2002: Issue 1 Archives - The Dulwich Centre https://dulwichcentre.com.au/product-category/2002/2002-issue-1/ A gateway to narrative therapy and community work Wed, 21 Jul 2021 09:47:13 +0000 en-AU hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.2.2 Beginning to use a narrative approach in therapy— Alice Morgan https://dulwichcentre.com.au/product/beginning-to-use-a-narrative-approach-in-therapy-alice-morgan/ Wed, 30 Nov 2016 17:44:42 +0000 http://dulwichcentre.com.au/?post_type=product&p=6665 We invited Alice Morgan to write the following article for this first edition of our new journal. Over the years we have had many requests for writings that describe the process of beginning to engage with narrative ideas and practices. Within the following paper Alice describes some of the ways in which she began to engage with narrative ideas and what she found helpful in the process. We believe that this piece will be of interest to those who are new to narrative ideas, and also to those who are teachers and trainers. Alice is the author of the very popular book ‘What is Narrative Therapy? An easy-to-read introduction’ (2000) and editor of ‘Once Upon a Time … Narrative therapy with children and their families’ (1999).

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Embodying both oppressor and oppressed— Cathy Richardson https://dulwichcentre.com.au/product/embodying-both-oppressor-and-oppressed-cathy-richardson/ Wed, 30 Nov 2016 17:41:55 +0000 http://dulwichcentre.com.au/?post_type=product&p=6664 This piece is a result of an interview with and writing by Cathy Richardson. We approached Cathy in relation to this edition of the journal because of her perspective as a Metis woman with both European and Aboriginal heritage. When considering the issue of forgiveness, it seems important that the experiences of those with multiple cultural heritages are acknowledged and honoured. As Cathy describes, when these heritages include Aboriginal or Indigenous ancestry, and the heritage of European colonisers, it leads to complexities when considering notions of forgiveness. The following piece is offered in a spirit of exploration. It does not seek to offer answers in relation to these issues, but instead to consider the complexities. It begins with an explanation of the history of the Metis people.

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A story for Dad and me— John William Jones https://dulwichcentre.com.au/product/a-story-for-dad-and-me-john-william-jones/ Wed, 30 Nov 2016 17:37:45 +0000 http://dulwichcentre.com.au/?post_type=product&p=6663 Extract:

My father died on Australia Day, the 26th January 1999. I never want to say goodbye to the rich values and lessons that my father taught me about life. He taught me about our duty to reach out to others, especially those less able or in need. In his public life, he taught me about fairness, fair play and respect for all people, regardless of race or creed. I want to acknowledge the profound influence that my Dad has had on the man I am today. Through my relationship with my father I have come to understand the complexities and stresses that people live through, and perhaps most of all, I have learnt about forgiveness.

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The complexities of forgiveness— Sharon Gollan https://dulwichcentre.com.au/product/the-complexities-of-forgiveness-sharon-gollan/ Wed, 30 Nov 2016 17:35:01 +0000 http://dulwichcentre.com.au/?post_type=product&p=6662 Extract:

Some years ago I undertook a ritual of forgiveness in relation to the policeman who I held most responsible for the loss of my brother, Stephan, who died in police custody. In doing so I was influenced both by my Christian faith and also by my dad and brother, both of whom are no longer living.

The ritual of forgiveness was a powerful experience for me and it brought me a sense of freedom and lightness. I think the day I went through with that ritual was the moment I was set free from those events of the past. I now feel free from that policeman’s presence in my life.

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Coming to terms with the everyday violence of our culture— Monica McGoldrick https://dulwichcentre.com.au/product/coming-to-terms-with-the-everyday-violence-of-our-culture-monica-mcgoldrick/ Wed, 30 Nov 2016 17:31:36 +0000 http://dulwichcentre.com.au/?post_type=product&p=6661 Extract:

In the culture in which I live, as with many cultures, violence is a part of so many people’s everyday lives. It is therefore an issue that finds its way into therapists’ offices and homes. In my therapeutic work, whenever we are talking about issues of violence, the question of forgiveness is also present.

