ABSTRACT
This article discusses the issue of using touch in psychotherapy and
addresses the difficulties encountered in discussing the topic. These difficulties include confusion
about the purpose of touch, lack of experience among psychotherapists in the
use of touch, and misunderstandings about who actually uses touch in
psychotherapy. The article then
addresses the anxiety psychotherapists feel about using touch such as fears of
sexual provocation or physical aggression. The importance of touch in emotional development and
everyday life is emphasised and the benefits of using touch in psychotherapy
detailed. Two cases of the
beneficial use of touch are presented with comments from the clients, and the
concept of Òcontactful touchÓ introduced.
Finally, based on the authorÕs experience as a body psychotherapist,
trainer and supervisor, some guidelines are suggested for how touch can be
introduced into psychotherapy.
KEY WORDS: contactful touch, anxiety about touch, benefits, guidelines,
vignettes, touch debate
PHYSICAL TOUCH IN PSYCHOTHERAPY:
WHY ARE WE NOT TOUCHING MORE?
Much has been written on touch in psychotherapy and it comes around as a
theme for conferences every few years.
It is a popular subject for student dissertations within the humanistic
and integrative psychotherapy field (see for example, Ball, 2002), but touch
remains an uncomfortable issue to deepen into, and the professional debate
moves relatively slowly given the evidence for its benefits. I was trained to touch and how to
discuss it in psychotherapy. Touch
was an integral part of my first individual psychotherapy, but not my
second. I am comfortable with
touch in the therapeutic endeavour, and include it fluidly as part of
communication with clients. This
article considers the reasons why the discussion of touch is so difficult and
confusing and why the debate about whether to touch or not develops
comparatively slowly. It discusses
anxieties about touch in psychotherapy and society, why touch is so difficult,
and the benefits of touch. Using
vignettes from clients to illustrate how touch is essential for some clients,
the author explains how she understands touch and offers guidelines on touching
in psychotherapy
At conferences discussions about touch can be confused, even for body
psychotherapists, as well as for humanistic psychotherapists and
psychoanalysts. Often it is not
clear whether we are thinking about touch as a symbol – perhaps of the
mother and nurture, or something to be included for clients with developmental
deficits, or as a tool for physiological calming with a goal like reducing
anxiety or lifting depression, or a way of gratifying impulses, or as a tool to
provoke catharsis. All of these
are possibilities, but depend on different ways of viewing touch in the
therapeutic endeavour. Often the
discussion is adversarial with discussants defending their positions. These are
often polarised as Òto touch or notÓ to add interest, but this does nothing to
engender a safe dialogue, where it could be truly possible to find some new
insights about a difficult topic.
One way to cut through some of the muddle would be to map out the territory and the different ways that touch is used in each domain. Weber (1990) proposes one such model and identifies three perspectives from which to discuss touch. These are the physical-sensory, the psychological-humanistic, and the field. The physical-sensory view is reductive, mechanistic and medical. Discussion is dualistic, tends to look at the physiology and anatomy of touch, and techniques. The source of the touch is irrelevant i.e. who or what is touching. The psychological-humanistic perspective is closest to phenomenology and existentialism. It is concerned with subjectivity, and human feelings such as love and empathy. Interaction between individuals is purposive and self conscious. ÒI-ThouÓ relating is whole person relating and communing with another (Buber, 1947/2002). ÒI-ThouÓ touch involves oneÕs whole being touching another whole being. Touch is reciprocal. The field perspective fits with Eastern philosophy and incorporates the other two perspectives. Individuals are regarded as Òlocalised expressionsÓ of the energetic field. Intentionality is fundamental to relating; and the intention of the giver makes a difference to the touch, and how it is received. Intention is energy, which impacts on the other, and may be experienced before the actual physical touch occurs. This is because organisms resonate and attune with each other via non-sensory means. This is both literal and metaphorical. Touch as ÒreachingÓ the other, meets the other at deeper levels than the observable. In field theory everything is connected and meaning comes from the context. Structure and function are not separate and in therapeutic work the client and therapist co-create the field together. The contact between them organises the field and the relationship takes its particular shape (Parlett, 1991).
A further difficulty in discussions is that participants may have no
experience of touch in their training or individual psychotherapy, apart
perhaps from ÒsparingÓ touch in a not very thought out way, or some social
touching such as handshakes, or hugs at the ends of sessions, or in the gap
between the consulting room and the outside door. Tune (2001, 2005) found in research interviews that
therapists initially stated that they did not touch, but when he prompted them,
they realised that they did touch mostly in the spontaneous social sphere.
