RELATING THROUGH PHYSICAL TOUCH IN CONTEMPORARY BODY PSYCHOTHERAPY
This article was accepted for publication in the Psychotherapist on 2nd July 2010.
Touch is the foundation of all senses (Montagu, 1971/1986) and it is no
surprise that physical contact is at the heart of building and developing the
relationship between the mother or father, and their infant.
Touch is the first important area of
communication between a mother and her new infant. Mothers respond to upset babies by containing them, shutting
down on their disturbing motor activity by touching or holding them. By contrast, fathers are more likely to
jiggle or rock babies in a playful, rhythmic fashion (Dixon et al). Touch is a message system between the
caregiver and the infant – both for quietening and for alerting and
arousing.
(Brazelton and Cramer, 1991, p 61-62)
The Sterns have described the exquisite touching that the mother does as
she gets to know her new born on the outside for the first time. And, when the baby is feeding at the breast the mother (or
perhaps the baby) orchestrates a shifting back and forth between them to
maintain the right level of arousal for the feeding to continue Òat a
reasonable clipÓ. Touching,
gazing, and listening are integral to the dance between them. And the Òhighest point of feeling secure, where one experiences a safe havenÓ
comes from a chest to chest embrace.
ÒA baby held in that way faces the
world without fear.Ó (Stern
and Stern, 1998, p.162)
Touch remains a major part of adult communications. Indeed, at times touch says more than
words can convey. Giving a warm
embrace conveys love and companionship to the bereaved. It says ÒI am with youÓ when that is all that can be
offered. And in intimate relationships touch
speaks to the other of our deepest feelings.
However, many adults have difficulties expressing themselves through
touch, although they may not seek psychotherapy. The robust looking person with the limp, clammy handshake is
a clichŽd example. Deficits, invasions
and traumas in early life can impact on the capacity to express emotions
through touch and to receive tactile communications.
Touch in psychotherapy
Prior to the development of psychiatry and psychoanalysis touch and
massage were part of the cures offered to the insane and those suffering from
ÒnervesÓ (Shorter, 1997) The
forefathers of body psychotherapy such as Janet, Ferenczi, and Reich used touch
in therapy. And it is well known
that Freud in his cathartic phase used touch to elicit memories. Reich spent time in Norway and whilst he
was there the training psychoanalyst, Braatšy (1954) attended ReichÕs
seminars. Braatšy collaborated with the reknown
physiotherapist, Aadel BŸlow-Hansen and, although he recognised the benefits of
abstinence with certain hysterical patients, he also wrote on instances where
he hid behind the abstinence rule out of his own fears and was aware of the
message this conveyed to the patient. Indirectly, Braatšy has influenced all of the Body
Psychotherapy Organisational Members within UKCP.
Touch is integral to body psychotherapy
Body psychotherapy has retained touch as part of psychotherapy and
accordingly has developed considerable expertise in this area. Communicating through touch is a core competency
learned during training by body psychotherapists, particularly if they have
trained at the London School of Biodynamic Psychotherapy, the Chiron Centre for
Body Psychotherapy, and Cambridge Body Psychotherapy Centre. This training is experiential and sits alongside theoretical and ethical
considerations. The main vehicles
for the exploration of touch are biodynamic massage and vegetotherapy, a Òfree
association of the body,Ó developed by Reich in the 1920s. This form of touching is more
than transferring social modes of touching such as hugs and handshakes to the
consulting room. Trainee body
psychotherapists also experience touch in their individual psychotherapy. This gives them an in-depth knowledge
of their own issues relating to touching and being touched. It also provides confidence in relating
through touch and provides the foundations for thinking about and exploring
touch in clinical work. Supervisory
relationships support this and deepen understanding.
Clients seeking out body psychotherapy
Many individuals seek out body psychotherapy specifically because it may
include touch. These clients know that they have impairments around touch that
they want to explore literally and not symbolically. Intuitively,
they know that verbal language alone will not resolve the issues encoded
bodily. The later clinical
vignettes in this article are composites to illustrate touch in body
psychotherapy.
In the contractual phase of body psychotherapy touch is discussed explicitly
and agreements made about its use (or not). Touch is multilayered and complex in its meanings and the
psychotherapist keeps these in mind, even if they are not always
discussed. This way of beginning a
psychotherapy relationship is different from other modalities of psychotherapy,
where touch is for exceptional circumstances, or might be used cautiously and
ÒsparinglyÓ. This understanding of touch opens up a
range of therapeutic possibilities not available, or indeed hard to imagine in
other psychotherapeutic modalities (Westland, 2009b, Westland, 2010, Westland,
forthcoming).
Touch as contact
Therapeutic touch is a learned skill, which becomes embedded over time
in the being of the psychotherapist, and a major mode of communication. Body psychotherapists consider touch as
ÒcontactÓ and are taught to use Òcontactful touchÓ (Westland, 2009a).
JennyÕs psychotherapist, Elaine held her hand
as she described her painful feelings.
They had agreed this to help Jenny to stay present to her experience. However, Jenny felt the ÒabsenceÓ of
Elaine in her touch and knew that she, too, was terrified, and had ÒgoneÓ.
This snippet of interaction invites further exploration and is the stuff
of body psychotherapy. Was
Jenny misreading the touch? Was Elaine out of contact? Did she know it? Could they talk about it? Could Elaine find her way back and
become present in her touch? Could
Jenny express her feelings? Was Elaine
becoming merged with the JennyÕs experiences? What happened next?