The most common situation that plays itself out in my work concerns working with the survivors of men’s violence. When I work with a woman who has been abused by someone else, I first of all try to find ways in which she can feel whole within her own skin. I try to find ways in which she no longer has to define herself as the victim of another person’s actions. Sometimes this involves finding ways that the woman who has been victimised can forgive herself for what she has been recruited into believing was her own culpability.

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On forgiving the church, families, science and those who remain silent— Esben Esther Pirelli Benestad https://dulwichcentre.com.au/product/on-forgiving-the-church-families-science-and-those-who-remain-silent-esben-esther-pirelli-benestad/ Wed, 30 Nov 2016 17:28:23 +0000 http://dulwichcentre.com.au/?post_type=product&p=6660 Extract:

Some years ago I was invited with my wife and fellow sexologist Elsa Almaas to view the movie ‘The Priest’ and then to go up on the stage to comment on it. The movie described a homosexual Catholic priest, the clerical judgements he was subject to, and the resulting personal torments. Most of the audience remained in the movie theatre to listen and to take part in the discussion. On the podium, in addition to the two of us, were a Catholic priest and a Lutheran priest.

Both priests commended the movie. The Catholic then went on to make some general remarks on his belief that the discussion on Christian Theology and homosexuality had to develop amongst theologians themselves, and therefore public conversations, such as the one we were engaged in, could only offer limited potential for meaningful change.

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Prisons and the question of forgiveness— David Denborough https://dulwichcentre.com.au/product/prisons-and-the-question-of-forgiveness-david-denborough/ Wed, 30 Nov 2016 17:23:50 +0000 http://dulwichcentre.com.au/?post_type=product&p=6659 Extract:

At present, prisons are upheld as our society’s response to those who have done the most harm to others. Those who have killed, hurt, assaulted, raped are supposed to be imprisoned. Also imprisoned are those who have committed property offences – most of which are directly related to poverty and the use of certain drugs which are deemed illegal.

To sincerely think about prisons involves trying to come to terms with the profound class and race-based injustices that our legal system creates and maintains. It is also to face the question of what to do with those whose acts seriously harm others, those who terrorise, assault and kill. During my years of working within prisons, I met with many men who had committed what I consider to be horrific crimes – callous, violent, cruel acts. I also met many lovely men brutalised by generational poverty, racism and/or ill-treatment.

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Seeking safety and acknowledgement: women who have experienced domestic violence— WOWSafe https://dulwichcentre.com.au/product/seeking-safety-and-acknowledgement-women-who-have-experienced-domestic-violence-wowsafe/ Wed, 30 Nov 2016 17:20:07 +0000 http://dulwichcentre.com.au/?post_type=product&p=6658 This piece was created from an interview (conducted by Dulwich Centre Publications’ staff writer, David Denborough) with WOWSafe – Women of the West for Safe Families, which is an organisation of women in Adelaide, South Australia, who have personally survived men’s violence in the home and now campaign in order to prevent it in the lives of others.

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Enabling forgiveness and reconciliation in family therapy— Karl Tomm https://dulwichcentre.com.au/product/enabling-forgiveness-and-reconciliation-in-family-therapy-karl-tomm/ Wed, 30 Nov 2016 17:14:57 +0000 http://dulwichcentre.com.au/?post_type=product&p=6657 Interpersonal conflicts are almost inevitable within families. The closeness and intensity of family relationships along with differences among family members in knowledge, desires, values, abilities, etc., account for much of this turmoil. Family members are often deeply hurt in the course of their conflicts and sometimes there is a significant breach of trust. Occasionally a family member will consider a certain offence unforgivable and will not seek reconciliation. Usually, however, family members try to recover a sense of personal and relationship wellbeing by endeavoring to forgive and reconcile. This can be a long and arduous process. Therapists are often consulted to facilitate such healing. My purpose in writing this paper is to share my understanding of some of the complexities involved.2 The perspective that I adopt is a social constructionist or ‘bringforthist’ stance. I assume that through caring conversation, it is possible to bring forth preferred ways of thinking and interacting that can lead to forgiveness and reconciliation.

