama
and much more:
- He was a pioneer of role theory in social psychology.
- He was a pioneer of thinking about creativity and
spontaneity.
- He supported the integration of play and laughter, and in
other ways was one of the precursors to the present fashion in
positive psychology.
- Moreno was also a pioneer in looking at group dynamics
and interpersonal networks from a variety of viewpoints, one of
which—sociometry—became more popular in the 1950s. Now it’s
gaining new life as social network analysis and also looking at
the dynamics of rapport. (Many current researchers haven’t
bothered to examine the roots of this effort in Moreno’s
writings.)
- Moreno was a pioneer of group dynamics and group
psychotherapy, of self-help groups and looking at teamwork. His
own group method differed from more psychoanalytic group work in
having more structure and role distribution (versus all patients
being in the sick role and one or two therapists being group
“leaders”)
- Moreno was also a pioneer in the realm of
improvisational theatre, impromptu drama, which again gained new
life independently with the Second City people who then branched
off into consultations with business. But role playing in business
and industry was around since the 1950s!
What we’re talking about, then, goes way beyond therapy, which is,
it must be acknowledged, a valid application, but only one of
many. Similarly, what you’ll be learning is already being applied
beyond the models of “therapy” and the medical
model.
In closing, here are some principles developed by Dr. Sue Jennings
in England—one of the pioneers of drama therapy there and the
editor of a number of books about this work: She calls her
approach “Sesame,” as in the “Open, Sesame” phrase used in the
children’s story. The expressive arts therapist, ideally:
- Uses a non-performance bias towards drama and movement as
a vessel for the creative healing process
- Works obliquely through symbol and metaphor rather than
confronting pathology directly or making interpretations.
- Values the unconscious inner world of the psyche and the
health of each individual which emerges spontaneously in play.
- Unique combination of Jungian psychology, Laban movement
analysis, Slades Play principles, and Marian Lindqvist’s Movement
with Touch and Sound
- Promotes the use of a ritualized session play, which is
sufficiently flexible to meet identified needs of individual
participants
- Affirms that people carry their own solution to problems
within; it is the work of the therapist to draw these out. The
therapist is not the expert.
Summary
What you're learning about is important and has a goodly number of
implications. It is rare and wonderful to begin to open to the
intuitive and imaginative sources inside you, and to learn ways to
help others do likewise. That opening is in some ways the opposite
of what most college and ordinary school classes are about---i.e.,
learning what the teacher thinks are "right" answers---and instead
opens the mind to creativity---a realm where "right" answers don't
exist. Oh, admittedly, some ideas work better than others in some
situations and you can use that feedback for continued
improvisation, but that doesn't make those ideas "right" in any
absolute sense. This is a good warm-up for the learning you're
commencing.
Ref:
Theories in Counseling & Psychotherapy: A Multi-Cultural
Perspective
$100.00 7th Edition ISBN: 1412987237 June
2011
SAGE Publications
Theories of Counseling and Psychotherapy: A Multicultural
Perspective / Edition 7 by Mary Ivey, Michael J. D'Andrea, Allen
E. Ivey, Mary Bradford Ivey
5th ed.
Boston : Allyn and Bacon, c2002.
Intentional Interviewing and Counseling: Facilitating Client
Development in a Multicultural Society (with CD-ROM) by Allen E.
Ivey, Mary Bradford Ivey and Carlos P. Zalaquett(Apr 3, 2009)