Compose: Singing as a Depth Modality in the Treatment of Trauma
by Jamie Rattner
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Master of Arts in Counseling Psychology
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I certify that I have read this paper and that in my opinion it conforms to acceptable standards of scholarly presentation and is fully adequate, in scope and quality, as a product for the degree of Master of Arts in Counseling Psychology.
____________________________________ Thomas Elsner, M.A., L.P.C. Faculty Advisor
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Abstract
Compose: Singing as a Depth Modality in the Treatment of Trauma
by Jamie Rattner
The author situates the human singing voice at the axis of Psyche and Soma,
suggesting vocalization as vital in the transformation of any trauma complex. Using
Intuitive Inquiry as a methodology, the results of the study are presented as a pre-
recorded vocal method for survivors of trauma supported by a qualitatively researched
rationale. In the Compose method, imagistic representations and sonic manifestations are
initially culled through visceral interoception and exteroceptive sensory awareness. These
images are then externalized in freely associated dreamlike scenes. Since singing is
physical and imagistic, the entirety of the body (as a biological organism and symbolic
field) is engaged in transforming the traumatically induced complex. Drawing from
heuristic self-exploration, the depth psychological tradition, and contemporary somatic
approaches, findings indicate that vocalization may be instrumental in the healing of
trauma survivors.
Table of Contents
Chapter I Introduction ..................................................................................................1 Research Method .....................................................................................................2 Researcher’s Area of Interest ...................................................................................5 Guiding Purpose.....................................................................................................11 Organization of Study ............................................................................................12
Chapter II Literature Review .......................................................................................13
Overview ................................................................................................................13 The Body in Psychoanalysis ..................................................................................15 Trauma and Body Memory ....................................................................................17 The Human Animal and Seven Stages of Traumatic Response ............................19 Stifled Vocalization During Trauma ......................................................................20 Limitations of Talk Therapy in the Treatment of Trauma .....................................21 Singing and Depth Psychology ..............................................................................23 Organism + Image = Body .....................................................................................24
Chapter III Compose: Singing as a Depth Modality in the Treatment of Trauma .......26
Overview ................................................................................................................26 Session Structure ....................................................................................................28 Using the Recording ..............................................................................................32
Part One: Introduction, Flooding, Grounding ....................................32 Part Two: Breathwork and Relaxation ...............................................34 Part Three: Resonance .......................................................................35 Part Four: Range and Images .............................................................38 Part Five: Embodiment and Free Association with the Image ..........38
Chapter IV Summary and Conclusions ........................................................................42
Appendix A Worksheet for Therapists ...........................................................................45 References....... ...................................................................................................................46
Chapter I Introduction
Compose results from researching the human singing voice as the potentially
pivotal bridge between Psyche and Soma, making it instrumental in the treatment of any
trauma complex. The outcome is presented as a recorded approach to symptoms induced
by catastrophe supported by a qualitatively researched rationale. Compose is a
contribution to the many voices in trauma studies that have emphasized the human
organism’s response to harrowing episodes. However, this writing simultaneously
suggests this as a reductionistic understanding that does not take into account a notion of
Soma that is trans-organismic, one that is inclusive and ultimately moving beyond
biology. The Compose method allows for both a literal and non-literal approach to body,
thus making sound with the symbolic orientation of the depth psychological tradition.
This research supports that an approach to trauma, one which arises out of
Lacan’s notion of the body as an organism unified by image, more readily addresses
associated symptomatology (as cited in Soler, 1995, para 12). In the Compose method,
visual imagery and sound are derived through interoception and then externalized
through voice into freely associated, dreamlike scenes. Since singing is somatic and
symbolic, the entirety of the body (as literal and emblematic) is engaged in transforming
the traumatically induced complex. The basis for Compose is both analytical
psychology’s foundational notion that overwhelming psychic material is unconsciously
expressed by the body through symbolic conversion (Freud & Breuer, 1895/2004, p. 81)
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and contemporary trauma research on literal physiognomic trauma response, which
found:
1) Trauma was somatic in nature to begin with and was encoded, stored, and
retrieved in memory along somatic sensory channels;
2) The physical dimension of the trauma was an intensive foreground
experience;
3) The original experience was never articulated beyond the level of the physical
aspect; and
4) The somatic nature of the memories concretized and validated the reality of
the traumatic experience. (Droga, 1997, p. 191)
This research supports the voice as symbol of Psyche (Soul) and supports increased vocal freedom as indicative of increased liberation from a trauma complex. Research Method Droga (1997), Levine (1997), and van der Kolk (2006), among others, have
argued that traumatic memories are primarily somatic, and even that vocal freedom is
reflective of psychological dynamism. But few have turned their research and findings
toward the development of modalities addressing trauma through the voice. This is with
the exception of the comprehensive research of voice movement therapy founder Paul
Newham (1994) and the vocal psychotherapy of Diane Austin (2008). However, until this
paper, intuitive inquiry methodology had not yet been used to investigate the use of
singing as a depth approach to trauma in psychodynamic therapy.
