This article ties in with previous post "A Mad Fight" but goes the other route in elaborating about persons with physical handicaps. My first question is why does this article, the beginning of a book really, start off with 'Western' societies only? Do Eastern societies feel differently or are you implying that your research is based off of Western cultures only?
Next. With regards to the late 1960s movement, it mentions disabled persons forced to live in residential institutions. Isn't this like the forced hospitalizations that the Mad activists were going on about? Isn't this a just reason to combine forces? The Mad article talks about how they have that extra level of politics, but when I read this article and the idea of second-class citizens, I think physically disabled people have it worse. You can see the problem; you can often figure out if someone is physically disabled whether they want you to or not. Finding out if someone has a mental disorder is harder.
Just like there is the idea that "whiteness" is a social construction more than a race issue, the same can be said of the label disability. The article talks about how it's a social and environmental construct toward those with impairments, not that they're disabled - that is to say, not able.
One thing that did horrify me was The Making of Blind Men (Scott, 1969) showed that agencies would "fix" the personalities of people who are blind to fit a stereotype. This reminded me of the movie One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, and the notion that being curried basically means turning you into a zombie and the nurses don't care or even recognize you as a person. Utterly terrifying.
Friday, September 7, 2012
Thursday, September 6, 2012
"A Mad Fight"
Okay. I have to applaud disability activists and their argument over the medicalization to achieve "normal" bodies. As much as some disabilities really are able-bodied versus the disabled, most things can just be viewed as deviations from the "norm" that society hascreatedand not actually a disability. Page 340 states that these activists call for a shift in perspective from a medical model to a social one. The real hardships come from other people and their judgments, criticisms, and pity. By looking down on someone becauseoftheirdisability, they rob that person the chance to prove themselves as equals. And if they do, then they are extraordinary. Normal isn't even an option then.
The Mad activists struggle through similar battles. One of their qualms with psychiatrization is that it provides "tremendous social and psychological pressure to stay on the side of normality, or sanity" (pp 340). Yet, these same people make a lot of money and have expensive hobbies such as collecting art, which may never have been created if the artist wasn't mad. I feel that is an argument for enabling. Doesn't society encourage such things as the arts? And don't we as art therapists provide opportunities to elmore alternative forms of treatment for these samemad people? It's a paradox.
I think this may tie into the struggle that disability and Mad activists have with each other. Physically disabled persons mayn't necessarily work without be associated with crazy people and Mad activists may not view their condition as a handicap. But as the article suggests, the two factions need to team up to form a formidable coalition.
The only other thing I found worth noting was the NO FORCED TREATMENT EVER rule (pp. 348). The only question I have is, what if the person is unable to make choices? We limit kids choices because "they don't know any better" but isn't that the exact same argument? Who determines the cut off point of understanding?
The Mad activists struggle through similar battles. One of their qualms with psychiatrization is that it provides "tremendous social and psychological pressure to stay on the side of normality, or sanity" (pp 340). Yet, these same people make a lot of money and have expensive hobbies such as collecting art, which may never have been created if the artist wasn't mad. I feel that is an argument for enabling. Doesn't society encourage such things as the arts? And don't we as art therapists provide opportunities to elmore alternative forms of treatment for these samemad people? It's a paradox.
I think this may tie into the struggle that disability and Mad activists have with each other. Physically disabled persons mayn't necessarily work without be associated with crazy people and Mad activists may not view their condition as a handicap. But as the article suggests, the two factions need to team up to form a formidable coalition.
The only other thing I found worth noting was the NO FORCED TREATMENT EVER rule (pp. 348). The only question I have is, what if the person is unable to make choices? We limit kids choices because "they don't know any better" but isn't that the exact same argument? Who determines the cut off point of understanding?
Wednesday, September 5, 2012
"Opening therapy to Conversations with a Personal God"
First off, this article is great if for no other reason than that it brings up religion. In working with a client, it is important to be able to acknowledge the different facets of their life, and that includes their religious/spiritual beliefs. One of the major goals I have learned as a budding art therapist is the importance of having a safe space. A client needs to feel that they are safe and allowed to open themselves, be vulnerable, and not be judged. If a client has private and meaningful conversations with a personal God (which is a strange phrase to me. I'm assuming that this is an umbrella term since many religions have a God. It does make me feel as though the author/therapist feels that the God isn't real but is real to that person aka their personal God) and feels that they cannot share that part of them in a therapy session, then they may lose trust or gain uncertainty about the art therapist and art therapy (or any therapy really).