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Ubuntu: Caring for people and community in South Africa— Elmarie Kotzé et al. https://dulwichcentre.com.au/product/ubuntu-caring-for-people-and-community-in-south-africa-elmarie-kotze-et-al/ Wed, 30 Nov 2016 17:12:02 +0000 http://dulwichcentre.com.au/?post_type=product&p=6655 Extract:

Since the first hearings of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) in April 1996, South Africans over the next two years heard the revelations about the nation's traumatic past. The TRC received 20,000 statements from victims, 2,000 of these were heard in public hearings (Krog 1998, p.vii). Through the TRC we came face-to-face with this country’s volatile history and began to grasp an understanding of the human cost of apartheid.

Different options were available regarding amnesty for perpetrators who testified before the TRC. Negotiators decided against the sort of trials held at Nuremberg after WWII, and they also decided against offering a blanket amnesty. A third way, granting individuals amnesty in exchange for full disclosure of the crimes for which amnesty was sought, was a preferred way of dealing with perpetrators. This way of conditional amnesty has often been described within a framework of Christian forgiveness, but it was also consistent with ubuntu, an African worldview (Tutu 1999, p.34). In this paper, we will be describing the significance of ubuntu in our work in South Africa.

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Forgiveness linked to justice: an interview with Charles Waldegrave https://dulwichcentre.com.au/product/forgiveness-linked-to-justice-an-interview-with-charles-waldegrave/ Wed, 30 Nov 2016 17:07:45 +0000 http://dulwichcentre.com.au/?post_type=product&p=6654 Extract:

Could we begin by considering your own relationship with the question of forgiveness? Has your thinking around the issue of forgiveness remained constant, or has it changed over time?

Over the years, there has been considerable debate at The Family Centre about the issue of forgiveness. Between the different cultural and gender groupings in our workplace we have had many discussions about forgiveness and its place in our work and lives. In the past I would speak positively about the concept of forgiveness. I do not consider Christianity as in any way superior to other faiths. It does happen however to be the religion of my culture. Some things we do badly, like the ownership of truth. Some things I think we do well, and the concept of forgiveness is a good example of this.

And yet, when I used to speak about my views on the significance and importance of forgiveness, this frequently led to considerable debate. It has been through these debates and conversations that I have come to see more clearly the particular implications that it can have when I as a white man speak on matters of forgiveness. When issues of forgiveness are being discussed, it makes a considerable difference who is speaking. When Maori or Pacific women talk about the hazards and possibilities of forgiveness, it evokes very different images than when white men such as myself have the same conversation. Not only have I been alerted to this, but when in the past I have spoken about forgiveness, the Maori and Pacific people with whom I work have reminded me that in some circumstances, if you forgive quickly, you don’t allow space for justice to be done.

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The power in remembering— Vanessa Jackson https://dulwichcentre.com.au/product/the-power-in-remembering-vanessa-jackson/ Wed, 30 Nov 2016 17:01:04 +0000 http://dulwichcentre.com.au/?post_type=product&p=6653 Extract:

Two years ago, I was formally invited on a journey: to work on an oral history project to recover African American psychiatric history. At the time of this was not conscious of the fact that I had been preparing for this journey for the last 20 years. In hindsight, I can now see that I started packing for this voyage on one of my first visits to see my sister in a state psychiatric hospital.

During that visit I recall hearing the chilling screams of a patient – screams that were virtually ignored by others in the ward, patients and staff alike. I remember looking past the nurses’ desk into a small room where a young white man was tied to a cot. He was the source of the screams and a nurse, noticing my concern, commented that he was out of control and just screaming for attention. What was clear to me, and probably even clearer to the young man, was that attention was the last thing he was going to receive in that place.

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Forgiveness and child sexual abuse: A matrix of meanings— Alan Jenkins, Maxine Joy & Rob Hall https://dulwichcentre.com.au/product/forgiveness-and-child-sexual-abuse-a-matrix-of-meanings-alan-jenkins-maxine-joy-rob-hall/ Wed, 30 Nov 2016 16:54:51 +0000 http://dulwichcentre.com.au/?post_type=product&p=6652 Extract:

he concept of forgiveness, along with notions of apology and atonement for wrongs, can constitute highly significant preoccupations for individuals and communities whose lives have been affected by abuse. People who have been abused, those who have acted abusively and members of their families and broader communities may all have concerns and hopes about forgiveness and atonement. In the aftermath of sexual abuse, concerns about forgiveness may range from, ‘I’ll never forgive’ to ‘Why can’t I forgive?’ and these concerns may be met with preoccupations like, ‘I’ve said I’m sorry, surely it’s time for her to forgive me’ and ‘You must learn to forgive and forget’.

