Selasa, 28 Desember 2010

Museum programs for Alzheimer's patients show the power of art as therapy

Monday, December 27, 2010
One woman told docent Kathe Patrinos she didn't like the painting Ms. Patrinos was leading a discussion about during a tour of the Carnegie Museum of Art by a special group from a senior care facility. The visitor said it was too confusing, and when the docent asked why, she was thrilled to get a response.
Another time, an adult day-care patient from the same group, from Presbyterian SeniorCare's Woodside Place, Oakmont, was so taken by a piece of religious art he had seen that he couldn't stop talking about it at home that night.
"That was my first experience that this was so powerful," said Woodside art therapist Kara Berringer, who first approached the Carnegie about doing the tours.
"This" is the apparent benefits of "In the Moment," a 21/2-year-old, monthly tour program for Woodside patients with Alzheimer's disease and other forms of dementia.
The program, modeled on programs on art for people with dementia at the Museum of Modern Art in New York, has been so successful that the Carnegie is expanding it. This past fall, it started doing tours several times a month with residents from Sunrise Senior Living in Upper St. Clair, and docent program coordinator Mary Ann Perkins also is talking to other groups about doing the same thing with them.
In addition, the Carnegie is going to extend "In the Moment" to individuals and their family member or caregiver beginning in April. Those twosomes will be combined into groups of 12 -- just as they are in MoMA's highly successful "Meet Me at the MoMA" program, which attracts 100 persons a month.
The cost for both Carnegie tours is $10 per twosome, so if a group of six patients and six caregivers or family members comes from a facility or social organization the cost would be $60. Standard admission for seniors is $12.
It's a small price for a big payback.
"Art appreciation and making art hold immense potential to impact quality of life," said Jennifer Lingler, an assistant professor at the University of Pittsburgh who also works as director of education and information core of the Alzheimer Disease Research Center within the medical school's department of psychiatry. Dr. Lingler spoke at a recent workshop the Carnegie held for docents who wanted to train in the expanded program and for the public.
Pitt's center has partnered with the Andy Warhol Museum for smaller programs of art for persons with dementia that have included an artist-in-residence, tours with discussions, and art-making.
The opportunities Dr. Lingler spoke of are numerous, said Amir Parsa, director of MoMA's Alzheimer's Project, a MetLife Foundation-funded program by which the museum is spreading its expertise and encouraging similar programs for patients with Alzheimer's to museums nationally and internationally.
Mr. Parsa, who serves as a lecturer and educator at MoMA as well, also spoke at the Carnegie workshop and during a subsequent interview. He enumerated the specific benefits of both tours and the art-making projects for small groups of patients that MoMA also sponsors. The programs were evaluated by the New York University School of Medicine.
Effects on participants in general, the NYU med school study showed, included caregivers reporting fewer problems during the week following their visit; both caregivers and patients reporting elevated mood; caregivers reporting an increase in social support; and patients reporting elevated self-esteem.
"It's a beautiful experience," said Ms. Perkins. "The caregiver enjoys the art with the loved one. They're outside the care facility ... [the caregivers] are creating a memory of their loved one."
Ms. Berringer said, "I see them making connections with other people. They sit up a little taller. They talk a little louder. I really think their behavior changes when they leave [Woodside] and go out in the community. It happens on other trips, too, but especially the museum.
"Kathe meets them at the door: 'Hey, Bob,' and he says, 'Hey, what are you selling today?' That's what's so different.
"And I also think they make a connection with the artwork. They see part of their life in the artwork. It's a metaphor for them. [They might] comment on past professions, how they lived."
Ms. Patrinos and Mr. Parsa both have experienced patients finding connections in art to their past lives.
Ms. Patrinos was doing a tour on the theme "Hats Off to Art," discussing works that had people wearing hats in them.
She had taken the group to a work by Mary Cassatt showing two women, one seated and wearing a hat and the other standing, without a hat.
"This woman had not said a word [to that point] and we already had seen three or four paintings and all of a sudden she started talking.
"I was floored. She was talking in sentences. Three or four words," Ms. Patrinos said. "After the fact, I found out from Woodside ... she used to be a buyer for Gimbels, so talking about clothes and hats triggered something and had great interest for her."
Mr. Parsa had taken a group to see Marc Chagall's "I and the Village."
"The husband [who was the patient] started, on seeing that, talking about where his mother was buried and talked about the experience, and the wife had never heard that," Mr. Parsa said. "It's a catalyst for conversation that may not occur in other circumstances."
According to Mr. Parsa's workshop presentation, the patients' engagement with art allows:
• An opportunity for personal growth.
• An exchange of ideas without relying on short-term memory.
• Opportunity to access long-term memories.
• New insight into others' ideas and interests.
• A means to make connections between individual experience and the world at large.
• A social setting that allows connection to one's peers.
• A respite, both physically and psychologically.
The tours last between one and 11/2 hours, with the groups looking at four or five works of art for an average of 15 to 20 minutes each.
The discussions are inquiry-based not lecture-centered, and the questions are not based on presumption of prior art knowledge like "Who knows who Picasso is?" Rather, Mr. Parsa demonstrated when he led the prospective docents on a tour of the Carnegie, they are questions that can engage everyone, like "What do you see?" or "What do you think of the colors the artist has used?"
The conversation also is "scaffolded," Mr. Parsa said, which means that the conversation goes through several layers to make it more fruitful. A key component is that it allows connection with artworks and interpretations by participants while they are at ease and feel their participation is legitimate.
Care is taken to look the patients in the eyes and not to direct the conversations on two levels, one with caregivers and one with patients. Everyone in the group is treated as equal.
At some point during the tour, the docent does what is known as a "turn and talk," in which he or she has the group turn and break into subgroups to address certain topics. As an example during the docents' workshop, he told them to imagine who they would put into a painting they were looking at and at what site it would be.
"Then people, shyer people, those who can't project as much [can be encouraged to talk]," Mr. Parsa said. "They don't have to move, they just turn their chairs. It's a cool, social thing. ...
"What's fascinating about that is sometimes they follow directions; sometimes they don't. [But] there's a lot of sharing, laughter."
The lasting effects of these art tours is perhaps best exemplified by one of Ms. Patrinos' experiences with a patient from Woodside.
"I hadn't done the tour the month before," she said. "As he was coming in in his wheelchair, he said, 'I was here last time and you weren't.' We all stood for a moment with our mouths open because it was two months since he'd seen me. I was floored and so were the caretakers from Woodside. It was exciting to know from the consistency of the building he remembered something. That was the first 'aha!' moment for me."
For more information or to register by individual or group for "In the Moment" tours call 412-622-3289.

