Nature-Based Expressive Arts Therapy

(Bozica Vekic) #1

60 NATURE-BASED EXPRESSIVE ARTS THERAPY


Nature-based expressive arts as a story of belonging


Rejecting the dominant narrative of separation, a nature-based
orientation to expressive arts returns us to our imagination, our
intuition, our physical bodies and the body of the Earth. We recall
the story of belonging attributed to Chief Seattle, patriarch of the
Duwamish and Squamish tribes of Puget Sound, in his 1855 letter
to US president Franklin Pierce:
This we know: the earth does not belong to man: man belongs
to the earth... Whatever befalls the earth, befalls the sons of the
earth. Man did not weave the web of life: he is merely a strand in
it. Whatever he does to the web, he does to himself.^1
Embedded in nature-based expressive arts is a respect for our
membership in the “family of things” (Oliver 1986). We recall a time
when singing and dancing were done not in the consulting room but
in concert with the rhythms of planting and harvest. When we work
with clay and paint, we remember our connection to the Earth and its
gifts. We bring ceremony and ritual into our work, recalling ancient
practices of honoring the cardinal directions and the elements and
giving thanks to the ancestors, to the future beings and to the Earth
and its many teachers. When we hold a flute, we know that it is a
gift from the tree. We know that the skin of our drums is a gift from
the animal kingdom. From this perspective we see our connection
and remember our belonging. This awareness of interdependence
informs our art. We are touched by, and moved to respond to, this
web of interconnection.

Summary


In this chapter, we have reviewed the basic tenets of expressive
arts and ecotherapy and resonances between the two fields. We
have introduced nature-based expressive arts work, compared this
approach to traditional therapy and offered a clinical story as an

1 The full letter can be read at http://www.barefootsworld.net/seattle.html.
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