When Griffith brings up her experience with Susan and her mother, she talks about 'kneejerk thinking' that causes a therapist to pause or disregard a thought or idea (re: the panic disorder specialist not wanting to see Susan and her mother together, that she was too dependent on her). This is similar to what we learned in Substance Abuse class and the idea of harm reduction techniques. Just because you don't agree with something, doesn't make it right. Treating alcoholism and a mental illness together, reducing alcohol intake instead of life-long sobriety, these alternatives to blacks white thinking are what causes more success stories. So it's no surprise that the author was mistaken in her theories about Susan's personal God.
Four Certainties-->Wonder. The author breaks down the knowledge she has gained based on her personal experiences in the field and how those lead to positive results.
#1
I know what God is like for you because I know your religious denomination
#2
I know what God is like for you because I know what your language about God means
#3
I know what God is like for you because your image of God is a reflection of your early childhood attachment figures
#4
I know what God is like and you need to know God as I do.
After reading the article, it seems that the author is merely summarizing how stereotypes, archetypes, and general "common knowledge" (the stories of certainty) lead to false assumptions (the already knowingness) that limit developing a great relationship (away from curiosity and creative) (pp.127).
The four certainties can be acquainted with four general assumptions about religion that break the therapist-client relationship. In giving example of how to handle situations that may arise revolving a personal God, the author shows how itcanbe beneficial to actively listen and allow the client to sort themselves out without restriction.
When Griffith brings up her experience with Susan and her mother, she talks about 'kneejerk thinking' that causes a therapist to pause or disregard a thought or idea (re: the panic disorder specialist not wanting to see Susan and her mother together, that she was too dependent on her). This is similar to what we learned in Substance Abuse class and the idea of harm reduction techniques. Just because you don't agree with something, doesn't make it right. Treating alcoholism and a mental illness together, reducing alcohol intake instead of life-long sobriety, these alternatives to blacks white thinking are what causes more success stories. So it's no surprise that the author was mistaken in her theories about Susan's personal God.
Four Certainties-->Wonder. The author breaks down the knowledge she has gained based on her personal experiences in the field and how those lead to positive results.
#1
I know what God is like for you because I know your religious denomination
#2
I know what God is like for you because I know what your language about God means
#3
I know what God is like for you because your image of God is a reflection of your early childhood attachment figures
#4
I know what God is like and you need to know God as I do.
After reading the article, it seems that the author is merely summarizing how stereotypes, archetypes, and general "common knowledge" (the stories of certainty) lead to false assumptions (the already knowingness) that limit developing a great relationship (away from curiosity and creative) (pp.127).
The four certainties can be acquainted with four general assumptions about religion that break the therapist-client relationship. In giving example of how to handle situations that may arise revolving a personal God, the author shows how itcanbe beneficial to actively listen and allow the client to sort themselves out without restriction.
Tuesday, September 4, 2012
"Make Me Wanna Holler"
The beginning introduction to this article has already upset me. Is it because I am not white, middle class or male but grew up with little more than an inner city attitude influenced by my Puerto Rican mother who was raised in the Bronx? I don't know. But I will admit that I often find myself rolling my eyes when gender, class, or race issues arise from a privileged view point.
