Outdoor Therapy: An Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis Examining the Lived-Experience, Embodied, and Therapeutic Process through Interpersonal Process Recall
Abstract
:1. Outdoor Therapy
“(1) Uses a process of supported self-discovery to promote wellbeing and change.(2) Has some experience that takes place out-of-doors (recognition of interconnection to the environment and other themes).(3) Recognizes the outdoor place is an active component in the therapeutic process and that the process involves other components such as place, experience and reflection.(4) Understands that reflection (not reviewing) for the therapist and client is an integral part of the process and that these reflective processes include what is happening for both the therapist/practitioner and the client and their relationship to the outdoor place.”
1.1. The Role of the Therapist
1.2. The Outdoor Environment: Figure or Ground?
2. Methods
2.1. Interpersonal Process Recall
2.2. Sample
- Participant A: Works with individuals indoors and outdoors with a person-centered modality and uses various outdoor sites from local parks to mountainous regions (male).
- Participant B: Works with individuals indoors and outdoors following a person-centered modality within a pluralistic agency, using woodlands, parks, and fells (male).
- Participant C: Works with groups and individuals in indoor and outdoor venues, using an integrative approach combining Gestalt, Jungian, transactional analysis, and person-centered theory and aspects of coaching and wilderness therapy (male).
2.3. Informed Consent
2.4. Procedure
2.5. Ethical Considerations
2.6. Researcher Bias
2.7. Analysis
“Descriptive comments focused on describing the content of what the participant has said, the subject of the talk within the transcript… Linguistic comments focused upon exploring the specific use of language by the participant… Conceptual comments focused on engaging at a more interrogative and conceptual level”.
3. Results
3.1. Transitional Landscapes; Transitional Thinking
“We’d get to the bridge at the head of the lake … that’s like a passage and I’d say to people… when we come off the tarmac road I’d invite them to think about their leaving one kind of environment and going into somewhere else”.(Participant C)
“He chose a route through some paths, woodland paths and ended up going off track and over walls… it was almost quite playful, and quite a sense of lostness and re-emerging and all that kind of stuff he was experiencing which mirrored some of our indoor sessions, literally as opposed to metaphorically”.(Participant B)
“He was moving along, like in the same way that his emotions were moving… feeling very lost, very confused… what mirrored that process was walking along in the light, a light airy space for a little bit and then going through the woods as per his direction, and getting very lost and weaving our way through these little paths”.(Participant B)
“Just at the point where we were more tangled was when we could actually start to see the sky through the trees again…and then saw the hope, the light through the trees and that seemed to help facilitate him getting back to himself, answering his question about the here-and-now”.(Participant B)
“That for me is like the holy grail, when the experience of the session and the experiencing of it feels as real as what’s going on internally, we hit those moments throughout that journey because the client is picking the route in tune with the content of their session”.(Participant B)
“I think walking gave us an opportunity to share times of stillness and silence which were sometimes necessary for my client to be able to process what was going on and to find the words to say what he wanted to say”.(Participant A)
3.2. The Embodied Process
“You feel kind of more what they’re feeling and their kind of anger can become perhaps more understandable or certainly experienced anyway!”.(Participant A)
“In a therapy room… they can see the clock… but in nature when they’ve been walking around in the woods and they don’t really know where they are, old worries and anxieties and things may well resurface but they may be reflecting the real person rather than the person they try to be”.(Participant C)
“If they don’t look after themselves physically in that environment, then what does that say about them emotionally? Are they able to take care themselves?”.(Participant C)
“Stillness’s and silences can seem a very natural part of the process of walking, whereas in a counselling room, sometimes those dark silences can seem very, yeah unbearable almost”.(Participant A)
