An "oasis within a desert," but the desert remains: Clubhouse members' experiences of social belonging and societal oppression.

Miraj U Desai, Robert Manning, Anthony J Pavlo, Kimberly Blackman, Luz Ocasio, Merarilisse Crespo, Elizabeth Flanagan
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

Persons living with mental health challenges are at increased risk of stigma, social isolation, and social exclusion. Due to its emphasis on member participation and community, the clubhouse model of mental health may help address these issues. In this study, we examined experiences of social belonging and of various social determinants of mental health among members attending a psychosocial clubhouse. Twelve members of a large psychosocial clubhouse were interviewed regarding their experiences of community life and belonging. Phenomenological qualitative methods were utilized to examine the meaning and structure of these experiences. Members overwhelmingly experienced the clubhouse as a central site of belonging ("an oasis"), but members also recounted devastating portraits of life in the outside world ("a desert"). This world presented fundamental restrictions on their movement and speech and held deeply sedimented norms pertaining to who is considered valuable, productive, and even human, which they were reminded of through an endless tyranny of questions ("what do you do," "where do you live," etc.). Life in the clubhouse presented an alternative world for members to experience nourishment, dignity, reaffirmed personhood, and a sense of beauty. And yet, the desert outside remained. Implications of these findings for clubhouses, mental health practice, and sociopolitical and community engagement are discussed, including the need to address profound deprivations and power imbalances within the wider world, beyond the walls of humane spaces such as these. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).

“沙漠中的绿洲”,但沙漠仍然存在:俱乐部成员的社会归属感和社会压迫的经历。
有精神健康挑战的人遭受耻辱、社会孤立和社会排斥的风险更大。由于其强调成员参与和社区,会所模式的心理健康可能有助于解决这些问题。在这项研究中,我们考察了社会归属的经验和各种社会决定因素的心理健康的成员参加一个社会心理俱乐部。对一个大型社会心理俱乐部的12名成员进行了关于他们的社区生活和归属感的采访。现象学定性方法被用来检验这些经验的意义和结构。绝大多数会员都将会所视为归属感的中心(“一片绿洲”),但会员们也讲述了外界生活的悲惨写照(“一片沙漠”)。这个世界对他们的行动和言论提出了基本的限制,并对谁被认为是有价值的、有生产力的,甚至是人类有着根深蒂固的规范,他们通过无休止的专制问题(“你做什么”,“你住在哪里”等)来提醒自己。会所的生活为会员提供了另一个世界,让他们体验营养、尊严、重申人格和美感。然而,外面的沙漠依然存在。这些发现对俱乐部会所、心理健康实践以及社会政治和社区参与的影响进行了讨论,包括需要在更广阔的世界中解决深刻的剥夺和权力不平衡问题,超越这些人道空间的墙壁。(PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA,版权所有)。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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