Home Societal / Political Cross Cultural Creating and Altering Rituals

Creating and Altering Rituals

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I employ role playing with my patients quite frequently. Sometimes it involves just a brief enactment of a scene from their life. An example would be an unsatisfactory interaction with their spouse. Sometimes I surprise them with challenges they don’t expect. If they are thrown off balance it provides them with the opportunity to practice their responses and centering skills. Sometimes I switch roles with my patients, with them assuming my therapist chairs and I theirs. My goal is to provide them with the opportunities of stepping out of their patient role and for me to enter into their frame of experiencing. Role plays can be helpful in rehearsing life challenges. They can also add resolution to situations that are physically difficult. Our patient may be able to express strong feelings to a parent or spouse who is no longer alive or available for dialogue.

There is much more to say about role playing “as-if”. I believe that role playing is an extremely valuable technique for helping the movement from realm of just words, talking about life problems, to the realm of feeling and action, although in a hypothetical situation. Courage, action in the presence of fear, creativity and imagination are at the heart of role playing. One particularly powerful role play technique I like, is George Kelly’s fixed-role therapy. In this “fixed-role” the patient is first asked to write a third person character sketch of himself. It is a sketch that might have been written by an intimate friend who knows the patient extremely well. The sketch is written as if the patient were going to be portrayed as the principal character in a play. “The object is to see how he structure himself.”  After the patient submits this sketch, the therapist studies it and prepares what is an enactment sketch.

This is a character sketch of a fictional person who shares many characteristics with the patient—but is different in at least one important dimension. The fictional character is not the patient’s psychological opposite, but he is importantly different. The difference may be intentionally drawn from the patient’s self- portrait—but is more often within a dimension that the patient has not even mentioned in his self-characterization.

The patient is asked to read the enactment sketch in session and his reaction is closely monitored. The patient is asked two questions: 1) whether he feels this other character seems genuine, and 2) whether this person is someone he would like to know. If his response is yes to both questions, he is asked to make an important time limited commitment in the form of a secret personal experiment. It is important that this experiment begin immediately in session. Importantly, the patient does not inform anyone including his spouse about the experiment. The enactment would simply become an exercise in acting if others were aware of it. When the patient receives feedback that he seems to be acting differently or strangely, it means that he is successful in his enactment.

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