“One particular client… it was very obvious there was not psychological contact between him and his surroundings… within about ten-fifteen minutes I had this most enormous headache… it was really frustrating because I was really feeling that sense of complete disconnection with where I was… I was in his world, I’d kind of lost a sense of me as a counsellor… I was as disembodied as he was”.(Participant A)
“The risk is you have a genuine relationship with somebody… then you actually feel their pain and their sorrow and their sadness”.(Participant A)
“I think that’s one of the reasons why counsellors are very reluctant to work outdoors because… strangely… it seems paradoxical because what you want is intimacy, I think often counsellors are actually very scared of true intimacy”.(Participant A)
“I think trusting relationships can develop very quickly, that can also be a problem too in the sense that sometimes people might be working quicker than they actually feel comfortable with”.(Participant A)
3.3. Parallel Processing
“I notice that when I’m outside I can be more immediate with what is going on in the moment, I can be more focused, perhaps more available for the client… that has an impact in terms of holding from a person-centered point of view… holding of the necessary and sufficient conditions”.(Participant A)
“My feeling is joy, I’m finally in a new place, there’s a new lostness; I love exploring so for me there’s an adventurous side, I love that feeling. But I love it so much that I’ve had to learn how to not let that get in the way of how the client is feeling… this has taken a long time… to both feel that excitement that I’m having in the moment… but to be with the client and how they’re experiencing that moment”.(Participant B)
“I keep feeling naughty about that… like little school boys playing… we were in this deep process literally a moment ago, but it got really steep and really windy, I had this feeling like ‘we shouldn’t be here’… and I just have to let it go because I’m looking at the client just carrying on talking but he’s weaving through”.(Participant B)
“For me it was divine, it was heavenly, but for my client it who was feeling very suicidal at the time, he just had this deep feeling of foreboding because it was just too much”.(Participant A)
“I was expecting them to have the same relationship to nature as I did. Which was enthusiastic, love, joy, it was amazing the best thing in the world and the first person I took outside hated it… I was really disappointed”.(Participant B)
“I didn’t realize until I did this on reflecting on this… I’m aiming for this ideal kind of equality with the client and the session… to mirror what I’m actually doing indoors… I wanted to actually go somewhere I hadn’t been before, so that it did feel more like it does in a normal session which is new territory, new ground”.(Participant B)
3.4. Watching for Drift
“Walking to the park, we would have general sort of chit-chat but we wouldn’t be doing sort of deep work because I’d end up walking into a car”.(Participant A)
“I’m almost giggling here actually because I remember… there was a part where the alliance was as if we were being a bit naughty like here we are doing a counselling session, talking about all these things and then we find ourselves weaving up, weaving up quite a steep track, not even a track, a steep wall with no track”.(Participant B)
“That pretense goes, you just lose yourself… we shared in those moments so that our eye contact was more and we were having fun”.(Participant B)
“I didn’t know that was the way out, he did actually find it… he thought I was pretending… that I did really know where I was… and I didn’t. And that was really levelling”.(Participant B)
4. Discussion
4.1. Limitations and Reflexivity
4.2. Implications
5. Conclusions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
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Schwenk, H. Outdoor Therapy: An Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis Examining the Lived-Experience, Embodied, and Therapeutic Process through Interpersonal Process Recall. Sports 2019, 7, 182. https://doi.org/10.3390/sports7080182
Schwenk H. Outdoor Therapy: An Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis Examining the Lived-Experience, Embodied, and Therapeutic Process through Interpersonal Process Recall. Sports. 2019; 7(8):182. https://doi.org/10.3390/sports7080182
Chicago/Turabian StyleSchwenk, Heidi. 2019. "Outdoor Therapy: An Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis Examining the Lived-Experience, Embodied, and Therapeutic Process through Interpersonal Process Recall" Sports 7, no. 8: 182. https://doi.org/10.3390/sports7080182
APA StyleSchwenk, H. (2019). Outdoor Therapy: An Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis Examining the Lived-Experience, Embodied, and Therapeutic Process through Interpersonal Process Recall. Sports, 7(8), 182. https://doi.org/10.3390/sports7080182