Learning from Action: Working with the Non-verbal

Editor : R.D. Hinshelwood, Editor : Luca Mingarelli

Learning from Action: Working with the Non-verbal

Book Details

  • Publisher : Karnac Books
  • Published : August 2022
  • Cover : Paperback
  • Pages : 296
  • Category :
    Group Psychotherapy
  • Catalogue No : 96446
  • ISBN 13 : 9781912691210
  • ISBN 10 : 9781912691
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Since the early 1990s, Enrico Pedriali with R. D. Hinshelwood organised workshops in Italy known as the learning from action workshops. This novel approach evolved from applying the principles of therapeutic communities to a group relations form of experiential conference. The group relation tradition, however, does not focus particularly on mental health organisations and tends to focus on senior management issues of leadership and authority. In contrast, the learning from action workshops are tailored to the care workers engaged in the direct work, in particular for those working with clients and patients with significant problems with verbal and symbolic communication. The workshops also include an element of research into the unconscious messaging systems employed in making relations, which contribute to therapeutic and other mental health care services. There are also chapters on a related form of workshop - the living and learning experience - which was established primarily for learning about therapeutic communities, which bring further insight to working practices.

The book brings together a community of 21 authors: Giada Boletti, Louisa Diana Brunner, Davide Catullo, Heather Churchill, John Diamond Donna M. Elmendorf, Giovanni Foresti, Rex Haigh, R. D. Hinshelwood, Yuko Kawai, Eriko Koga, Jan Lees, Simona Masnata, Luca Mingarelli, Gilad Ovadia, Mario Perini, Barbara Rawlings, Antonio Sama, Edward R. Shapiro, Lili Valko, and Zsolt Zalka.

It will be a must-read for those working in mental health care. The information within will be of use to those new to the profession, for whom there is often very little preparation or reading material, and also to more senior members to use not only for their own development but also in training and research activities in mental health.

Reviews and Endorsements

Human relationships and mental distress are vastly complex and multifactorial. It is obvious, and at the same time a paradox, to realise that the most intensively trained and self-conscious practitioners are the ones who are able to facilitate the most secure and bounded interactions, with the greatest outcomes in mental health. To be able to use the "ordinary" as therapy requires great skill and humility or, as some authors name it, a "complex simplicity". The quality of democratic therapeutic communities is evident in the various chapters presented. The most intense learning a human being goes through is in the first two years of life before the ability to communicate verbally. During this period, genes reorganise themselves and brain structure changes dramatically. The baby learns through action and the reflection that others leave and return. Psychological organisation, in this way, is not down to the individual but is a dialogical process and a multidirectional system. What this book effectively demonstrates is the "complex simplicity" of using the ordinary daily activities and interactions as therapy. Instead of reducing relationships to the "technical-rational" and the still-dominant model of science with its linear causality, the authors remain daringly focused on the complex dance between implicit and explicit levels of communication. This book is a masterful contribution to the discussion.
João Pereira, clinical director, Romão de Sousa Foundation; founder, Open Dialogue Portugal; president, INDTC Portugal

'This excellent book addresses the crucial issues that the therapeutic communities were conceived to deal with and shows the potential benefits arising from regular involvement in the Learning from Action (LfA) programme. The LfA workshop was set up as an experiential setting for participants to begin to reflect on the dysfunctional processes of role-recruitment and hidden communications, which tend to become unconsciously cocooned in the institutional body of psychiatric services. As R. D. Hinshelwood quite rightly points out, psychiatry is hugely influenced by the basic assumption that "the psychiatrist and psychiatric nurse know best". But should we actually start from that assumption? The implicitly accepted roles of passive patient and active carer can interfere with the task of helping patients to become active participants in their own treatment.'
Matteo Biaggini, psychologist and Jungian psychoanalyst; former head of publishing, Il Porto Therapeutic Communities