Pohla Smith: psmith@post-gazette.com or 412-263-1228.

First published on December 27, 2010 at 12:00 am


Read more: http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/10361/1113361-114.stm#ixzz19PtBV0tJ

Selasa, 14 Desember 2010

Grieving All The Way: 12 Gifts to Cope with Grief during the 12 Days of Christmas


http://www.parentingtoolbox.com/2010/12/08/grieving-all-the-way-12-ways-to-cope-with-grief-during-the-12-days-of-christmas/

by Ron Huxley on December 8, 2010
i

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“Grieving boys,
Grieving girls,
Grieving in the home.
Oh what terrible pain it is
when you lose someone you love.”
(Loosely sung to the tune of Jingle Bells).


This song is not meant to be disrespectful. It is meant to demonstrate how disrespectful society can be to children who are grieving the loss of a loved one. Christmas is supposed to be a magical time of the year. Children, who have lost someone they love to death or divorce, shouldn’t have the wintertime blues, should they? They should be dreaming of a white Christmas, not having their dreams shattered, right? The true story of Christmas is that many children are grieving the loss of loved ones during this season, causing Christmas morning to turn into Christmas mourning. Parents can help their children by giving them twelve gifts, for the twelve days of Christmas, to help them cope during this painful time:

Gift # 1: Educate yourself about grief. Parents can unwittingly pass on their anxieties and fears to their children. Even the best actors will give themselves away. Children are tuned into adult’s nonverbal signals. Trying to hide painful feelings or awkward emotions will only increase children’s anxieties. They will assume they are “bad” or “responsible” for the absence of the loved one. Instead of hiding your emotions, learn about the stages of grief by reading books on the subject, attending support groups for families of loss, or working with a qualified family therapist. The better you care for yourself, the better you can care for your child.

Gift # 2: Let children teach you about grief. Children respond to loss in different ways. No way is the right way. Let children teach you how they think, feel and respond to the loss. Walk along side the child in his or her personal journey. Notice the path and scenery as well as the direction you are headed. If children are taking a destructive route (suicide or self-harm) steer them in a different direction. Don’t wait till you are stepping over the edge. Be on the look out early in the journey for upcoming dangers. Talk to qualified educators and therapists about the warning signs of suicide, chronic depression, unrealistic fears and other self-destructive behaviors if you are concerned.

Gift # 3: Wrap your child in relationship. Just as you would wrap a Christmas present in beautiful wrapping, with string and ribbons, you can wrap your child in relationship. Healing comes in connection with healthy people. It doesn’t make up for the loss, but it does provide children with a safe environment to heal. This requires that parents spend quality time with children and permit free expression of thoughts and feelings about the loss. If a child doesn’t want to spend time with a parent or healthy adult, give him or her some space but remain available to them. Occasionally ask them how they are feeling about the loss and stay involved, physically and emotionally.

Gift # 4: Talk openly and honestly about the loss. Many cultures avoid the topic of grief. Because the person is gone we want the painful feelings to be gone too. This isn’t how grief works. Grief has its own time and space to do the work of healing in children’s lives. Children need to be able to talk openly and honestly about the loss. They may have questions that can’t be answered easily. Don’t avoid them. If you don’t know the answer to the question be honest and say so. Never tell children silly stories or lies, by saying, “Grandpa went away on a trip.”

