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Rescued Speech Poems: Co-authoring
Poetry in Narrative Therapy
by
Christopher Behan
In my work with the people who consult me I am always
pursuing poetic language. I will write down on the notepad
at my knee the words and phrases that bring forward
brilliant images from the person's life and imagination, or
depict colorful longings and dreams, or speak to
extraordinary movement in some way. Johnella Bird (2000)
calls this "talk that sings." Lynn Hoffman (2002) calls it
"painted language." 1 I call it poetic speech.
On the page these notes, shards of our conversations,
almost look like poems: pieces of continuous thought,
impressions, mixed with contradiction-- with lots of space
between. Recently it occurred to me to attempt to share
edited versions of our notes in poetry form with some of my
clients, in the same way that I offer letters to extend the
story between sessions. This idea appealed to me because
poetry is more able to contain some of the complexities of
the spoken word and the richness of the stories of those who
consult me.
I am constantly frustrated attempting to express in prose
the tangled profundity of my clients' lives. A Buddhist
friend recently offered me an aphorism, which aptly
describes the difficulty: "The tongues of the Buddha are too
clumsy to describe enlightenment." Poems evoke association,
reverie and contradiction. Poetry has "space between" to
describe multiplicity, tentativeness and ambiguity and is
perhaps better suited to render visible these subtle stories
from therapy conversations.
Co-authoring poetry with clients fits with narrative
therapy's aspirations to be a "therapy of literary merit"
(Epston & White, 1990). Michael White points out the
important and practical reasons for documenting our
conversations in written form: "these practices of the
written word document the more sparking events of people's
lives and in so doing contribute to 'rescuing the said from
the saying of it,' the 'told from the telling of it'" (2000,
p.6). Conversation, as a healing medium, can be made more
impactful when it is recorded in poetic form and brought
forward into the future.
I do have a concern that by calling this a poetry writing
practice there may be some danger to judge these documents
on high academic or aesthetic standards. Perhaps an
"inner-English teacher" will cause clients or therapists to
censor their own words or to view these efforts as less-than
poems. The intention is not necessarily to write the best
poem but to rescue poetic speech. That is why I prefer to
call them "rescued speech poems," an alternative genre that
is prose-like in many ways but which offers the spaciousness
and freedom of open form poetry.
This short paper reflects the beginnings of my poetic
identity explorations with a few of the people who consult
me. I offer examples of some of the work and initial
guidelines for co-authoring poems with clients.
Staying Out There
I had been seeing Jeff, who is a narrative therapist, for
a few months for consultation and because he lived far away
from where I work, we met only once a month or so. After our
third session Jeff said, "I feel like this is going well and
I wish there was a way to have you write some letters that
would help me to hold onto these stories." For a few months
I had been wanting to try other forms of writing as
follow-up documents for people, and I found myself saying to
him, "I'd like to try writing a poem using some of the
things you said today. Would that be okay?" Here is that
poem:
Staying Out There
I am stuck here, Sister Mary Aloysius
Since childhood, I have seen things
And I was not welcomed to see what I could see
Noticing and bewilderment at injustice and cruelty
Bewilderment is an act of refusal
I was my father's child
I think the draft was the first time I had to really say
how I was in relation to the world
And the beginning of the radicalization of me
Thinking outside the dominant discourse
Am I crazy?
Carl Rogers, my hero, how could things get any
better?
Or are they crazy?