Contactful touch is a complex intersubjective interaction. It involves moment by moment, here and
now awareness (mindfulness of sensations, thoughts, images, feelings) accompanied
by curiosity to be brought to what is happening in the relationship between
client and psychotherapist. The
relationship flows back and forth, co-arises in a joint endeavour, and as it unfolds
depends on the presence and intention of the psychotherapist. Contactful touch requires technical skills,
expertise in timing, assessing the ambience around the transferences, and
having some idea of what might be forthcoming on touching or being touched by a
client. It is always exploratory
and unpredictable, although a skilled therapist may have some inkling of what
might arise. The psychotherapist should
know how to explore what arises either non-verbally or perhaps using a
combination of words, touch and perhaps gaze.
Touch is a direct communication
Touch is a direct communication between the client and the
psychotherapist. It goes both ways
– the client knows the psychotherapist, and the psychotherapist knows the
client. This direct communication
is not always possible to translate into words: touch and verbal language are
different forms of communication. Indeed,
words cannot express the subtleties of experience, including emotion, and moving
to verbal communication can prematurely cut off further exploration of
experience. Touch shows the
defence system of both client and therapist and the availability for intimacy
and contact. It is potent and reveals
the relationship in stark concreteness.
For this reason touch, as a form of communication is threatening to some
as it fails to leave enough privacy for client and psychotherapist alike.
I felt safe with my psychotherapist as she was holding
me, and told her something that I had not mentioned before. Her words suggested that she was
receptive, but I felt her hand startle almost imperceptibly with my revelation.
Body psychotherapy tends to relate more from a Òbottom-upÓ sensorimotor,
emotional, experiencing process than from a more Òtop-downÓ cognitive
process. However, in
practice both modes of access to experience occur. Similarly, contemporary body psychotherapy shifts
between more intrapsychic focus to more interpersonal relating and attention to
emergent intersubjectivities. Sometimes
the ÒconversationÓ in body psychotherapy will be directly via touch with little
verbal back up.
Relating through touch
Touch is the choice of interaction with some clients as it creates space
from the intensity of the interpersonal relationship. It can give a way of being in contact with another without
the pressure to fend off a supposedly hostile world, which has to be defended
against.
As Martha (psychotherapist) speaks, Susan (client)
reacts by speaking more rapidly and justifying herself in well-trodden
explanations. Susan is
hyper-aroused, has quickened chest breathing, and a heightened awareness of
every nuance of MarthaÕs being. Martha
could sit silently and hold the client energetically and listen until the
ÒemergencyÓ passes. However, touch
is possible with Susan and Martha decides on this way of going on. The predictable structures of biodynamic
massage enable Susan to have brief moments of being with Martha and feeling the
human to human contact in a low key way.
Her system calms, her
breathing deepens, and gentle tears spill and trickle down her cheeks. There is no need for either to
say anything.
SusanÕs mother had apparently been
inconsistent, sometimes invasive, sometimes distant, and not able to ÒbeÓ with
her infant. Intellectual
understandings had substituted for authentic emotional meetings between
them. Sometimes Martha felt
compelled to talk and to comment on the process, but it only interfered and
took Susan back to the cognitive level.
What was needed was just to be in the immediacy of the moment tracking
feelings, thoughts, images and somatic responses.
Touch can also connect emotion and inner sensation to language.
Alex speaks in a monotone about her son. She says something about his dark,
unreachable despair. She continues
to speak of not cleaning the house, a problem at work, a visit from a friend. Life is a list of problems to deal
with. Her sentences seem coherent,
but are unintelligible, despite her considerable vocabulary. There are also no changes in tone or
intensity or emphasis as she speaks.
Conveying her inner life with its body sensations, emotions or images is
a mystery to her and questions or comments about it produce blankness. Alex continues in the same tone
of voice. Paul (psychotherapist)
instinctively reaches out and takes her hand. It is icy cold and in that moment he recognises AlexÕs
almost frozen terror. Alex takes a
breath, and Paul says ÒYou are terrified about what your son might do to
himself. You think that he might
take his own lifeÓ. Alex
silently nods. This is another
small step towards recognising internal sensations and feelings and translating
them into word language.
Sometimes touch opens up to spiritual experience.
ÒAll artistic and spiritual experience – perhaps everything truly
important – can be implicit only: language, in making things explicit,
reduces everything to the same worn coinage, and as Nietzsche said, makes the
uncommon commonÓ (Gilchrist, 2009).
Jane recounts her experience after receiving biodynamic massage:
I was vaguely aware of you, but more with myself. I became suffused with feelings of utter
peace and joy - I was me, and I knew that you were you - and we were all one
with everything - I was in the world - and the world pulsed in all my
cells.
Conclusions
Touch is such a central part of communication at all stages of life that
the possibility of its inclusion in psychotherapy is vital. However, touch is powerful and should
not be undertaken lightly in the therapeutic endeavour. Caution should be exercised with including
touch with borderline, traumatised and potentially psychotic clients. Nevertheless, each psychotherapy
relationship has its own unique potential and for a trained psychotherapist who
is adequately supervised it may be possible to include touch. For some clients it is the main way to
relate.
References
Please contact the author for a full list of references.
Gill Westland is director of Cambridge Body Psychotherapy
Centre, which offers a full training in body psychotherapy. She offers individual body
psychotherapy, training, supervision, and consultancy. She is co-editor of the international
journal Body, Movement and Dance in
Psychotherapy, published by Taylor and Francis.
gillwestland@cbpc.org.uk www.cbpc.org.uk