One way of filling the touch experience gap is to have massage or a body
therapy such as craniosacral therapy alongside analysis or psychotherapy, or
after completing initial training.
When touch is split off in this way from the psychotherapeutic
relationship it creates its own problems, and is quite a different experience
from the possibility of having a range of ways of communicating in one
relationship. So this leaves
discussants speaking from everyday experiences, combined with theoretical ideas
and rules. For the discussion on
touch to progress, I believe that touch has to be experienced to enable talking
from an informed position.
Assumptions about who touches therapeutically
The common assumption is that psychoanalysts do not touch, and indeed,
are supposed not to touch – the rule of abstinence. The rule of abstinence appears to be
more prominent amongst Freudians, but is also found amongst Jungians, although
Bosanquet (2006) has observed that Jung made no clear prohibition on
touching. Well-known examples of not touching are Patrick
CasementÕs (2002) work with Mrs B., who was severely scalded as a child, and
also Joy SchaverienÕs (2002, 2006) relationship with a dying patient.
However, we know that some analysts over the different decades do touch
(see for example, Bosanquet, 1970; Woodmansey,
1986; Rosenberg, 1995;
Toronto, 2006), but there is unease and ambivalence about it. Indeed, FerencziÕs (Dupont, 1995) work
with active methods and touch was largely ignored for years. Although WinnicottÕs work with Margaret
Little (1985) is held up as an example of work with a severely distressed
person and touch seems legitimate, the current assessment of it is not
clear-cut (see for example Kahr, 2006).
Where touch has occurred in analysis it can be associated with shame,
guilt and inadequacy. Something
has been transgressed, which is hard to discuss with a supervisor (Pinson,
2002) or at a professional conference.
Nevertheless, with the developments in neuroscience, trauma studies and
research into child development, psychoanalysis has been required to reassess
the abstinence rule and discussion on touch is coming out of the closet
somewhat tentatively (For example, Orbach, 2003;
Galton, 2006).
Contrary to popular belief not all body psychotherapists touch, or
indeed have any training in touch.
Some trained at the Chiron Centre for Body Psychotherapy have moved
relatively more towards a psychoanalytic stance and do not use touch and active
methods (Hartley, 2009).
Rothschild (2000, 2002) does not use touch in her work with those who
are traumatised. Young (2005) has
also written on body psychotherapy without touch.
A recent step forward theoretically, is the discussion within the
relational psychoanalysis – body psychotherapy debate. Asheri (2009), for example, orients her
themes on touch around intersubjectivity and the therapeutic relationship. The common understanding on
intersubjectivity seems to create a climate in which to reconsider touch.
The topic of touch does provoke anxiety. Authors who advocate touch in psychotherapy are emphatic
that they are discussing Òethical touchÓ and are ÒthriftyÓ with their use of
it. The most prevalent fear is
that touch will provoke sexual acting out by both parties. Mintz responds to this and asserts:
To this writer it seems absurd that any
qualified psychoanalyst should be so carried away by contact with a patient,
however attractive, that he (or she) could not refrain from complete
gratification. Such an impulsive
person would not be safe on a dance floor. (Mintz, 1969, p.371)
Research has indicated that psychotherapists who touch are no more
likely to act unethically than those who do not touch (Milakovich, 1998). Denman (2004) informs us that sexual
boundary violation involves the Ògradual erosion of customary boundariesÓ (authorÕs italics) (p. 298). Nevertheless there remains a tendency
to link touch with sex both in psychotherapy and society more generally (see, for example,
Davis, 1991).
Other fears are that touching a client may be aggressive or will lead to
aggression.
Additional arguments against touch include that it may be manipulative;
that it brings too much reality in and spoils the symbolic aspect of
therapeutic work; that it keeps the client dependent in a pre-oedipal state
with no room for envy, competition and the development of autonomy; and that it
heightens the emotionality of the client.
Nowadays there is also the fear of false accusation and litigation
making psychotherapists less adventurous.
Nevertheless, the Health Professions Council consultation document for
Dance Movement Psychotherapy (2009) includes touch as a differentiating factor
from other creative arts psychotherapists. However, Popa and Best (2010) highlight the lack of detailed
ethical guidelines and theoretical foundations for the use of touch in Dance
Movement Therapy.
