Sex educator, relationship advisor & co-founder of iOS advice app, okayso.app, Elise Schuster, and Valeria Koutmina of The Art Therapy Project use the Festival performance of Hope Singsen's solo play with music, SKIN, as a jumping off point to consider common questions about the healing process.
Along the way, Elise and Val share professional perspectives as Hope offers examples from personal life as well as within her play, SKIN, to illuminate:
Why it takes so dang long to recover from impacts of sexual violence
Why it can be confusing to recognize these impacts
Why it's often hard to know how "healed" we really are, and what to expect from the healing process
Why it takes time to change behaviors after they’re set, and how our assumptions about the process can make it more difficult
Ways that sexual trauma can create challenges around identity, shame, safety, trust, sex itself, learned helplessness, self-doubt, and an impression our bodies are vehicles for pain
How our cultural ideas about sexuality can get in the way for survivors and non-survivors alike
How practicing saying no can lead us to feel more empowered and safe to say yes
How we work hard to be ok, but feel as if we are “broken” and needing to be "fixed," which contributes to a feeling of helplessness -- even as we feel we have to present ourselves as unharmed
How nonverbal art-making within a therapeutic relationship can help because it works in the same parts of the brain where trauma was originally stored
The grief and loss that needs to be acknowledged as we learn to tolerate the feelings -- taking breaks and bringing humor into it
Why relapse is part of recovery and can help you practice changing your perspective from “I am this” to understanding “I do this,” which gives us more space to change what Brenee Brown calls “the story we are telling ourselves”
Ideas to help practice new ways of healing, like:Cultivating self-compassion instead of self-blame and helplessness
Recognizing that the healing process doesn’t make rational sense, and celebrating strengths that emerge, like the ability to reach out for help
Taking breaks to put aside the work and feelings sometimes to get some distance
The #HealMeToo Podcast is hosted by Hope Singsen--the artist, creativity researcher and survivor-activist who founded the #HealMeToo Festival in NYC this Spring.
On the episode details page for this interview, you'll find Elise and Val's biographies and links to okayso and The Art Therapy Project. You'll also find a page with videos of many performances at the Festival, and can join our email list to hear about future pop-up #HealMeToo Festival events.
Soon, we'll also drop audio and video excerpts from Hope's performance of SKIN in the #HealMeToo Festival.
Subscribe now. Let's talk about how we can #HealMeToo.
Find the #HealMeToo Podcast on Apple Podcasts at bit.ly/hm2pod. Or visit healmetoopodcast.com to find links to other platforms.
Interview recorded & prepped by Delaney Hafener
Edited by Hope Singsen
Music performed by Micah Burgess:
If I Can by Hope Singsen & Dillon Kondor
Rockabye by Hope Singsen, Dillon Kondor & Micah Burgess
Gorgeous Fire by Hope Singsen & Dillon Kondor
Support the show
Comentarios