I have this sense that people around me have more respect
for me and faith in me than I do
Besides being not visible, feeling exposed somehow
When I forget the position, I can fulfill the
position
I am stepping away from being resigned to life in the
valley
You know, Getting By Valley
I am going toward, going toward
Being visible
Owning power
Believing it could happen
Confirming the belief it could happen
My life has been led by finding things I can believe
in
And throwing myself into them
I'm going to create my own version of courage
Co-writing therapy poems has altered the quality of my
listening in consultations with people. I find I am more
keenly attuned to the particular expressions of my clients,
developing even more of what Bird calls a "feeling for
words" (2000, p.17). Words and phrases seem to leap from
their mouths onto the page. Stories are rendered more
pliant, more open. In poetry time is circular. As Irish poet
Eavan Boland (2000) has noted:
And so even as the words of the poem happen, they are
already arranging, in the most subtle and powerful way,
experiences that have already happened. They are cutting
across time and completed experience to show that, after
all, it was incomplete. (p. xxvi)
The poems become reflections that string together spoken
expression without imposing meanings. They often express
strong-felt views of the past and present and speak to
powerful longings for a different future. The poems allow
linguistic space and metaphorical distance for clients to
explore connections with others, engagement in the world or
an alternate view of self.
As I take notes about my clients' expressions, I check in
with them about what I am recording: Is this how they wish
to say it? Is this important to them? This constant process
helps to assure that the voice of the person who's
consulting me is privileged. At the same time, I am actively
co-authoring by shaping the beginnings of the poem,
retaining the client's preferences, searching out colorful
language, juxtaposing problem saturated and preferred
accounts, editing byroads, looking for contradictions and
openings.
Living the Questions
I have found Rilke's (1934) advice to a young poet
inspiring. During tough times in my life, when I have felt
unsettled, betwixt and between, I have recited his words
almost as an incantation so I could sit with unanswered
questions. These are the very questions that seem to come up
in therapy conversations: How am I going to get through
this? Why is this happening? Who will help me? This
quotation fits how I see therapy poems-- a way to keep
questions open.
Be patient toward all that is unsolved in your heart and
to try and love the questions themselves like locked rooms
and like books that are written in a foreign tongue. Do not
now seek the answers, which cannot be given you because you
would not be able to live them. And the point is, to live
everything. Live the questions now. Perhaps you will then
gradually, without noticing it, live along some distant day
into the answer. (p. 35)
I often feel quite humbled by the enormity and complexity
of the situations my clients bring. I wonder to myself, "How
will we ever be able to figure this all out?" Somehow the
process of co-writing therapy poems, the saying of it and
the rescuing of the saying of it, which keeps questions
open, reassures me. The rescued speech poem is a text to be
performed, becoming the story through which the person can
live.
As Bachelard (1964) points out in his phenomenological
study of poetry, the poetic image actually comes to be in
reverberation. Poetry exists in sound, in its resonances and
reverberations. Poems are meant to be spoken aloud. Once the
words are given voice in sound, they come to life. Thus the
poem makes its reader up as much as the reader makes up the
poem.
Very often a person will not be able to answer a question
asked in the session and I will say, "You don't have to
answer that now; let's just leave it as an open question."
Sometimes there is a noteworthy phrase that captures the
spirit of the session or maintains a hope. A short poem that
repeats the open question and reiterates these few key
expressions extends the conversation beyond the therapy
room.
Here is an example of a short poem that I co-wrote with
Julia, a young woman who had recently left a torturously
abusive relationship with her boyfriend. Julia had been
describing the fears that had come in the wake of the abuse
and her departure: Did she deserve the new contentment she
had found? Would her new partner think she was "too much"?
Could she really trust that her friends and family could see
her renewed vivaciousness or would they see her as a
victim?
I know in my heart
I can believe what they see about me
I'm just starting to see it again
Starting to be the person that they see
But I'm even more compassionate
My heart is so huge now
Because I have seen pain
.
Guidelines for Co-authoring Poems
This is a fairly new practice for me and I have a sense
that there are limitless possible directions to go in. Here
a few ideas that might help those who are interested in
these sorts of co-writing projects with the people who
consult them:
I think it is best to use verbatim from the
session, especially the words of the person consulting
me.
However, I may include some of my words,
especially questions I may have asked or wished to have
asked.
To write the poems, I choose words and phrases
from my notes that stand out as representations of the
person's preferences, that connect the person with other
people, that evoke memorable places and things, that link
with hopes and dreams, that demonstrate action, that talk
about emotions.