Gift # 5: Don’t wait for the big talk. Use little, everyday experiences to talk to children about loss. If you find a bird has died in your yard or the gold fish dies in the fish tank, use that time to talk about your child’s thoughts and feelings around their loss. When your child’s friends move away and go to another school talk about how that feels in relation to mom and dad’s divorce. Treat loss as a “serious curiosity.” Children are naturally curious and talking about your thoughts, feelings, and ideas about loss can be an equally natural experience.

Gift # 6: Respect children’s responses, however negative they may be. Some of children’s responses to loss might be unpleasant (grumpy, rude, oppositional), unattractive (poor hygiene, messy room, poor grades) or even frightening (inconsolable crying, insomnia, and refusal to eat). Take the necessary steps to respond to their responses. Don’t judge them or shame them. Respect their responses as one of many ways to cope with a difficult, overwhelming situation. Of course, not all responses are constructive. Stop destructive ones, but do it in a sensitive manner. In addition, children should not be allowed to set their own limits by avoiding responsibilities and rules. Continue to set limits while being flexible and understanding.

Gift # 7: Expect and understand that your child may have bodily reactions to loss. When children’s hearts hurt, so do their bodies. They may experience some somatic problems such as stomach aches or headaches. This can be perfectly normal and if not due to a physical problem, will go away with time and support. Always check these bodily reactions out with a physician to be sure. If conditions persist without any known physical causes consult with a child or family therapist.

Gift # 8: If someone has died allow the child to attend the funeral. Although children are young they need to participate in a ceremony designed to say goodbye to a loved one and find some emotional closure. Although you should never force a child to go to a funeral, don’t exclude them either. Let them set the pace for each part of the ceremony. At each step of the way, ask them if they wish to participate. They may be comfortable attending a service but not viewing an open casket. Respect their wishes. Have someone who can take them home or wait outside with them if you wish to continue and they do not.

Gift # 9: If the loss does not involve a death or a funeral, create a ceremony to perform with the child. Rituals, traditions and ceremonies are important physical markers of our emotional territory. They create a solid boundary for starting and stopping an activity or relationship. In the case of a divorce, no ceremony exists for a child to gain closure. Make a special dinner and eat it in memory of the person who has left. Find rituals to mark the goings and coming of children from mom’s house to dad’s house. During the Christmas holiday, find special ways to celebrate that are uniquely different from the past such as caroling, doing volunteer work, baking breads, hanging a special ornament, reciting a spiritual message, etc.


Gift # 10: Give children permission to feel relief without it being interpreted as a lack of love. In some circumstances the loss of a loved one may bring relief. For example, a family member may have suffered from a chronic illness that produced great physically pain for the victim as well as emotional pain for the family. A divorce may result in the reduction of abuse (verbal, emotional, or physical) that occurred in the home prior to one parent leaving. Children may interpret this relief as a lack of love for the loved one. Explain the differences and give them permission to feel relief that the pain has stopped, not their love.
Gift # 11: Focus on the spiritual. Use times of loss as motivations to learn more about your religious beliefs and elements of your culture. Great comfort can be found in this neglected aspect of us. Turn to your religious and cultural leaders for support. Read age appropriate materials with your child on religious and cultural thoughts. Attend religious and cultural functions. Don’t worry that you won’t have all the spiritual answers to loss. That really isn’t the point. Although you will find some answers, the greatest benefit is recapturing or nurturing your spiritual self.




Gift # 12: Prepare for hard work. Grieving is complicated. Fortunately, it is also natural. If you trust the process the work will not be as hard as when you resist it. If you or your child have not been comfortable expressing your feelings, in the past, grieving may be harder. But it will not be impossible. In fact, grieving is inevitable. Let it do its work in you so that you and your child can do the work of grieving and in so doing, have a merrier Christmas!


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Kamis, 09 Desember 2010

GW Seeking Child Art Therapy Professor

Due to recent life events, we are currently seeking professors to teach the Child Art Therapy course which is scheduled for Spring 2011 semester.

This is a 2cr. course and there are 2 sections of the course with 15 students each.
It is currently scheduled for Tuesday and Thursday from 6-7:30pm.
There is already a developed syllabus that could be used as is, or tweaked to reflect your individual expertise. Each course allows for 3 invited local lecturers who can bring in additional expertise and knowledge.
Requirements include:
-- currently working with children or extensive recent history and case examples
-- ability to teach Lowenfeld's stages and the Kramer assessment
-- ideally, experience with teaching or presenting

The semester begins January 10th, therefore, unfortunately, we are in a bit of a rush to find suitable professors and to allow for time to prepare for the course. One professor could teach both sections, or two professors could be hired each to teach a section.
If you are interested, please email a cover letter with your intent and philosophy of teaching (please include whether you are interested in one or both sections) and your CV/resume' to artx@gwu.edu
In the subject life, type "Child Course."

I look forward to hearing from you. If you have questions, email me at hbardot@gwu.edu

Please feel free to pass this along to other interested professionals.

Heidi Bardot

Kamis, 02 Desember 2010

What is Transpersonal Counseling Psychology?

