We talk quite a bit about motional releases here, but I think this is usually code for saying the client releases sadness along with some tears. I'm wondering at the moment about releases of other emotions, that can maybe get released from the body just the same - happiness and delight, anger and rage, for instance.
I was at a workshop at the weekend, acknowledging the full range of emotions that can get released through bodywork, and working with them. It was pretty strong stuff. We all have some ideas about handling the release of sadness - staying with the client, making sure they know it's OK, letting the release take its course, and we have talked on here before a little about tickling, and allowing releases of joy and delight, but how about the darker emotions?
Having a client releasing their rage in a safe way seems, on the face of it, a much more difficult proposition for the therapist. When a client releases their tears or laughter, we feel the response within ourselves, and, providing we are fairly secure, we can separate our own emotions from the client's and just be there to witness their feelings. Maybe it's just me, but anger and rage seem much harder to deal with - much harder to avoid getting lost in the emotion yourself. When a client is in the full flow of releasing their rage, I find it harder to acknowledge my own response to the client's emotions, and stay with the client. What do you guys think? How do you/would you work with the darker side of emotional release?
As for what got raised for me at the weekend, I'll be taking it to my own therapist to work on a little, which brings me on to supervision - when you are working with your clients emotions, which, lets face it, we all are at one level, do you have supervision yourself, or therapy, that can help you deal with what the release brings forward in your own bodymind?
I was at a workshop at the weekend, acknowledging the full range of emotions that can get released through bodywork, and working with them. It was pretty strong stuff. We all have some ideas about handling the release of sadness - staying with the client, making sure they know it's OK, letting the release take its course, and we have talked on here before a little about tickling, and allowing releases of joy and delight, but how about the darker emotions?
Having a client releasing their rage in a safe way seems, on the face of it, a much more difficult proposition for the therapist. When a client releases their tears or laughter, we feel the response within ourselves, and, providing we are fairly secure, we can separate our own emotions from the client's and just be there to witness their feelings. Maybe it's just me, but anger and rage seem much harder to deal with - much harder to avoid getting lost in the emotion yourself. When a client is in the full flow of releasing their rage, I find it harder to acknowledge my own response to the client's emotions, and stay with the client. What do you guys think? How do you/would you work with the darker side of emotional release?
As for what got raised for me at the weekend, I'll be taking it to my own therapist to work on a little, which brings me on to supervision - when you are working with your clients emotions, which, lets face it, we all are at one level, do you have supervision yourself, or therapy, that can help you deal with what the release brings forward in your own bodymind?