I seek to chronicle colorful language and
evocative images. This brings immediacy and momentousness to
the poems.
Descriptions of problems are important to record
as well. They may provide a necessary counterpoint to the
preferred account of the person's life.
The poems take an open form, that is, they don't
have to conform to any rules about rhyme, meter or format.
Rhyming poems may appeal to some people, though.
I understand that poetry might not be for
everyone. Some of my clients seem more receptive to the
poetic. I am more likely to suggest co-authoring poems with
them.
When the client returns to see me after receiving one of
the co-written poems I have sent, I am always sure to
check-in about any of his or her reflections about the
poem&emdash;what fit, what didn't and any implications for
his or her life. These reverberations further extend the
life of the poem. I also encourage clients to circulate
their poems as a way to bring their primary audience--
family, friends, partners-- in on the current state of their
journeys. My clients have told me with each retelling of the
poem the experience becomes richer.
Rescued speech poems have given birth to a more poetic
practice with the people who consult me. These days my work
is about finding the words and sharing them. I have been
touched to hear back from one of my clients about a poem's
being read aloud to a loved one or posted on the family
refrigerator. One of my clients brought in an Edna
St.Vincent Millay sonnet that resonated with a poem he had
written with me. A world of possibility is opening up around
sharing poems back and forth, connecting poets across
time.
Poetic practices are being explored simultaneously in all
sorts of therapy and community organization settings theses
days and present many possibilities. I know that the people
from Dulwich Centre (Denborough, 2000) have been collecting
lyrics for songs from the images and themes of the people
assembled at community gatherings. In their teaching Jill
Freedman and Gene Combs (2001) have been conducting poetic
explorations with therapists. Cheryl MacNeil (2000) has
written an intriguing paper about the promising practice of
writing poems based on quotations gathered from subjects in
qualitative research, which she calls "poetic
transcription." Jane Speedy (2003) is currently writing
poems back and forth with some of the people who consult her
for therapy. I hope these poetic practices continue to
expand.
Acknowledgements
I am grateful to the people who consult me for their
patience with my flights of fancy. Thanks to Jeff Scannell
and Julia who have given me permission to us their rescued
speech poems as illustrations in this paper. The beauty and
intensity of the poems reflects the beauty and intensity of
life lived.
Notes
1. For those who are interested in the importance of
language in therapy, practices of the written word and the
poetics of everyday living, Lynn Hoffman's Family Therapy:
An Intimate History and Johnella Bird's A Heart's Narrative
may be inspiring. They certainly have been for me.
References
Bachelard, G. (1964). The poetics of space. (M. Jolas,
Trans.). New York: Orion Press.
Bird, J. (2000). The heart's narrative. Auckland, New
Zealand: Edge Press.
Denborough, D. (2000). Living positive lives: A gathering
of people living with HIV and workers in the HIV sector.
Dulwich Centre Journal, 4, 3-37.
Freedman, J., & Combs, G. (2001, February). Bringing
forth the poetry in "little sacraments of daily existence".
Paper presented at the International Narrative Therapy and
Community Work Conference, Adelaide, Australia.
Hoffman, L. (2002). Family therapy: An intimate history.
New York: W. W. Norton.
MacNeil, C. (2000). The prose and cons of poetic
representation in evaluation reporting. American Journal of
Evaluation, 21 (3), 359-367.
Rilke, R. M. (1934). Letters to young poet. (M. D. H.
Norton, Trans.). New York: W. W. Norton .
Speedy, J. (2003, July). Using "poetic" documents in
narrative therapy. Paper presented at the International
Narrative Therapy and Community Work Conference, Liverpool,
England.
Strand, M., & Boland, E. (2000). The making of a
poem: A Norton anthology of poetic forms. New York:
Norton.
White, M. (2000). Reflections on narrative therapy.
Adelaide, Australia: Dulwich Centre Publications.
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