D3.5 Narrative Therapy David Denborough
D3.5 Narrative Therapy David Denborough
D3.5 Narrative Therapy David Denborough
in response to trauma
David Denborough
Dulwich Centre Foundation
Welcome
Introducing key principles through
example of working with an individual in an
isolated context how can collective
narrative practices be used in this context?
Collective documentation of skills and
knowledges
Linking storylines and songlines
Tree of Life: an approach to working with
vulnerable children
Key principles:
To find a way to richly acknowledge the
real effects of the hardship/abuse
To listen for double-storied accounts
storyline of hardship AND storyline of what
people give value to (responses to
hardship, skills and knowledge)
To link lives and experiences to some sort
of collective
To enable individuals, groups,
communities to make a contribution to the
lives of others
Nine years old, nine years young
William Prescott
Listening for the shared values,
the self-transcending ideals, that
are implicit within survivors
expressions of anguish
Noticing and acknowledging
ways in which survivors have
carried on these ideals
Making it possible for
survivors to name these
shared ideals
Inviting survivors to tell stories
about the social histories of these
ideals, where they come from,
and with whom they are shared
Creating contexts in which
survivors can contribute to the
perpetuation of these shared
ideals
Yia Marra: Good stories
that make spirits strong
The Tree of Life
narrative
approach: born
from a
collaboration
between REPSSI
and Dulwich
Centre Foundation
and between
Ncazelo Ncube &
David Denborough
Key principles:
* Riverbank position
* People always respond
* Implicit in responses are skills,
abilities and special knowledges
* There is always a social history to
these
* Rich story development
Part One
- Drawing a Tree of Life
- Riverbank position
Roots: Where we come from
rich textual heritage
Ground:
Where we live, what we do each day
Trunk: Our skills, values
- what people value/care about
- think collectively
- through the eyes of others
- trace the histories
- rich stories
Branches
Our hopes, dreams & wishes
- combination of big hopes and
smaller
- self, family, community
- hopes have a history (trace them!)
Leaves: Those who are special
to us
- Alive or no longer living
Fruits
What those special people have
given to us
Seeds
Gifts we wish to give to others
Part Two: Forest of life
- Moving from individual to
collective
Part Three: The storms of life
- Collective disclosure
- Externalising the problem
Part Four: Celebration,
certificates & song
Enabling contribution
Dulwich Centre Foundation
www.dulwichcentre.com.au
www.narrativetherapylibrary.com
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