The training analyst, Braatšy (1954) writes of the Òtremendous giftÓ to
certain hysterical female patients of not touching and the message it gives of
being interested in ÒmeÓ and
supported FreudÕs ideas, based on his work with hysterical females, of shifting
the focus to frustrating impulses and work with transference. Braatšy collaborated with the renown
Norwegian physiotherapist, Aadel
BŸlow-Hansen, and studied with Reich, and
also observed:
Épersistent withdrawal, the absolute and holy
rule, Ònever touchÓ may be reacted to as if it expressed a fear in the
therapist similar to the patientÕs own
fear. In such cases, the
absolute rule may paralyze the treatment.
The patient will not let herself go because the therapist seems to be
just as frightened of the essential thing, the body and its impulses, as she is
herself. (Braatšy, 1954, p. 224 original italics)
He recalls defensively placing a table between himself and a female
patient, and also observed that persistent verbalisation by the analyst can be
interpreted quite rightly as defence.
During the 1970s, along with many others, I met with friends to learn
how to massage using DowningÕs (1972) book on massage. Whilst there is now more ease in some
parts of society with massage and touch, we have ambivalent feelings about
touch and remain afraid of the intimacy involved (Leijjsen, 2006). With this comes uncertainty about
pleasure and sexuality. The roots
of this lie in how we were treated, and how we continue to treat children in
our society. Intimacy between
parent and child still gets regulated into feeding routines, carrying babies
around in car seats like parcels, and not picking the child up for fear of
spoiling. This leads to a deficit
of touch experiences, and the lack of a continuum of touch communications and
ÒunderstandingÓ of the nuances of playful touch, soothing touch, caring touch,
and the pleasure of contact.
Cornell (1998) has drawn our attention to ReichÔs (1983) paper on the
origin of the human ÒNoÓ and how painful it is for an adult to feel fully
alive, when they had the Òjoy of lifeÓ crushed by a cold, unresponsive mother. This remains as pertinent as ever. The risk management culture in the
U.S.A. has led to the avoidance of anything risky regardless of any benefits
(Zur and Nordmarken, 2009). In
Britain, mistrust has also been institutionalised (Furedi and Bristow, 2008) and
rules are made to make everything safe and to
dampen spontaneity.
Touch is ÒchiefÓ amongst the languages of the senses. ÒThe communications we transmit through
touch constitute the most powerful means of establishing human relationships,
the foundation of experienceÓ (Montagu, 1986, p.xv). Touch is vital in infancy for development (e.g. Spitz and
Wolf, 1946; Bowlby, 1997/1969; Brazelton, T Berry, and
Cramer, B.G., 1991; Schore, 1994;
Trevarthen and Aiken, 2001; Travarthen, 2004). Sadly most of our clients will have had inadequate or
inappropriate experiences of touch.
Less is known about the touch needs of adults, including the elderly,
but an awareness of ourselves through skin contact of some sort does seem to be
important for an ongoing sense of self.
From a medical perspective touch including massage has numerous benefits. These include lifting mood in the
treatment of depression, including post-natal depression, reducing anxiety,
pain relief, reduction in muscle tension, decreasing raised blood pressure,
enhancement of immune function, improving sleep, decreasing the symptoms of
sexual abuse, reducing aggression in adolescents, and improving weight gain in
preterm neonates (See for example, Field, 2003;
Westland, 1993, 1993a).
The literature on touch in psychotherapy describes a wide range of
reasons for its inclusion therapeutically. Each position is underpinned by a theoretical stance and
there is some consensus gradually developing across modalities. The categories below are an attempt to
map the use of touch. The specific
criteria fit in more than one grouping and are the authorÕs categorisations of
the literature.
There are clients for whom touch is an essential part of the therapeutic
relationship. A Jungian analysand
describes (permission given) how the history of receiving touch from her
analyst has taken her to the beginnings of sensing relationship without
touch. She writes:
My therapist had often talked about the space
between us as if it were alive with feelings, and that there could be contact
across this space. I had always
felt it to be an empty nothingness É We explored where my therapist might be in
the room in relation to me. A
problem I have had is that when I lie on the couch and close my eyes, I often
lose all sense of my therapist being present. She sits a little behind me and I can find it hard to keep
any awareness of her unless she is touching me. In this exploration, I
found that there was an area in front of me where I could sense her strongly
with my eyes closed, but as she moved to the side, and more behind, she would
disappear. As a result, we have varied our spatial relationship, with her
sometimes sitting more in front of me as I lie down. In that way I can both have the relaxed space that comes
when lying down but without dropping right into an empty place where I feel
alone and abandoned unless I am physically touched.
