Wednesday, October 12, 2016

My Art Therapy Philosophy & Experiences

My Art Therapy Philosophy
1.     How did I discover and pursue the field of art therapy?
My first exposure was in 1981, when curiosity drew me to a weekend seminar on Jungian Art Therapy at Sonoma State University.  I experienced firsthand the strength of art as therapy in revealing the hidden and powerful parts of myself.  Something clicked inside of me during my experience, pointing to my future.
It was to be ten years before I acted on this dream, however.  I patiently observed art therapy's slow move towards being viewed as a respected and recognized career.  Then, when family responsibilities eased up and the time was right, I applied for and was accepted into the College of Notre Dame's Masters in Art Therapy Program.  I took a pre-master's art therapist intern position under Al Friedman at the Center for Youth here at the hospital in '93 and '94.
Art therapy provides a holding environment for emotionally disturbed adolescents to express themselves in a safe environment.  For ten months I observed  adolescents at the hospital scribble out frustrations connected to hormonal changes and their mental illness. I witnessed them paint raw feelings of the pain of losing family and being institutionalized.  I helped them collage and map inner body parts from life-sized body tracings; the art clearly identified the body areas where abuse and violations took place. I watched young clients shape clay into the forms of their own haunting inner demons, put color to feelings of rage and helplessness connected to their abuse, use pastel chalks to sketch out the delicate butterflies of their fragile hope. The experience was sometimes frightening--and sometimes wonderful.  I learned that I could not cure them, but I could supply tools of communication, and be a force of caring that might support a change in their perception of a cruel to caring world.
After graduating in 1994, I took a post masters position as art therapy intern under Louise Salant at the Veterans Home in Yountville, to accrue hours for my
ATR--Art Therapy Registration.  Working with disabled seniors, some of who suffered from mental illness, was challenging and rewarding work.  My Yountville experience led me to be hired by three junior colleges to teach art classes to disabled seniors.  I did this for two years, while waiting patiently for full-time art therapist positions to open up. I then applied and was hired at Napa in September 1997.

2. Population at Napa State Hospital
A.  I worked in Program One, Unit T7, at Napa State Hospital with developmentally disabled, adult male sex offenders with forensic backgrounds. Many of the clients’ placements there were an alternative to jail, to become competent to stand trial for their crimes; some would never achieve this due to their developmental disability. Certain clients had speech impediments and difficulty verbalizing and being understood.  With this population the problems included aggressive behavior, obsessive compulsive disorder, borderline personality disorder, impulse control.  Their crimes included rape, incest, child sexual abuse, voyeurism, public exposure, foot fetishism, assault and battery, grand theft, and sexual perpetration or victimization.  I primarily used art therapy in the context of treatment for the clients’sex offenses and substance abuse addictions; as a support to verbal processing.
3. Goals of Art Therapy for clients in forensic settings include opportunities to:
--break through client denial and offer a non-threatening means of getting information from the client
--provide immediate gratification and control over environment as well as opportunity to safely explore and alter feelings and fantasies.
--explore and select socially acceptable behaviors as alternatives to substance abuse, violence or sex offender behavior.
--use art therapy in the context of the clients’sex offenses and substance abuse addictions, as a support to verbal processing.
--experience a holding environment which can make pain bearable, and allow progress and growth to proceed.
--genuinely express feelings and attitudes
--self-express in a socially acceptable manner--leading to increased self-awareness.
--solve inner conflicts through inner work.
--reveal/understand client's own personal past history; putting behavior in a larger
context, so as to increase understanding of need to change.
--experience a less threatening avenue of expression than verbal therapy.
for perpetrators, art therapy can be a  work through the internalized abuse and
compensatory mechanism of identifying with the perpetrator.
--embark upon a meaningful relationship with self and art therapist, thus enriching the quality of life of each.
4. Example of an Art Therapy Interventions
Focus interventions on enlarging a part of an art therapy painting, to get inside the symbol, to touch the deeper core of the problem.  Ask, "Can you take this symbol here, open it up, make it bigger, and show me what's inside?  Do another painting of just that thing.  Now, open that one up, make it larger, and show me what's inside that one."  What can be revealed are deep, hidden feelings, which, once shared, have less of a charge or control over the client's behavior.

5. What is my philosophy of art therapy?
Tolstoy said, "Art and only art can cause violence to be set aside.”
A major factor in the placing of clients at Napa State Hospital is the inability of the client to control behavior, thus becoming a danger both to self and to others. The client is separated from the community through the consequence of his violent or out of control actions, and lacks the cultural controls over self that are necessary to interact safely in society. This issue of safety --of client and community--must be addressed first and foremost, at any psychiatric or forensic institution.
6. What are the benefits and applications of art therapy?
--Art therapy can increase the safety of both client and staff.  Violent and mentally
disturbed patients in forensic settings such as NSH can find artmaking a valuable tool for making peace-first with self, then community. It can be a tool that mirrors antecedent behaviors to oncoming violent behavior, a window on monitoring the emotional states of the client; a recidivism predictor--potential for dangerous behavior.
--Art therapy can support the existing diagnoses and alert staff to changes.
--Pre/post art therapy intervention testing can measure client's general progression of wellness and improvement over time. Outcome measured by behavior changes in client over time.
--Art as a second language that communicates a variety of information about client
through the creative process.
--May be a tool in revealing/supporting developmental disorders/delays in client.


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