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“She Offered Me a Place and a Future”: Change is an Event of Becoming Through Movement in Ethical Time and Space.
Bøe, Tore Dag.
Kristoffersen, Kjell.
Lidbom, Per Arne.
Lindvig, Gunnhild Ruud.
Seikkula, Jaakko.
Ulland, Dagfinn.
Zachariassen, Karianne.
University of Agder, Grimstad, Norway.
Journal Article
Copyright
Contemporary Family Therapy
Vol. 36, No. 4
, p. 474-484
DOI: 10.1007/s10591-014-9317-3
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Within mental health research, the promise of exploring the lived experience of those affected is increasingly acknowledged. This research points to the significance of social aspects. The present study is part of a series of qualitative studies exploring network-oriented practices in southern Norway. The aim of this study was to explore the social dynamics of change related to adolescents in psychosocial crises. From the perspective of lived experience the study focused changes related to the adolescents’ ways of existing in various social arenas. Data from qualitative interviews with adolescents receiving help from a mental health service, persons in their social network, and the practitioners involved were explored through a dialogical phenomenological–hermeneutical process. Two co-researchers, on the basis of their own experience with mental health problems, participated throughout the research process. Concepts from the thinking of Mikhail Bakhtin, Françoise Dastur, and John Shotter were used as interpretative help. Main theme: change is the event of becoming through movement in Ethical Time and Space. Two dimensions, conceptualized as Ethical Space and Ethical Time, were identified: (1) “A place for me” or “No place for me” (Ethical Space), and (2) Before-Event of anticipation—Event of movement—After-Event of experience (Ethical Time). Four aspects within these dimensions emerged: (1) an opening Before-Event: offering space for my movement; (2) a closing Before-Event: not offering space for my movement; (3) a life-giving After-Event: the experience of being valued; and (4) a life-deteriorating After-Event: the experience of being devalued. The results are discussed in relation to other studies investigating how bodily responsiveness is at the core of human becoming. (Author abstract)
Keywords:
adolescents; mental health services; norway; emotional problems; identity; crisis therapy