At Naropa we earn a degree in Transpersonal Counseling Psychology: Art Therapy.  Many people haven't heard of Transpersonal Psychology and Naropa just made a little explanatory video that turned out pretty cool. Check it out if you want to know more about what the heck we're doing at Naropa!


Visit this link: Naropa TCP Video

Rabu, 01 Desember 2010

Tracy's Kids' upcoming show at Carroll Square Gallery


Opening Reception: Friday, December 3
6 pm – 8 pm

Carroll Square Gallery
975 F Street NW
Washington DC 20004
www.carrollsquare.com

Gallery Open During Business Hours
Monday through Friday, 8 am – 6 pm

Tracy's Kids Art Therapy Program helps young cancer patients and their families cope with the emotional stress and trauma of cancer and its treatment. Our mission is to ensure that the children and families we serve are emotionally equipped to fight cancer as actively as possible—and prepared for the time when they are cancer free.

Tracy's Kids uses art therapy to engage with young patients, their siblings and parents so that they can express feelings and reflect on their treatment experiences. The program—which began at the Lombardi Cancer Center in 1991 and is based on the model developed there—employs Master's trained, Board Certified art therapists to address the multi-faceted needs of children with cancer through art and play therapy. The Art Therapists work directly with physicians, nurses and other medical personnel and are integrated as members of each child's treatment team.

Today, well over 70% of children diagnosed with cancer will beat the disease and live the overwhelming majority of their lives cancer free. Tracy's Kids is dedicated to helping to ensure that the children we serve are ready to live full, happy and healthy lives.

The program—which is offered at no charge to the patient and his or her siblings—works in hospitals, freestanding clinics and other appropriate settings. Our goal is to provide a child-centered, open studio approach for inpatients and outpatients and to interact with the children while they are receiving infusions and other treatments. We welcome the chance to work with siblings and parents because we know that the entire family is affected when a child has cancer.

Our program locations are: Lombardi Cancer Center at Georgetown University Children’s Medical Center, Children’s National Medical Center, Children’s Center for Cancer and Blood Disorders of Northern Virginia, and Inova Fairfax Hospital’s Life with Cancer Center. To learn more about us, visit us at www.tracyskids.org or email tracy@tracyskids.org
.

Selasa, 30 November 2010

Identifying Learning Problems in Adopted Children


When adopted kids struggle in school, clues from their past and present can help pinpoint the cause.

By Annie Stuart

When you made the choice to adopt a child, you took a leap of faith at least one bound beyond that taken by other parents. And, if your child is challenged by learning or attention problems, your parenting path may now seem strewn with "speed bumps" caused by these overlapping issues.
Learning disabilities (LD) and Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (AD/HD) are certainly not unique to adopted children. But as an overlay to adoption, they present unique challenges - and questions. For example, where does your child's pre-adoption history fit into the mix, along with genetics and her current environment? And how can you begin to interpret her personality or learning style when so much of her history is missing or incomplete?
Still, remember this: as the care-giving parent, you know your child best. Many highly capable adoptive parents who encounter LD and/or AD/HD for the first time often doubt their own parenting abilities until they understand the complexities of these disorders. Combine your intimate knowledge of your child with the information that follows. This may help you better identify, understand, and manage any learning difficulties your child has.

High Rates of AD/HD and LD Among Adopted Children

The Barker Foundation, the nation's first cooperative adoption agency, conducted a 1996 survey with the parents of 500 adopted children. Thirty percent of these children had some type of learning or attention problem. A 1991 New Jersey study by Brodzinsky and Steiger also looked at the high numbers of adoptees in special education. Adopted children made up about 5 to 7 percent of the children studied with neurological, perceptual, or emotional problems. Yet, they represented only 1 to 2 percent of the general population of children.
Could these kinds of numbers partly reflect a hawk-like vigilance common to caring adoptive parents, who are likely to follow up on any apparent problem? Possibly. Another reason may be that adopted children tend to have "externalized," or more visible, types of psychological problems. These might show up, for example, in the hyperactive and impulsive behavior often seen in AD/HD. Because parents find such behaviors more challenging, they often seek professional help sooner.

Potential Contributors to Learning Problems in Adoptees

Studies like those cited above have led researchers to further speculate about the causes of learning and emotional challenges in adopted children. Any of the following factors may contribute:
Your child's pre-adoption history:
  • Poor prenatal care, including drug or alcohol exposure

  • Complications at birth

  • Malnutrition, neglect, abuse, or time spent in foster care or an orphanage

  • Genetics

Your child's post-adoption history:
  • Trouble learning a second language if adopted as an older child from a different country or culture

  • Anxiety caused by dealing with having been adopted and the concept of birth parents having "given her away"

  • Insecurity due to being a different race or simply having a different physical appearance than her adoptive parents

  • Attachment problems, which are believed to result from a lack of reliable protection and nurturance early in life. This condition, which may disproportionately affect adopted children, interferes with a child's ability to form secure emotional bonds with her adoptive parents.

