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Lecture 8 narrative therapy
1. Lecture 8: Introduction to
Narrative therapy
Systemic Comparative
Kevin Standish
Newham College University Centre
2. Learning Outcomes
1. Identify the background influences
2. Describe the core concepts of Narrative Therapy
3. Conceptualisation of problems in Narrative
Therapy
4. Therapeutic goals in Narrative Therapy
5. Therapist role in Narrative Therapy
6. Narrative Therapy interventions
7. Evaluation of Narrative Therapy
7. Human Nature
People are interpretive
beings who make
meaning of themselves
and their world through
the language of stories
that have become part of
themselves, as well as
their understanding of
those stories
8. Narrative Family Therapy
1. Based on “liberation philosophy” (postmodern, social
constructionist) which avoids objectification of
people/families—belief that problems arise because of
culturally-induced subscription to narrow and self-defeating
views of self and world
2. No normative pattern to be achieved (meaning,
purposefulness, health determined by each
family/culture/situation)
3. Focuses on narrative reasoning (versus logico-scientific)—
asserts that people live their lives by stories, and these can
be re-written (re-authoring in creative ways)
4. Families encouraged to externalize their problems (problem
becomes separate entity, avoids blaming traps)
10. PRIMARY THEMES IN NARRATIVE
THERAPY
Realities are socially constructed
Realities are constituted through language
Narrative organizes and maintains reality
There are no essential truths
10
11. PRIMARY THEMES IN NARRATIVE
THERAPY
Our lives are storied
Identity generated through stories
People are not problems
Problems are to be externalized
Deconstruct problems
11
12. REALITIES ARE SOCIALLY
CONSTRUCTED
We become who we are through relationship—
through how others perceive us and interact
with us and how we make meaning of the
social interaction
(Combs and Friedman, 1999)
12
13. REALITIES ARE SOCIALLY
CONSTRUCTED
Identity=definition of the author generated in the
text of one’s story
– Self dwells within the story
– Confirmed and modified through interaction
– Basis for identity rests in the group fiction
– Fiction can either heal or cripple the person who
possesses it
(Hillman, 1983, cited in Nagel, 1988)
13
14. REALITIES ARE CONSTITUTED THROUGH
LANGUAGE
Internal reality differs from external reality
Combination of values, experience and filters
Postmodernists state that words and language
create reality
(Combs and Freedman, 1998)
14
15. REALITIES ARE CONSTITUTED THROUGH
LANGUAGE
[Three umpires] are sitting around over a beer,
and one says, “There’s balls and there’s
strikes and I call ‘em the way they are.”
Another says, “There’s balls and strikes and I
call ‘em the way I see ‘em.” The third says,
“There’s balls and there’s strikes, and they
ain’t nothin’ until I call ‘em.”
(Combs and Freedman, 1998)
15
16. OUR LIVES ARE “STORIED”
Dominant identity story
– Solution or problem oriented?
Life story=sufficient and self-contained fiction
Differs from biography, oral history or life history
16
17. Theoretical Concepts
• People’s lives are created
and interpreted through
their stories… ones they
hear, create in their own
minds, and ones they tell
and retell
• Problems are
manufactured in social,
cultural, familial,
political and historical
contexts rather than
being intrinsic to or
inherent in the person.
18. Theoretical Concepts
• Drawing people’s attention to
subtle changes in their lives
can foster new insights,
promote empowerment and
help people develop better
ways to resolve difficulties…
through this knowledge people
can truly become authors of
their own lives…
• Client is an expert on his own
life and counselor is an expert
of narrative therapy
19. Theoretical Concepts
• Stories give messages
and become road maps
of our lives
• Believes stories have
cultural and
interpersonal basis and
meaning are generated
in social interaction
• Person isn’t the problem
the problem is the
problem
21. IDENTITY GENERATED THROUGH
STORIES
Represents the key to meaning and significance
(Fisher, 1984)
Stories provide
– Significant events and appropriate meanings for
listeners
– Identify and affiliation for those who tell them
Healing for both listener and storyteller
Emphasis on “listening, accepting, making nonjudgmental, non-confrontational comments.”
(Hennings, 1987)
21
22. PROBLEMS ARE TO BE EXTERNALIZED
Hidden problems cannot be changed
– “only as sick as your secrets”
Externalization allows re-authoring
May need to externalize solution as well as
problem
22
23. DECONSTRUCTING THE PROBLEM
Erase object of text as well as author
“I’m not much, but I’m all I think about.”
Can ask multiple forms of same question
Therapist becomes linguistic detective
Intricate and delicate process
23
24. EXAMPLE OF DECONSTRUCTION
“A tear in the hand of a Western man
He’ll tell you about salt, carbon and water
But a tear to an Oriental man
He’ll tell you about sadness, sorrow, the love of
a man and a woman.”
