Creative Repair
71 pages
English

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71 pages
English

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Description

The recent pandemic has highlighted an increasing need for support for those experiencing mental health challenges and those caring for them. There is an urgent need for clergy and others involved in pastoral care both to attend to their own well-being and to develop resilience. The role of pastors in accompanying those grieving, planning, and conducting funerals carries a toll of emotional and psychological resources which need to be replenished routinely. Showing how everything from singing in choirs or joining theatre or dance groups to painting or sculpting can help those in leadership to develop a flexible mindset and give relief to the pressures of responsible roles, Creative Repair is essential reading both for those who train others as pastors and those who are themselves in training and preparing to take on pastoral responsibility themselves.

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Publié par
Date de parution 31 mai 2023
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9780334061786
Langue English

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,1500€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

Creative Repair
Pastoral Care and Creativity
Anne C. Holmes






© Anne C. Holmes 2023
Published in 2023 by SCM Press
Editorial office
3rd Floor, Invicta House,
108–114 Golden Lane,
London EC1Y 0TG, UK
www.scmpress.co.uk
SCM Press is an imprint of Hymns Ancient & Modern Ltd (a registered charity)

Hymns Ancient & Modern® is a registered trademark of Hymns Ancient & Modern Ltd
13A Hellesdon Park Road, Norwich,
Norfolk NR6 5DR, UK
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying or otherwise, without the prior permission of the publisher, SCM Press.
Anne C Holmes has asserted her right under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988 to be identified as the Author of this Work
British Library Cataloguing in Publication data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
ISBN 978-0-334-06176-2
Typeset by Regent Typesetting
Printed and bound in Great Britain by CPI Group (UK) Ltd



Contents
Foreword
Acknowledgements

1. Introduction
2. The Concept of Creative Repair
3. Why Self-care?
4. Individual Creative Repair
5. Group Creative Repair
6. The Creative Repair of Things
7. Regular Habits or a Rule of Life
8. Resilience and Creative Repair
9. Towards a Theology of Creative Repair
10. Creative Repair in Pastoral Practice

Appendix A: Questions to Think About
Appendix B: Informal Audit and Questions for Creative Repair

Bibliography




For Simon and Rachel



Foreword
The theme of this book is beautifully summed up in its title, Creative Repair . So many of us, perhaps all of us, are in need of repair, either because of some trauma we are going through now or that we experienced earlier in life; or even perhaps because we are suffering the long-term effects of trauma in the lives of our parents and forebears. Its hopeful theme is that repair is available not just through therapy, but also by engaging in some form of creative activity. Examples from music are given, such as playing an instrument or, especially, choral music; and also drawing and theatre. These activities allow a person to relax and simply do what they enjoy doing, thereby releasing fresh springs of creativity within them. The theme is vividly illustrated in the Japanese art of kintsugi , whereby a broken dish is not thrown away but repaired with gold and becomes more valued than the original.
This is the best kind of book: drawn from her own experience of pain and difficulty, about which the author is honest; the fruit of extensive training and practice as a clinician, and its associated literature; drawing on some vivid personal histories; and imbued with a sure practical wisdom. All these qualities are directed to enabling clergy, especially those suffering stress or experiencing burnout, to recover the freshness and enthusiasm of ministry.
The practical wisdom of this book, what the Greeks prized as phronesis , is suggested by three of its key concepts: well-being, balance and time wisdom, words which seem particularly relevant to busy clergy. It is a book that will be helpful both to those engaged in helping others through therapy and to those in ministry.
Richard Harries



Acknowledgements
I would like to thank all those who supported me during the original research and who have since encouraged me to write this book.
All the participants in my doctoral research.
My colleagues Val Parker and Jill Buckledee who have been central to my writing the initial proposal and for offering critical encouragement as I completed the manuscript.
The Rt Revd Lord Harries of Pentregarth for writing the Foreword.
My former doctoral supervisors, the Revd Dr Jane Leach and Dr Zoë Bennett who provided insight, wisdom, encouragement and support.
My friend Trisha Dale for reading some of the chapters and especially for completing the index.
My clinical supervisors Mrs Sheila Mackintosh Millard and the Revd Professor Alistair Ross.
Sister Paula, Abbess, and the Sisters of the Community of St Clare, Freeland, Oxfordshire.
Dear friends who have variously encouraged, fed and prayed with and for me throughout this process, especially Pat, Marilyn, Cathy, Becky, Laura, Nicola, Paula, Tricia and Siân.
My son, Simon, and daughter-in-law, Kate; my daughter, Rachel, and son-in-law, Mark, and their families. Also, my sister, Jennifer, and brother-in-law, John, and their family.
David Shervington and his team at SCM Press, especially Rachel Geddes.