Like sitting at the feet of Gamaliel.
There is a genius in the Learning from Action (LfA) conferences, in the understanding of action as communication, of the everyday as a rooted expression of the being of being human; it is not just in the office or study or consulting room that being is transformed into useful meaning, but in everyday reflective shared living. This is expressed in what is a very straightforward, accessible, and complex book which operates, like the conferences themselves, at multiple levels. Through its richness of experiences, perspectives, interpretations and histories - inside, outside, and in what comes after - it is a practical instruction manual for something which cannot be manualised; a laboratory for research and exploration. As an archivist and historian engaged with therapeutic community for most of my adult life, Learning from Action is a unique historical/archival document. The conferences were created and developed at the turn of the millennium by leading figures in European group and psychosocial therapy. They ran uninterrupted for twenty years, developing a self-replicating culture of innovation and learning. Then the pandemic struck, and the initiators, developers, and experienced members were faced by the trauma familiar to the clients of their therapeutic institutions, of a rupture of continuity, belonging, and home territory. Generally, when institutions hit a wall, they rapidly fragment into aerosols of memory and documentation, as do people, and the work of reintegration takes years of difficult reconstruction. This is the work for archivists, researchers, and therapists. Here, we have an organisation which adapted. Here we have modelled, in a book which is ostensibly about the history and practice of the LfA conferences, how the community itself works and responds to concrete existential challenges seen as opportunities for reflective learning. It models in content and structure the continuity of culture of LfA, and by doing so gathers memory and documented experience into a research tool, making the inner life of the culture visible, becoming a primary source of a kind which is rarely produced economically by living organisations. We are holding the life and working of the LfA conferences in our hands. The fact, basis, and mechanics of continuity are created and implemented as we watch. It creates rich material for study.
Reading Learning from Action from the perspective of someone who lived and worked in a therapeutic community for ten years; and who co-created residential living/learning/working communities for former members of therapeutic communities, engaging with their identity, history and archives (we called them "Archive Weekends"), I found myself in that exciting space where ideas start having themselves and generalising into the lived fabric of the world. The authors and editors explore and model their creative and adaptive response to the trauma of the disruption of the LfA community, adapting to continue the acquisition of knowledge and learning across the rupture. I understood myself, my work, and my experience of both better. It's an experience I can recommend.
Dr Craig Fees, founding archivist, Planned Environment Therapy Trust Archive and Study Centre (retired); honorary research fellow, History of Medicine, University of Birmingham

This remarkable book helped me to gain a better understanding of the mechanics of unconscious messaging […] Everyone should read this book.
Jane Cooper, former senior university counsellor, ‘Therapy Today’ March 2023

Table of Contents


Acknowledgements
Our community of 21 authors

Foreword
Donna M. Elmendorf and Edward R. Shapiro

Introduction
R.D. Hinshelwood and Luca Mingarelli

Applying group relations to therapeutic communities: A marriage with offspring
R.D. Hinshelwood

Deciding for Surviving: Ideas and Models in Group Relations Conference (GRC) Traditions
Giovanni Foresti and Antonio Samà

Language in Action: The other side of Group Relations
Mario Perini

The early intentions
Louisa Brunner and R.D. Hinshelwood

The LfA programme and its reasoning
Giada Boldetti and Luca Mingarelli

Snapshots of the process
Simona Masnata

Reflections on behaviour and relations as meaningful
R.D. Hinshelwood

A journey called learning from Action
Davide Catullo

The dilemmas of role taking as consultant during decision-making and activities
Gilad Ovadia

Comments from other approaches: Living-Learning Experience (LLE) Workshops in theory
Rex Haigh, Jan Lees and Barbara Rawlings

Comments from other approaches: LLE in Practice
Rex Haigh and Jan Lees

Research conclusions
Barbara Rawlings

Facilitating learning at the LFA and taking the learning home
John Diamond

Developments and later conceptualisation
Luca Mingarelli and Giada Boldetti

Understanding community dramaturgy in the everyday life
Zsolt Zalka and Lili Valkó

LfA-Japan: European Flavour and Japanese Taste
Eriko Koga and Yuko Kawai

A Perspective from the US
Heather Churchill

Leaving our conclusions open
Luca Mingarelli, and R.D. Hinshelwood

Appendix 1 - Initial Correspondence
Appendix 2 - Sample Programmes (2001, 2005, 2012, 2019)

About the Editor(s)

R.D. Hinshelwood is a member of the British Psychoanalytical Society, and currently holds the post of Professor of Psychoanalysis at the Centre for Psychoanalytic Studies, University of Essex. He is a Fellow of the Royal College of Psychiatrists, and previously was Clinical Director of the Cassel Hospital in Richmond. He is a past Chair of the Association of Therapeutic Communities. Professor Hinshelwood has written extensively on psychoanalysis and founded the International Journal of Therapeutic Communities (now Therapeutic Communities) in 1980 and the British Journal of Psychotherapy in 1984.

More titles by R.D. Hinshelwood

Luca Mingarelli is chairman of the Foundation Rosa dei Venti no profit. He is a social entrepreneur, psychotherapist (ECP,WCP), and organisational consultant. Since 1997, he is founder and director of Therapeutic Communities for Adolescents. He has worked in University La Bicocca Milan holding workshops. He is also past President and now Associate President of Il NODO Group Association and an OPUS member. He is founder and board member of the International Network Therapeutic Communities (INDTC) and of Mito&Realtà Association with the role of national convener of therapeutic communities for adolescents. He has been director and/or consultant of several international Group Relation Conferences (Italy, Peru, UK, USA, etc.) and of ten “Learning from Action” workshops. He has been a basketball coach and is member of the Order of Journalists. He has written several books on therapeutic communities for adolescents.

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