{"title":"“如果疼痛会说话,它会说什么?”镰状细胞病的相互关系/内部调查:诗意的(探究)见解。","authors":"Peace Anumah","doi":"10.28963/6.1.8","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"If pain could speak, what would it say? If it could have a form, what would it look like? \nI start with these questions to illustrate the line of inquiry I am reframing as insight. The insights come from a conversation with a therapist warrior battling sickle cell disease (SCD). I use the language of therapist warrior for multiple reasons. To protect the anonymity of my conversational partner; to obscure her name but not her identity or infinite resourcefulness; to work with an archetype in a way that is congruent with the model of engagement I use within our conversations - Internal Family Systems (IFS), (Schwartz, 2013). \nI work with this model in my therapy practice. I draw on it in this paper to highlight the transformational power of externalising the pain experienced by the therapist I am conversing with. I will offer an overview of the model and an overview of the new language I am introducing in relation to methodology. \nIFS offers a different lens through which to view pain. Pain can be externalised as a “part”, no longer within the individual. This helps to empower the individual and their experience of pain. \nIn this paper, I seek to highlight the resilience of the therapist I am conversing with and raise awareness of sickle cell disease. The paper actively examines the oppression and racialisation experienced by individuals with SCD from within the health care system. Care is contested. \nI use “re-lational inter-rogation/intra-rogation”, a methodology I am developing, to examine this. This way of engaging with conversational material highlights the importance of intentionally exploring relational changes after every re-connection or newfound acceptance between and within a group and connecting those insights with wider political forces. \nI use my embodied reflexivity for witnessing the impact, experiences, and happenings that occur during and after our dialogue. I illuminate my conversational partner’s resilience within the wider discourse of racialisation and marginalisation. \nPoems are transcribed from the conversation to add to the quality and aesthetics of the paper for the readers, as well as a reflexive process for me during and after my conversation with the therapist warrior. Poetry has a long history as a counter-narrative to the status quo and can be viewed as a decolonial, political act (van Rooyen and d’Abdon, 2020).","PeriodicalId":422770,"journal":{"name":"Murmurations: Journal of Transformative Systemic Practice","volume":"71 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-04-23","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"“If Pain Could Speak, What Would It Say?” Re-lational Inter/Intra-rogation of sickle cell disease: A Poetic (Inquiry) Insight.\",\"authors\":\"Peace Anumah\",\"doi\":\"10.28963/6.1.8\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"If pain could speak, what would it say? If it could have a form, what would it look like? \\nI start with these questions to illustrate the line of inquiry I am reframing as insight. The insights come from a conversation with a therapist warrior battling sickle cell disease (SCD). 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引用次数: 0
摘要
如果痛苦会说话,它会说些什么?如果它有一个形式,它会是什么样子?我从这些问题开始,以说明我重新定义为洞察力的探究路线。这些见解来自与一位与镰状细胞病(SCD)作斗争的治疗师的对话。我使用治疗师战士的语言有多种原因。为了保护我谈话对象的匿名性;模糊她的名字,而不是她的身份或无限的机智;以一种与我在对话中使用的参与模式一致的方式与原型一起工作——内部家庭系统(IFS), (Schwartz, 2013)。我在我的治疗实践中使用这个模型。我在这篇论文中引用了这一点,以强调我正在与之交谈的治疗师所经历的外化痛苦的转变力量。我将提供一个模型的概述,以及我所引入的与方法论相关的新语言的概述。IFS提供了一个观察疼痛的不同视角。疼痛可以外化为“一部分”,不再属于个人。这有助于增强个人的能力和他们对痛苦的体验。在这篇论文中,我试图强调我正在与之交谈的治疗师的韧性,并提高对镰状细胞病的认识。本文积极探讨了压迫和种族化经历的个人与SCD从医疗保健系统内。护理是有争议的。我使用我正在开发的一种方法“关系审问/内部审问”来检验这一点。这种参与对话材料的方式强调了在每次重新联系或在群体之间和内部获得新接受后有意探索关系变化的重要性,并将这些见解与更广泛的政治力量联系起来。我用我的具身反射来见证我们对话期间和之后发生的影响、经历和事件。我阐明了我的对话伙伴在更广泛的种族化和边缘化话语中的韧性。诗歌是从对话中转录出来的,为读者增加了论文的质量和美学,同时也是我在与治疗师战士交谈期间和之后的反思过程。诗歌作为一种对现状的反叙事有着悠久的历史,可以被视为一种非殖民化的政治行为(van Rooyen and d’abdon, 2020)。
“If Pain Could Speak, What Would It Say?” Re-lational Inter/Intra-rogation of sickle cell disease: A Poetic (Inquiry) Insight.
If pain could speak, what would it say? If it could have a form, what would it look like?
I start with these questions to illustrate the line of inquiry I am reframing as insight. The insights come from a conversation with a therapist warrior battling sickle cell disease (SCD). I use the language of therapist warrior for multiple reasons. To protect the anonymity of my conversational partner; to obscure her name but not her identity or infinite resourcefulness; to work with an archetype in a way that is congruent with the model of engagement I use within our conversations - Internal Family Systems (IFS), (Schwartz, 2013).
I work with this model in my therapy practice. I draw on it in this paper to highlight the transformational power of externalising the pain experienced by the therapist I am conversing with. I will offer an overview of the model and an overview of the new language I am introducing in relation to methodology.
IFS offers a different lens through which to view pain. Pain can be externalised as a “part”, no longer within the individual. This helps to empower the individual and their experience of pain.
In this paper, I seek to highlight the resilience of the therapist I am conversing with and raise awareness of sickle cell disease. The paper actively examines the oppression and racialisation experienced by individuals with SCD from within the health care system. Care is contested.
I use “re-lational inter-rogation/intra-rogation”, a methodology I am developing, to examine this. This way of engaging with conversational material highlights the importance of intentionally exploring relational changes after every re-connection or newfound acceptance between and within a group and connecting those insights with wider political forces.
I use my embodied reflexivity for witnessing the impact, experiences, and happenings that occur during and after our dialogue. I illuminate my conversational partner’s resilience within the wider discourse of racialisation and marginalisation.
Poems are transcribed from the conversation to add to the quality and aesthetics of the paper for the readers, as well as a reflexive process for me during and after my conversation with the therapist warrior. Poetry has a long history as a counter-narrative to the status quo and can be viewed as a decolonial, political act (van Rooyen and d’Abdon, 2020).