1. Introduction
This book is the result of many years of thinking and research. As a psychotherapist and Anglican priest, I have worked with people from a wide variety of backgrounds who may or may not have professed a religious faith. My interest in the importance of creativity first found expression in a theoretical paper written when training as a group psychotherapist in the early 1990s. I had observed that there was a link between blocked grief and blocked creativity, and noticed that when a person was able to unblock their grief they also released their creative energy. This applied both to individuals in counselling and people being helped in group therapy. For example, I once worked with a writer whose capacity to write was blocked by unprocessed grief since a parent had died. When these feelings of loss had been sufficiently released, I was thanked for my help and the work was brought to an end because the writing had resumed. Another example was a graduate student who kept deleting his work as he tried to write up his thesis. He was in a group with others who had different problems and they helped him to understand the underlying family grief issues that were blocking his progress and, in time, he found a way of saving his work for future editing, rather than deleting it all as soon as he had written it. He went on to complete his thesis and be awarded his doctorate.
In the past, my roles as a clinician and a Christian leader were kept separate. In order to be fully available for our clients, it is usual for counsellors and psychotherapists to keep personal information away from the therapy sessions. While that is still the case from a clinical point of view, I later combined the two disciplines academically in an MA in Pastoral Theology. Seeking a topic for the dissertation, I began by exploring the connection between involvement in the creative arts and a pastor’s or carer’s capacity to restore energy expended in sensitive pastoral care. The idea of creative repair began to form in my mind at a time in my life when I was dealing with the complicated grief following the death of my former husband nearly 20 years after we had separated. The concept emerged from a personal reflection during the grieving process and began in France on 19 August 2007. It was the day on which the ashes of my former husband were to be scattered off Spithead, as he had requested before his death. As he had remarried it was not appropriate for me to be there. I was in my holiday cottage in north Burgundy, intentionally reflecting on our marriage and honouring the happier times. One of our common interests had been a love of music, especially choral church music and organ music. I was listening to a recording of organ music and recognizing that this music stretched back to the beginning of my life.
My father was an Anglican priest and church musician, having played the organ for services since the age of 13. Among my earliest memories are those of him playing the piano as I went to sleep. The music included Bach preludes and fugues, Beethoven sonatas and various pieces by Brahms and Chopin. As I thought about him, I realized that his music was for him both a release and a resource because he never talked about the various pastoral encounters of his ministry. Had my father intuitively known that music was the safe container for both personal difficulties and the emotional demands of being a priest? I knew that his childhood was difficult, that he would rarely speak of his experience as an RAF chaplain in the Far East during the Second World War, and that he had had the unpleasant task of exposing and bringing to justice the perpetrators of a paedophile ring in one of his parishes. He had played the organ in church and the piano in jazz bands as a young man, and played both instruments throughout his life. He worked hard but never experienced burnout. Gradually, as I grieved and reflected, the idea of the role of the creative arts in the restoration of energy expended in pastoral care became clear. I set out to explore the idea and my future studies represented further exploration of the role of creativity in the sustaining of ministry.
In order to explore this idea further in a research context, I conducted a focus group of volunteer clergy. I devised a series of questions and recorded their spontaneous answers in a recorded discussion. Others who were interested but were unable to attend the focus group were sent a questionnaire by email (see Appendix A) and invited to respond. I was curious about the role that the creative arts might have played in their avoidance of extreme stress. For some, such stress can accumulate until a person suffers from burnout, a type of breakdown from which it can take months, if not years, to recover. Two of those who responded had already experienced burnout and had found that participation in creativity, whether reading novels or learning a new craft, had been crucial in their recovery and had since then become part of their regu

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