Early experiences that can lead to attachment disorder may also have a profound impact on a child's learning. That's because the brain pathways responsible for social perceptions, emotion, and empathy are the same ones that regulate communication and organization of memory. Higher levels of certain brain chemicals caused by chronic stress or trauma can damage a part of the brain called the hippocampus, making it hard to create and retain memories needed for learning.
Of course there are several factors other than adoption that may contribute to learning problems. Genetics may play a crucial role, particularly when it comes to AD/HD; there is a five-fold increase in the incidence of AD/HD among first-degree relatives. And don't overlook a broad range of other potential factors, including your child's current school situation, home, or social life.

Sorting Through the Complexity of Adoption Issues

It may be a challenge to sort out how all of these things affect your child's learning and development. You may want to start with some basic questions, such as these:
Your child's pre-adoption history:
  • Do you know the birth parents'histories? If so, try to find out if there is a history of alcohol or drug abuse.

  • Do you know if anyone in the child's birth family has a learning disability or AD/HD?

  • Do you know if anyone in the child's birth family has a significant mental health disorder?

  • What else can you learn about your child's pre-adoption history?

Your child's post-adoption history:
  • Does your child seem plagued by anxiety? Does she have physical tics or obsessions? Does she talk about adoption in an anxious way or refuse to talk about it at all?

  • Is your child very fearful, intolerant of physical closeness, or lacking in empathy? These can be signs of attachment problems.

  • Was your child adopted at an older age and required to learn a second language in her adoptive home and country? Has this posed a problem for her?

  • Is there a discrepancy between your child's apparent intellect and effort and her academic performance? If so, it's possible the core problem is a learning disability. If no specific learning disability is found, it's possible the core problem may be AD/HD (hyperactivity is not always present).

Answering these questions may help you begin to identify your child's main challenge and provide helpful information if you go ahead with a professional assessment. From time to time, also try to determine which issue - adoption or learning - is having a greater impact on your child. But remember that dealing with adoption may be the burning issue for your child, even when it remains a quiet, internal process. Following are some other approaches that may help you both.

Helping your Child Cope With Anxiety

Fears about the future are not uncommon in adopted children, particularly in those who were older when they were adopted. For this and other reasons, an adopted child may find times of transition trying. That's because the routines and structures that provide a sense of security are suspended. Fear can emerge around major changes like adjusting to a new teacher, or smaller ones like moving from one activity to another during the day.
An adopted child with a learning disability may worry that her birth parents placed her for adoption because she's "stupid." Intensifying things even more, children often become aware of these two differences - adoption and learning problems - at about the same time, at around age 6 or 7. Anxiety about all of this can further interfere with learning. As one first-grader put it, "The worry takes up too much of my brain, and then I can't think."
Here are a few ways you can help reduce your child's anxiety:
  • Ease transitions, such as the beginning of the school year, by taking your child to tour her new classroom and meet her new teacher.

  • Focus less on academics early in the school year and more on your child building relationships with her teacher and peers.

  • Alert the teacher to times and places that might trigger painful memories in your child. Provide information about patterns observed at home. Share bits of your child's history (from before and after adoption) that you think the teacher may find helpful.

  • Encourage your child to succeed, and show satisfaction with her progress. Balance this with realism so she doesn't get the message that perfection is a prerequisite for being allowed to stay with her "forever family." You may have invested a lot to create this family. Don't let that overburden you or your child with unreasonably high expectations.

  • Let your child know that you understand learning isn't easy, but that you value and love her for who she is; tell her specific things you appreciate about her often.

  • Celebrate small achievements and redefine success as "doing your best," rather than getting the highest grade.

Helping a Child with Attention Problems

If your child struggles with attention problems, you can try a few management strategies that will help you both a great deal. Establishing solid, clear communication with your child early on will help her both at school and at home.

Seeking Educational Evaluations

How will you know if your child needs extra help in school? First of all, trust your instincts. If you feel something isn't quite right, it won't hurt to seek advice. Early intervention is best. And having the problem identified may help you to stop taking things personally, while helping your child to become less frustrated. The first step may involve a pre-referral process through your public school. If additional assessment is needed, you can request either a school or private assessment. You may find referrals to private resources through community adoption support networks, your adoption agency, or a local mental health agency. If possible, find a trusted person who is knowledgeable about both assessment and adoption.

Keep Your Chin Up

By now, you know that the parenting path isn't always easy. Yours may have a few more twists and turns than most. And you may find it frustrating that usual sources of support - family and friends - lack sensitivity or understanding about adoption and LD or AD/HD. But a wealth of resources awaits you, including support groups for adoptive parents or for parents of kids with learning problems. Once your child has received a diagnosis, you can make progress in obtaining the support she needs, whether that's special education services or accommodations, tutoring, medical care, counseling, or a combination of these interventions. Even though there are some "speed bumps" in your path, just knowing where they are will allow you and your child to develop skills to navigate them safely. Just slow down, keep your destination in mind, and enjoy the journey.

References

  • When Adoption and Learning-Attention Difficulties Overlap: The Impact on the Adoptive Family.
    Allen, R. Barker Foundation, 1996.

