ABSTRACT

Building on relational conceptualizations of enactment and on developmental research that attests to the role of embodied, nonverbal language in the meanings children impute to their experiences, Sebastiano Santostefano offers this compelling demonstration of effective child therapy conducted in the “great outdoors.”  Specifically, he argues that, for the child, traumatic life-metaphors should be resolved at an embodied rather than an exclusively verbal level; they should be resolved, that is, as they are enacted between child and therapist.  To this end, child and therapist must take advantage of all the indoor and outdoor environments available to them.  As they take therapy to nontraditional places, relying on the nonverbal vocabulary they have constructed together, they move toward enacted solutions to relational crises, solutions that revise the child’s sense of self and ability to form new and productive relationships.

chapter |15 pages

Introduction

chapter |44 pages

Interacting and Enacting with a Therapist and Environments

The Path to the Pathway of Change

chapter |44 pages

Ernest

I Detached My Embodied Self from Relationships Because of the Pain and Emotional Deprivation I Experienced

chapter |31 pages

Vera

Abandoned at the Doorstep of an Orphanage, I Battled the Abuse I Embodied to Gain My Freedom

chapter |30 pages

Environments, Interactions, and Embodied Meanings

Probing How Three Are One