Similarly a body psychotherapy
client (permission given) writes:
É my psychotherapist respects and honours my boundaries, my insecurities and the space that opens up when I am unable to verbally express what is going on for me (authorÕs italics). We are in relationship to one another, and as such, my experience of him and the therapeutic space is one of safety.
She continues from her diary:
I am touching a well of grief: a long hollow place that is empty and I keep falling and falling. This is not the emptiness of dissociation; this is inside, a place deep inside that goes on and on. It sits underneath the anxiety, the anxiety always there to keep me apart from this emptiness, from the depth of the aloneness, from this dark fetid hollow. Here I am excluded, and separate – solitude. I am touching the dark void, the abyss I am falling into the darkness alone. I touch this well of dead grief - I am dead grief, and I howl and long to be contacted and held. As I curl up, my therapist is there, and carefully, gently he places his hand on my back, he is a witness to my grief, he is there with me, in my grief he makes contact – he holds my grief without taking it from me, without fear he holds it alongside me, there are no words, there is the contact. I feel the warmth of his hand on my skin, but it does not interrupt my grief, it lets me know he is with me, it lets me know he can take this pain, that he recognizes the aloneness and without wanting to fix, cure or interrupt he sits there with it and me É I am alone but with someone, a benign someone, and it all feels a little more bearable.
If I generalise about these client examples
with their unique differences, they might be considered in terms of development
trauma and/or deficit, possibly alexithymia. When the clientÕs system becomes overwhelmed with arising
sensations and feelings, there is no language capacity to articulate what is
occurring. At a certain point, Òthere are no wordsÓ and the client no longer
feels/does not feel the presence of the psychotherapist. For clients who can accept touch it can
be a rapid way of bringing them back into relationship (Eiden, 1998). This is skilled work and not to be
undertaken lightly. Clients who are
more traumatised have less capacity to differentiate the touch communications
of others (Fagan, Silverton, and Smith, 1998). Ford (1993) has developed a structured protocol for
therapists to employ to explore touch, when the client has been sexually abused
– one of the major areas of trauma.
When I worked at the Chiron Centre (1983-1995), we adopted the term Òcontactful touchÓ for the way we related to clients through touch. We acknowledged touch as a language in its own right that does not always easily translate into words. Touch contact can be much deeper than any verbal communication, and is informed by presence, intentionality and congruence between other forms of communication (Westland, 2009). Touch is relational and part of a range of ways of communicating. Contactful touch always happens in the here and now, moment by moment. In the moment of touching, I am also touched and out of that communications occur. When I touch I do not have a predetermined goal. This form of touch is more a bottom-up, than top-down approach.[1] Technical knowledge about different types of touch may give some idea of how the touch might be received, but I can never really know. Contactful touch is underpinned by WeberÕs (1990) field perspective. Touch is not a technique or an intervention. Touch becomes technique when the client becomes object and I am subject as in ÒI do bodyworkÓ. When touch is exploratory, awareness is placed in the hands and there is movement into the unknown with curiosity. I cannot explore what I already know. So whatever form the touch takes, contact is fundamental to it. Carroll sums this up as ÒTouch is a multiplicity of possibilities each with context in the specific relationship at a specific momentÓ. (Orbach and Carroll, 2006, p. 66)
After 30 years of clinical experience, I have come to the following
thoughts about touch:
Touch is intrinsic to communication, and without it relationship is
partial. Whilst there is some slow
progress towards the acceptance of touch for clients who are emotionally
deprived, more has to be done to further its more widespread inclusion. For this to happen, dialogue about touch in relationship has to move
from adversarial debate to discussion that can hold both the universal (or
general) and the particular (or specific) and not confuse them. The problem with touch is that it is
not easy to pin down and make safe.
Any touch in psychotherapy will be multi-layered with meanings and
experiences that cannot be
pre-determined. It is not possible
to be prescriptive about touch without losing some of the richness of its
possibilities. Touch reminds us
that we are human and are embodied.
Touch can lead us into the deepest realms of intimacy and mystery. It is not surprising that we are
frightened of it.
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[1] Processing of information can be seen as Òtop-downÓ i.e. relatively more cognitive or Òbottom upÓ i.e. relatively more sensorimotor and emotional. These three levels of processing must be balanced and integrated in psychotherapy. See for example, Ogden, P., Minton, K, and Pain, C. (2006). Trauma and the Body, a Sensorimotor approach to Psychotherapy. London: W.W. Norton.