  • ADHD and Conduct Disorder in Adopted Children
    by Barbara D. Ingersoll, PhD, ADHD Report/Russell A. Barkley & Associates (August 1998)

  • Assessment "Blues" and Adoption
    by Janina Nadaner



Senin, 29 November 2010

New Movie features Art Therapy!

I haven't seen the movie yet...though I'm planning on it soon...but I was pleased to see that art therapy (also recreation and music therapy) was included in the movie "It's Kind of a Funny Story" as a part of this teen's treatment. Wonderful!

It's Kind of a Funny Story

The movie starts on a bridge—both literally and figuratively. In the opening scene, distressed 16-year-old Craig (Keir Gilchrist) climbs out on a bridge. Filled with teenage angst inside and facing a crazy, messed-up world outside, Craig is overwhelmed and tempted to end it all.

When he wakes up and realizes he's just had another suicide-themed dream, and that they're getting more vivid, he also realizes he's teetering on a bridge between sanity and craziness. Afraid he's headed in a dangerous direction, he climbs out of bed without waking his parents or younger sister and bikes himself to the nearest hospital in his Brooklyn neighborhood.

After explaining to the attending physician his stress over his demanding pre-professional magnet school, his crush on his best friend's girlfriend, his forthcoming application to a prestigious summer program, his over-busy father and overwrought mother, his tendency to puke when stressed, not to mention global warming and the economy—as well as his suicide dreams and the fact that he recently took himself off Zoloft—Craig gets himself checked into the psych ward.

Keir Gilchrist as Craig
Keir Gilchrist as Craig

Since the teen wing is under renovation, Craig is put in with the adults for his five-day minimum stay. He's soon introduced to Bobby (Zach Galifianakis), the gregarious man-child who shows him around 3 North (the adult wing) and introduces him to the amenities (the art room, the rec room) and the locals (the doped-out, the delusional, and the delightful Noelle, a fellow displaced teen).

At first Craig is even more stressed—he was hoping for a quick cure that wouldn't keep him out of school for so long. And he's a bit freaked out by all the people who are dealing with more serious issues, like his mumbling, bed-bound roommate. Instead of rescuing him, Craig's parents arrive with some of his things and the advice to do whatever the doctors recommend.

Zach Galifianakis as Bobby
Zach Galifianakis as Bobby

In the following days Craig attends art therapy, has meandering and meaningful conversations with Bobby, slowly opens his heart to Noelle (Emma Roberts), tries to get to the root of his issues with Dr. Minerva (Viola Davis), and tries to explain to his friends via the payphone in the hall where he is and why. It's in all these human interactions that the magic of the movie happens—the a-ha moments, the small awakenings, the baby steps toward a healthier reality.

The most compelling moments are between Craig and Bobby. Their conversations are deep and revealing without seeming too clever or overwritten. Gilchrist and Galifianakis imbue their characters with warmth, wit, and quirky charm. Only Craig's parents (Lauren Graham and Jim Gaffigan) start to veer into caricature territory with some of their classic yuppie faults.

Sure, this is a relatively sanitized look at depression and other mental disorders, but then again 3 North is a temporary facility for those who struggle. The hard-core cases would be in a more permanent location. Thankfully the film avoids some common trappings of movie mental wards—out of touch doctors, sadistic orderlies, rampant overmedication. These patients are merely people on the verge—walking that tightrope with brokenness, pluck, and yes, some only-in-the-movies charm.

Emma Roberts as Noelle
Emma Roberts as Noelle

Though most of the film happens in the hospital ward, there are a couple scenes of stylization—when Craig draws some intricate city scenes that come to life and when all the patients sing a rousing version of "Under Pressure" in music therapy class and are magically transformed into a rocking music video. The latter scene is a lovely tribute to the way music and community can elevate us for a few joyful, transcendent moments.

What seeps through all these scenes is a surprising, compelling celebration of life. The film seems to be communicating that life is crazy, and those who stop—and sometimes need to check in—to acknowledge that are merely wise enough to embrace the truth and seek the help they need to navigate the maze. In the moving forward, in the coming together to help those who need it, there is hope. The film doesn't depict an eternal hope, but a hope based on friendship, love, communication, music, art, laughter, truth—some of the better things offered to us by the One who is eternal hope.


The scenes between Bobby and Craig are the best part of the film
The scenes between Bobby and Craig are the best part of the film

The ending is a bit pat and over-sweet, but the voiceover kind of acknowledges that, which somehow makes it mostly okay. They can't all be tragic endings, right? The beauty here is that a movie about depression and people on the verge can be a sweet, funny, life-affirming story. And perhaps that's the funniest part about this charming little film.










Other reviews' references to art therapy in the movie:

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=130195398

"After quickly decoding his own plight — with some help from art therapy and the ward's shrink (Viola Davis) — Craig starts fixing other patients."

http://www.fdhsnews.com/2010/11/08/its-kind-of-a-funny-story/

"Accordingly, Craig’s drawings, or “brain maps,” serve as an animated entree into his vivid imagination and bring the audience more insight into the character. Inspired by the book’s original cover, Curious Pictures, a New York-based company specializing in animation, design, and graphics, produced the sequences. Animation/paintings creative supervisor Dominie Mahl recruited Brian Drucker, an artist with a background in architecture, to submit an illustration for consideration.

