Body awareness – a vital aspect in mentalization: experiences from concurrent and reciprocal therapies
Original version
Ekerholt, K., Schau, G., Mathismoen, K. M., & Bergland, A. (2014). Body awareness-a vital aspect in mentalization: experiences from concurrent and reciprocal therapies. Physiotherapy theory and practice, 30(5), 312-318. http://dx.doi.org/10.3109/09593985.2013.876562Abstract
Background: A psychomotor physiotherapist and a clinical psychologist had collaborated onpatients consistently for several years, when their individual therapeutic approach had turnedout to be insufficient.Aim: The aim of this study was to investigate the therapists’understanding of their patients and the therapeutic processes they had been involved in,and to develop concepts in order to understand the concurrent therapeutic processes.Designand method: This qualitative study is based on a grounded theory approach. The twostrategically chosen therapists participated in ‘‘mini focus-group’’ interviews, in data transcrip-tion and in the analyzing process.Findings: Three empirical categories emerged from thetherapists’ experiences. The core category ‘‘Body awareness: a vital aspect in mentalization’’ wascomprised of two main categories: (1) ‘‘The over-stretched children in the grown-up patients’’;and (2) ‘‘The traumatized children in the grown-up patients’’.Conclusion: Reduced bodyawareness seemed to correspond with lacking or fragmented memories of their own lifehistory. Body awareness was a vital aspect in the therapeutic processes. Future challengesseemed to become manageable for the patients once they had realized that the resources forcoping with these demands were available within themselves.