“Ride the Tiger,” Jefferson Starship (1974)
Dragon Fly
24
26. Therapeutic Goals
• Therapists invite clients to describe
their experience in new language and
facilitate the discovery or creation of
new options that are unique to them
28. Counselors’ Roles
• Active role… suggesting
exercised, offering new
viewpoints, soliciting feed
back
• Create shifts to bring about
new meaning to the client’s
story
• Therapeutic Anthropologists
• Supportive, facilitator,
encourager… not an expert
• Never Judges
• Does not seek to heal or
“fix” people but to learn
about client & understand
them
29. Therapist Role
• Suggest alternative
viewpoints and elicit stories
• Mirroring- reflect
themselves as well as the
client
• Emphasis on being
respective & encouraging of
client’s strengths and
resources
• Participatory witness
and interpersonal
relationship based on
collaboration not just
reflection (personcentered) but interactive
• Careful listening,
empathetic,
summarization and
paraphrasing to give
people ownership
30. The Therapeutic Process in
Narrative Therapy
• Collaborate with the client in identifying (naming)
the problem
• Separate the person from his or her problem
• Investigate how the problem has been disrupting
or dominating the person
• Search for exceptions to the problem
• Ask clients to speculate about what kind of future
they could expect from the competent person
that is emerging
• Create an audience to support the new story
31. Narrative Therapist’s function and role
• To become active facilitators
• To demonstrate care, interest, respectful curiosity, openness,
empathy, contact, and fascination
• To adopt a not-knowing position that allows being guided by
the client’s story
• To help clients construct a preferred alternative story
• To separate the problem from the people (instead of person
own the problem)
• To create a collaborative relationship --- with the client being
the senior partner
32. Therapeutic Relationship
• Emphasize the quality of therapeutic
relationship, in particular therapists’ attitudes
• Client-as-expert, clients are the primary
interpreters of their own experiences
• Therapists seek to understand client's lived
experience and avoid effort to predict,
interpret, and pathologies.
34. Therapeutic Techniques
• No recipe, no set agenda, and no formula
• This approach is grounded in a philosophical
framework
• Questions—and more questions:
– Questions are used as a way to generate experience
rather than to gather information
– Asking questions can lead to separating “person”
from “problem”, identifying preferred directions, and
creating alternative stories to support these
directions.
35. Therapeutic Techniques
• Externalization & Deconstruction
– Externalization is a process of separating the
person from identifying with the problem
– Externalizing conversations can lead clients in
recognizing times when they have dealt
successfully with the problem
– Problem-saturated stories are deconstructed
(taken apart) before new stories are co-created
Essential
reading
36. Therapeutic Techniques
• Search for unique outcomes
– Successful stories regarding the problem
• Creating Alternative Stories
– The assumption is that people can continually and
actively re-author their lives
– Invite clients to author alternative stories through
“unique outcomes”
– An appreciative audience helps new stories to
take root
Read
37. Therapeutic Techniques
• Documenting the evidence
– Therapists write and send a letter to clients
between sessions regarding their strengths and
accomplishments, alternative story, and unique
outcomes or exceptions to the problems.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XMst5HoO
S6c
38. Narrative Treatment Techniques
1. Externalization of problem—the problem is the
problem, and is given a name. Family and members
not defined by problem
2. Influence of the Problem on each Person
3. Influence of the Person on the Problem
4. Raising Dilemmas—examine aspects of problem
before need arises
5. Predicting Setbacks—they almost inevitable, best
dealt with when anticipated
39. Narrative Treatment Techniques
6. Using Questions
• Exceptions-oriented
• Significance of exceptions
7. Letters to client families—a form of case note to
family, put in transparent/congruent statements
8. Celebrations/certificates—festive, signify
victory/achievement, tailored to circumstances by
wording, printed and include logo (For
achievements in conquest of “Apathy”)
41. Summary and Evaluation
• Contributions
– Client-as-expert (not knowing position)
– View people are competent and able to create
solutions and alternative stories
– Do not support the DSM-IV-TR labeling system
– A brief approach, is good for managed care.
– In general, studies provided preliminary support
for the efficacy
42. Summary and Evaluation
• Limitations
– No set of formulas or recipes to follow
– Inexperienced therapist may view narrative as techniques.
However, the attitude of the therapist is critical to the
success of outcomes.
– Therapists need to be able to make quick assessments,
assist clients in setting up the goals, and effectively use
appropriate interventions
48. • Dallos, R. & Draper, R. (2010) chap 3
• Metcalf, L. (2011) chapter 13
• White, M & Epston, D. (1990) Narrative means to therapeutic ends. New
York: W. W. Norton
• Kaslow (2010) Family therapy Narrative
• Moreira, et al (2011) CLIENTS’ NARRATIVES IN PSYCHOTHERAPY
• Von Sydow (2002) Systemic Attachment theory and therapeutic practice
• Wallis et al (2011) What Is Narrative Therapy and What Is It Not
• Dallos (2004) Attachment narrative therapy integrating ideas from
narrative attachment theory
• Advanced reading
• Chang & Nylund (2013) Narrative and Solution-Focused therapies a 20
year retrospective
• Payne, Martin (2006) Narrative Therapy : An Introduction for
Counsellors 2nd ed. SAGE Publications London. Full Text available as
an eBook on EBSCO Host via your Athens login.
• Meier, Scott T (2012) Language and Narratives in Counseling
and Psychotherapy Springer Pub. Co New York, N.Y. Full Text available as
an eBook on EBSCO Host via your Athens login