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Self-forgiveness— Sue Jackson https://dulwichcentre.com.au/product/self-forgiveness-sue-jackson/ Wed, 30 Nov 2016 16:51:44 +0000 http://dulwichcentre.com.au/?post_type=product&p=6651 Extract:

Some years ago a young woman came to see me in great distress. She was pale and thin, her skin was grey and she had dark circles under her eyes. She looked very small in her oversized coat. ‘Janet’ explained that she had come under duress. Her parents, siblings and General Practitioner were all extremely worried about her and it was for this reason that she had finally picked up the phone and arranged an appointment with a therapist.

Janet outlined her situation in the following terms:

Two weeks previously, on a Friday night, she was travelling home from Melbourne to the country, to spend the weekend with her parents. She had had a few drinks after work with some friends, but had not stopped for dinner. Halfway home, she fell asleep at the wheel. The car drifted to the wrong side of the road, where it collided with another car travelling in the opposite direction. Both the young driver and his girlfriend in the other car were killed instantly. Janet, who only awoke at the point of impact, emerged uninjured.

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Not in our names: The work of Murder Victims’ Families for Reconciliation: an interview with Renny Cushing https://dulwichcentre.com.au/product/not-in-our-names-the-work-of-murder-victims-families-for-reconciliation-an-interview-with-renny-cushing/ Wed, 30 Nov 2016 16:48:33 +0000 http://dulwichcentre.com.au/?post_type=product&p=6650 Extract:

Perhaps it would be appropriate to start with the title of your group. Can you explain the role of your group and why you are emphasising reconciliation …

Murder Victims’ Families for Reconciliation is a national organisation of people who’ve lost someone to murder and who oppose the death penalty. Our opposition to the death penalty is victim-centred and victim-focussed. We are determined to refute the commonly held beliefs that all victims want the death penalty, and that we somehow need the death penalty in order to overcome our trauma and grief. We are trying to point out that actually there are thousands of people in this country who have lost somebody to murder who don’t think that a ritual killing by the state is going to accomplish anything, other than a further loss of life. We primarily oppose the death penalty, not so much because we’re concerned about what it does to killers, but because of what it does to us as victims. We believe it hinders the healing process and makes us become complicit in further killing.

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Almost twenty years on … reflecting on ‘Father Daughter Rape’ — Elizabeth (Biff) Ward https://dulwichcentre.com.au/product/almost-twenty-years-on-reflecting-on-father-daughter-rape-elizabeth-biff-ward/ Wed, 30 Nov 2016 16:42:55 +0000 http://dulwichcentre.com.au/?post_type=product&p=6649 In 1984, Biff Ward wrote ‘Father Daughter Rape’ (The Women’s Press) one of the first books to address the issue of childhood sexual abuse. In this short reflection she looks back at the writing of this book and the question of forgiveness.

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Women’s outrage and the pressure to forgive: an interview with Jussey Verco https://dulwichcentre.com.au/product/womens-outrage-and-the-pressure-to-forgive-an-interview-with-jussey-verco/ Wed, 30 Nov 2016 16:39:45 +0000 http://dulwichcentre.com.au/?post_type=product&p=6648 Extract:

Because of the ways in which forgiveness is spoken about in the broader Christian-influenced culture and also in the mental health field, survivors of childhood sexual abuse are often placed under strong pressure to forgive the person who perpetrated abuse against them. Many women report that when they have accessed a group or counselling, that there has been an emphasis on forgiving the perpetrator and that this step is seen as necessary for healing.

As a worker, I am conscious that everyone goes through their own unique process in relation to coming to terms with the effects of sexual abuse. For a small number of women with whom I have worked, forgiveness has played an important part in their healing process and for them, the pressure to forgive may not have negative consequences. It may have been a process of their own choosing.

