What is
Eating Disorder Psychotherapy?
The arts therapies, including dramatherapy, are particularly beneficial as a therapeutic approach for people with eating disorders. As dramatherapist Kate McCormack said, the dramatherapist does not directly address the eating disorder with the client, or talk to the client about food and how they are eating. The dramatherapist draws on the healthy aspect of a client and works to nourish that.
The development of an eating disorder is in itself an act of communication. It is an extreme form of communication that the unconscious undertakes to protect the person from other very painful and deep issues. Dramatherapy supports a client to work through these at the safe distance of talking about them through character, or through stories and myths, at a place where the client may not be consciously aware. It is a gentle approach that supports the client into awareness of feelings and behaviors otherwise locked in the unconscious. This awareness allows for healing from the pathological communication that is the eating disorder.
As a client explores different means and media of expressing themselves, within the safety of the relationship with the therapist and with the group (if in group therapy), an increase in confidence unfolds. This is a significant aspect of working therapeutically with people with eating disorders many of whom have very low levels of self-esteem.
The therapist engages different creative techniques to support the client at the stage of recovery where they may be at. Sensory exercises support reintegration of the connection between the body and the mind; exploring meaning through images, masks and props that are external to the body support the client’s connecting with the internal and unconscious aspects of their being and developing trust in the therapeutic relationship before being able to engage through their body; improvisation and dramatic play support them to grow more confident in their body and explore new ways of being.
How Does Eating Disorder Psychotherapy Works?
Working With
Sensory Exercises
Because dramatherapy engages both the body and the mind, the process works towards healing the connection through the using of sensory exercises.
Engaging The Body Creatively
The experience of engaging creatively through the body can be experienced as threatening, especially by the notion of ‘being watched’ that comes with drama.