The animator adds, “This story affected me, so I wanted to keep a human scale and touch to the drawings. I drew by hand, then colored in with the computer and built up everything into three dimensions.” Mahl elaborated, “Given Craig’s age, we had to make sure that the work was done to display natural talent but not years of experience. Given the particular stage of his life that he’s in, the colors had to be more thoughtful than perky. This artwork comes forth as something of a revelation for Craig.”

Boden comments, “With his drawings, Craig rediscovers a hidden artistic talent-and is encouraged to do so by his fellow patients and through art therapy.”

Ned Vizzini, age 29. Los Angeles, CA. (author of the book the movie is based on)

"When I went into a psychiatric hospital for a week-long stay for depression and 'suicidal ideation' in November 2004, I found myself with a lot of time on my hands. Although I'm a writer by profession I decided to try and do abstract art. I limited my color palette and tried to just make pleasing shapes with Cray-Pas on paper. The goal was to see the colors blend well and to bring motion to the composition. I ended up really liking these drawings, and I used the art-therapy angle when I made the main character of my subsequent novel It's Kind of a Funny Story draw 'brain maps' during his own hospital stay. In a real way, these are the drawings that inspired the brain maps."



Watch the trailer below:


Press Release for Creative Wellbeing Workshops, LLC

November 2010

Gioia Chilton, MA, ATR-BC and Rebecca Wilkinson, MA, ATR-BC have just launched
their new business, Creative Wellbeing Workshops, LLC. Creative Wellbeing
Workshops provides interactive training and workshops that blend the cutting
edge research of positive psychology, the "science of well-being," with the
benefits of art therapy.

Gioia and Rebecca started this work several years ago, after being introduced to
Positive Psychology by Lani Gerity. Rebecca and Gioia were struck by the
relevance of positive psychology to art therapy and the complimentary potential
of the two fields.

Positive psychology is the study of positive emotions, positive character, and
the positive institutions and communities that facilitate their development.
Positive psychologists suggest that the prevailing model of psychology, with its
focus on illness and symptoms, does not reflect a balanced view of human
potential and that focusing on strengths, increasing positive emotions, and
identifying meaning and hope may be more effective in increasing wellbeing.
These principles fit naturally with art therapy which has long been valued for
its ability to showcase and develop clients' strengths and to improve quality of
life.

Gioia and Rebecca have suggested a new term, "Positive Art Therapy" which
combines the healing potential of art therapy with the empowering focus of
positive psychology. Positive art therapy utilizes the creative process to
enhance positive emotions, identify and develop positive character and
strengths, and foster positive communities. They are looking to partner with
other art therapists, artists, mental health practitioners, positive
psychologists, community organizations, educational and governmental
institutions, who are interested in promoting the connection between creativity
and wellbeing.

Creative Wellbeing Workshops works with individuals seeking to feel happier,
more engaged, more creative, in their personal and professional lives; with
organizations and employers wishing to foster greater job satisfaction and
higher productivity in their employees; and with mental health practitioners who
wish re-energize their practice by incorporating state of the art research on
well-being and creativity into their practice.

Gioia and Rebecca, who have been friends since attending GW in the early 90's,
are enjoying the new direction their work is taking them. "We love doing this
work and our participants can tell. They really enjoy the fun we have
together—and it's really fabulous seeing the transformation that people undergo
as they explore these new concepts." Visit Gioia and Rebecca's website at
http://www.creativewellbeingworkshops.com/
, or contact them directly at either r.wilkinson@creativewellbeingworkshops.com
or g.chilton@creativewellbeingworkshops.com. or 202 352 5225.

References:

Chilton, G. & Wilkinson, R.A. (2009). Positive art therapy: Envisioning the
intersection of art therapy and positive psychology. Australia and New Zealand
Journal of Art Therapy, 4(1), 27-35.


Gerity, L. (2007). The Artist's Happiness Challenge Condensed Version.
Available from:
http://www.lulu.com/product/ebook/happiness-challenge-condensed-version/2990086





Rabu, 24 November 2010

Mental Introspection Increases as Brain Areas Begin to Act in Sync

ScienceDaily (Nov. 16, 2010) — Neuroscientists at Georgetown University Medical Center can now show, using functional MRI images, why it is that behavior in children and young adolescents veers toward the egocentric rather than the introspective.

In findings presented at the annual meeting of the Society for Neuroscience in San Diego on Nov. 14, the researchers say that the five scattered regions in the brain that make up the default-mode network (DMN) have not started working in concert in youngsters aged six to nine. These areas light up in an fMRI scan, but not simultaneously.

The DMN is only active when the mind is at rest and allowed to wander or daydream. This network is believed to be key in how a person introspectively understands themselves and others, and forms beliefs, intentions, and desires through autobiographical memory.