However, for most women with whom I’ve worked, the pressure to forgive can be oppressive. For many women survivors, there has been no acknowledgement of guilt or even of any wrongdoing by the person who perpetrated the abuse. In many situations the women have not been believed or have been viewed as in some ways culpable for the abuse to which they were subjected.

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Coming to terms with the events of September 11th: an interview with Kenneth V. Hardy https://dulwichcentre.com.au/product/coming-to-terms-with-the-events-of-september-11th-an-interview-with-kenneth-v-hardy/ Wed, 30 Nov 2016 16:33:47 +0000 http://dulwichcentre.com.au/?post_type=product&p=6647 Extract:

With the city in which you live still struggling to come to terms with the deaths of 3,000 people on September 11th, and with military retaliation still occurring in Afghanistan, in some ways it seems a strange time to be talking about forgiveness. Living and working as you do in New York City, perhaps we could begin by talking a little about your experience of September 11th and subsequent events …

Not long ago I wrote a short piece about September 11th entitled ‘After dusk and before dawn’. It seems to me that we are at a critical time in this country and that actually it is very relevant to be talking about broader issues such as forgiveness, compassion, and how we come to terms with injustice, privilege and loss of life.

Personally, I found the events of September 11th profoundly emotional and difficult to come to terms with. Living and working in New York City, we had a close-up view of the devastating events of that day. Here at the Ackerman Institute of the Family, many of us continue to be involved in working with firemen and with the police, and some of us were intimately involved in responding to the events of the day itself. We continue to meet together and talk about what is involved in this work and we remain in touch with the ongoing experience of families who have lost loved ones. Three thousand people died on that day and this means that the lives of three thousand families and countless friends and other relatives can never be the same. That is a grief of vast proportions.

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Re-thinking deathbed forgiveness rituals— Lorraine Hedtke https://dulwichcentre.com.au/product/re-thinking-deathbed-forgiveness-rituals-lorraine-hedtke/ Wed, 30 Nov 2016 16:29:03 +0000 http://dulwichcentre.com.au/?post_type=product&p=6646 In this article, I want to question how forgiveness has been described in recent medical models of death and bereavement. I believe that these models have at times promoted unnecessary deathbed conversations in which awkward attempts to rush the process of forgiveness may serve only to further distance us from our connections with our deceased loved ones. I also want to offer some alternatives to commonly held assumptions in the discourse of forgiveness. To begin though, I will consider some of the common modernist understandings of forgiveness that influence work with people who are dying.

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The church, confession, forgiveness and male sexual abuse: from an interview with Patrick O’Leary https://dulwichcentre.com.au/product/the-church-confession-forgiveness-and-male-sexual-abuse-patrick-oleary/ Wed, 30 Nov 2016 16:22:36 +0000 http://dulwichcentre.com.au/?post_type=product&p=6644 Extract:

As a therapist and a researcher in the area of male sexual abuse, the question of forgiveness is a pertinent one, although I see this more clearly now, than I once did. In the past, due to my own experiences of growing up Catholic in a school in which those hearing young men’s confessions were also subjecting them to violence and abuse, I was not always open to the possible significance of forgiveness in other men’s lives. In therapy contexts I would have been more likely to explore other areas of the conversation rather than open space for discussion about the meaning of forgiveness to the particular person concerned. I would have more easily adopted a position of condemnation towards the perpetrator of abuse rather than see the possible relevance or helpfulness of forgiveness. I would have been more open to survivors expressing outrage than exploring notions of forgiveness.

In recent years, however, I have come to see that for some survivors of abuse, forgiveness can be one of the few options available to them to move their lives forward. This seems particularly true for those who feel they have no option but to live in close relationship with the perpetrator of the abuse, or those for whom their entire social networks and family will continue to be in relationship with the person who was responsible for the abuse they experienced. I have come to realise that some of the people consulting me do not have the same sort of options as I do to sit in condemnation of the perpetrator of the abuse they experienced. This has been a bit of a wake-up call to me, as I have come to see how limiting it can be for a counsellor to take an absolute stand in relation to forgiveness.

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