For example, the opening sequence shows a Latino boy being amazed, presumably because there was a white man in his neighborhood. But there is a lot to be determined. Had the kid never seen this guy before? I mean, he said "You're here". Was that a general statement (white person in the neighborhood) or toward him specifically since he's a regular due to his group meetings. Why was he amazed? Was it really for that reason? Perhaps the kid thought the guy was someone important. Why was it presumed that he ran off to tell his friends about the alien? I think this story is too general to be used for so specific a purpose. Assuming that the interaction meant one thing when it could have been anything (based on the short description and minimal dialogue) puts him in the over-generalization that writers have that he (the author) was trying to avoid (pp. 214). Maybe I'm just reading too much into this...but isn't the whole point of this class that we explore Cultural Dimensions and other outlooks? "I envied my colleagues of color who had grown up in New York, wishing that I could find a way to access their unique ability to connect and understand" (pp. 214). But isn't this the same for every person who finds themselves in a situation that they are unfamiliar with? It's not really a unique ability, it's just the ability to identify with the current population. And I know the author understands this, because he later goes on to write about how recent mental health literature on male development has a Freudian problem; that is to say, it looks at white, middle-class boys and makes it a general experience for all.
Moving on...
The author brings up a valid point in defining "whiteness"; using Javier and Herron's (2002) definition of a "social construction built from the components of economic and and educational status" shows how even people of color can be labelled as 'white' (pp 215):
Twinkie/Banana - yellow on the outside, white on the inside
Oreo - black on the outside, white on the inside Urban Dictionary: oreo
If you are well educated and come from a privileged background, then you must be white, because white people get all the good jobs and money. They can afford fancy education and so forth. They have the options, the opportunities. This is generally true and needs to be changed. Unless there is a role model or an example, kids who are taught to be one way may have trouble thinking that other possibilities exist.
I believe that the author's points on inner-city male youth are valid. Self-protection, dis-empowerment, male role models, and rage are all things that I have witnessed while working at my internship at Rice. Though not about boys, one teenage girl was upset that I was leaving and stated, "I like you because you're half-Puerto Rican like me. I don't have any role models to look up to. People think because I'm half that I don't count, but I do." These kinds of comments are unique in that you rarely hear them from white, middle-class boys. So this article is relevant in that sense. It brings awareness that there is a gap in society and in literature.
For example, the opening sequence shows a Latino boy being amazed, presumably because there was a white man in his neighborhood. But there is a lot to be determined. Had the kid never seen this guy before? I mean, he said "You're here". Was that a general statement (white person in the neighborhood) or toward him specifically since he's a regular due to his group meetings. Why was he amazed? Was it really for that reason? Perhaps the kid thought the guy was someone important. Why was it presumed that he ran off to tell his friends about the alien? I think this story is too general to be used for so specific a purpose. Assuming that the interaction meant one thing when it could have been anything (based on the short description and minimal dialogue) puts him in the over-generalization that writers have that he (the author) was trying to avoid (pp. 214). Maybe I'm just reading too much into this...but isn't the whole point of this class that we explore Cultural Dimensions and other outlooks? "I envied my colleagues of color who had grown up in New York, wishing that I could find a way to access their unique ability to connect and understand" (pp. 214). But isn't this the same for every person who finds themselves in a situation that they are unfamiliar with? It's not really a unique ability, it's just the ability to identify with the current population. And I know the author understands this, because he later goes on to write about how recent mental health literature on male development has a Freudian problem; that is to say, it looks at white, middle-class boys and makes it a general experience for all.
Moving on...
The author brings up a valid point in defining "whiteness"; using Javier and Herron's (2002) definition of a "social construction built from the components of economic and and educational status" shows how even people of color can be labelled as 'white' (pp 215):
Twinkie/Banana - yellow on the outside, white on the inside
Oreo - black on the outside, white on the inside Urban Dictionary: oreo
If you are well educated and come from a privileged background, then you must be white, because white people get all the good jobs and money. They can afford fancy education and so forth. They have the options, the opportunities. This is generally true and needs to be changed. Unless there is a role model or an example, kids who are taught to be one way may have trouble thinking that other possibilities exist.
I believe that the author's points on inner-city male youth are valid. Self-protection, dis-empowerment, male role models, and rage are all things that I have witnessed while working at my internship at Rice. Though not about boys, one teenage girl was upset that I was leaving and stated, "I like you because you're half-Puerto Rican like me. I don't have any role models to look up to. People think because I'm half that I don't count, but I do." These kinds of comments are unique in that you rarely hear them from white, middle-class boys. So this article is relevant in that sense. It brings awareness that there is a gap in society and in literature.
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