By ages 10 to 12, the researchers found that these diffuse regions start functioning together as a unit, and at ages 13 to19, they acted in concert, just like they do in adults.

"These results suggest that children develop introspection over time as their brains develop," says the study's first author, neuroscientist Stuart Washington, Ph.D., who will be presenting the results. "Before then they are somewhat egocentric, which is not to mean that they are negatively self-centered, but they think that everyone views the world in the same way they do. They lack perspective in that way."

In this study, the researchers sought to understand if connectivity between distant regions in the brain increases with age. They chose the DMN to study in part because it consists of a widespread system of neuronal nodes that work together, but are linked in a way that is not yet well understood. (These discrete nodes could be physically connected by neuronal synapses or they could fire together and not be connected.)
Previous research has suggested that the DMN is not well synchronized in many autistic individuals, and this may explain the perceptions many of these individuals express in testing -- a viewpoint that is also seen in younger children who do not have autism, Washington says.

An example that illustrates the difference between an egocentric and an introspective view is the simple puzzle, Washington says: "Jane" walks into a room, and puts a marble in a closet, and then "Bill" comes in and takes the marble out of the closet and puts it into a box. Jane comes back in and looks for the marble and she has not spoken to Bill. Where does she look for the marble?

The right answer, of course, is that she looks in the closet. But many autistic individuals say Jane looks in the box, "because they know that the marble is in the box and they think that everyone else knows that," Washington says. The ability to see the world from the perspective of others is called "Theory of Mind" (ToM) and certain nodes of the DMN have been associated with it. The failure to develop ToM seen in many autistics individuals and younger children may lie in asynchronous firing of the DMN, Washington says.
In this study, the research team enrolled 42 participants: 10 individuals which were aged six to 9; 12 were aged 10 to 12; 9 individuals which were aged 13 to19, and 10 were aged 22 to 27 years. The scientists' goal was to study the development of functional connectivity between the anterior and posterior nodes of DMN across the four age groups.

They gave the participants a task to perform, but the scientists were actually interested in recording brain activity that took place after the task was over, when the patients were told to rest.
In the group of children ages six to nine, the researchers saw the same kind of lack of synchronicity seen in older autistic children, Washington says.

The older participants in this study were, the more in sync the DMN functioned, reaching a plateau in adulthood, he says. Significant differences were noted between children and adolescents, and children and adults, he adds. "These increases in functional connectivity coincide with introspective mental activity that has been shown to emerge during adolescence."

The study was funded by the National Institute of Mental Health and the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development.

Editor's Note: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment.
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/11/101114190819.htm

Jumat, 19 November 2010

MANDALA Life Cycle Level 2 Course


MANDALAS AND THE DEVELOPMENT OF CONSCIOUSNESS
Integrating color and form
A Life Cycle Level 2 Advanced Intensive
A
20 hour course with a certificate of completion and CEU’s available

DATE:    February 11-13, 2011
                          Friday-1:00 - 5:00 pm,  Saturday and Sunday (9:00 - 5:00 pm)
PLACE:   Round Oaks Creative Center,   1443 Glenside Green, Charlottesville, VA 22901
434-973-7543     pframe79@aol.com
COST:     $325
INSTRUCTORS: 
 PHYLLIS FRAME, M.A., ATR is the founder and director of the Round Oaks Creative Center, offering expressive therapies, especially work with mandalas and sand tray to professionals.   She has taught Mandala courses and presented nationally, publishing widely on the mandala theory and research.  Phyllis studied with Joan Kellogg and has contributed significantly  to the development and use of mandala theory.
CAROLE MCNAMEE, PhD, LMFT, is the founder and director of Willowbank Creative Center in Blacksburg, VA, offering  traditional and expressive therapies.  She has been leading mandala groups since 2004 and has presented regionally and nationally on the expressive arts and healing.  

 DESCRIPTION OF Intensive
This advanced intensive is intended for those with previous training in the Life Cycle theory and is meant to deepen
 understanding of this material. There will be an emphasis on color and form in mandala expressions throughout the Life cycle. The intensive will include a review of the Life cycle theory, theory associated with color and form found in mandala drawings, relationship of mandala theory to the chakra system, current research and ethics. Learning opportunities will include didactic presentation, experiential activities, small group work.  In addition, opportunities for personal sharing and supervision will be provided.  Please be sure that you have obtained releases for any client work that you bring for supervision.

Please send your non-refundable deposit of $95 to Phyllis Frame, 1443 Glenside Green, Charlottesville, VA 22901.  Call 434-974-7543 or e-mail pframe79@aol.com for questions or further information.  Housing, and directions with a map will be sent upon receipt of your deposit.  Please register as early as possible.  Bring your workbook from previous courses (you may purchase a Round Oaks workbook if needed),

<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<
REGISTRATION: Mandalas and the Development of Consciousness Feb. 11-13, 2011

NAME…………………………………………………………PHONE..…………….………...

ADDRESS…………………………………………………………………………………………

DEPOSIT…………………..E-Mail………………………………………………………………

 

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