As a method, “intuitive inquiry is an epistemology of the heart that joins intuition
to intellectual precision in a hermeneutical process of interpretation” (Anderson, 2004, p.
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307). The research in this method is comprised of a cycle of five stages. The first
involves being captivated by the material and in some way called to the research, which
will be revealed more fully in the succeeding chapter. The emphasis of stage two is the
disclosure of the “preliminary lenses” which are the initial postulates and preconceived
notions that shape the exploration (p. 307). Some of my initial lenses at the threshold of
research included the following:
▪ Trauma is stored somatically and sensorially
▪ The voice is emblematic of Psyche
▪ Breath, tone resonance, quality, pitch, registration, and range can indicate
hyperarousal, vigilance, and anxiety indicating possession by the trauma
complex
▪ Vocal limitation is symbolic of traumatic impact in the form of tension
▪ Singing is trans-organismic and transpersonal
▪ Increased vocal freedom indicates increased liberation from the complex
▪ Communication about trauma is both desired and repulsive to the survivor
▪ Singing must be vocal but not necessarily verbal
▪ Language is limited in the treatment of trauma
The third stage of work was the creation of Compose, which negotiated these
ideas through a recorded method over a period of several months. The recordings were
created intuitively and out of heuristic trial-and-error. This allowed much of the
instrumental material to arise from a semi-conscious creative state while paying attention
to my own embodied responses to the material. During the fourth stage of intuitive
inquiry, there is refining of the lenses and a return to interpretation of the various
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literature. At this point, three additional lenses emerged:
▪ Vocalizing can be an area prone to inauthenticity and self-consciousness
▪ Singing can create increased tension if understood as performative
▪ A new aesthetic understanding of symptoms allows for transformation of
the complex
Compose is the vocal process that has resulted through the fifth stage (and another
cycling through of the previous stages). It is a composite not only of my own research but
also many healing approaches introduced by psychological theorists and vocal therapists,
each of whom have their own means toward processing psychologically harrowing
episodes and events. Compose emphasizes as its rationale the body-centered
psychoanalytic school and research by somatically oriented trauma specialists such as
Peter Levine (1997) and Judith Herman (1992). Its contributions from the arts emphasize
the foundational work of Alfred Wolfhson (as cited in Newham, 1997), an admirer of
Jung whose research has informed a generation of protégés interested in a psychoanalytic
view of the voice including Roy Hart (1967), Paul Newham (1994), and Diane Austin
(2009). Although teachers from Wolfsohn’s lineage certainly have their own nuanced
styles, some traits comprise a common philosophy which has contributed to the
development of Compose, including “a pedagogy that encourages expression of the many
colors of the voice, from the ugly to the beautiful and from the angelic to the demonic [as
well as] the philosophy that the voice and body are inseparable and can only be
effectively worked on in tandem” (Overland, 2005, p. 27). Intuitive inquiry was chosen
as a research method because it also seeks to tether what is often thought of as separate. It
is a method that allows for the simultaneous insights of both art and science (Anderson,
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2004, p. 307). Hopefully, Compose will also bridge the gap between a poetically based
and physiognomically grounded approach to the treatment of those who have suffered
tragedy.
Researcher’s Area of Interest
Trauma Storm
Hunkered down, nerve-numb, in the carnal hut, the cave of self,
while outside a storm rages.
Huddled there,
rubbing together white sticks of your own ribs,
praying for sparks in that dark
where tinder is heart, where tender is not.
Orr, 2002, p. 7
The refrain of life itself is suffering and relief. As the poem above suggests, the
instrument that sings the tune is the human body. Being of an artistic temperament, I have
always been attracted to a certain intensity, though I can acknowledge that spending time
studying severe psychic injury is not for everyone. Had it not been for a certain series of
literally inescapable events in my life, I may have not developed my passion for the
desperate and dramatic nor been compelled toward creating this work. My own history of
trauma hurled me into a need for relief when my primary therapeutic salve was singing. I
have had the privilege and misfortune to often ponder the aforementioned metaphor
through my own lifelong pairing of singing and psychic anguish. The stunning impact of
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trauma has been utterly shaping of both my personal and professional life.
It is important to state from the outset my definitions of trauma and singing. For
this work, trauma will be defined as any psychologically catastrophic instance requiring
coping resources beyond those possessed at the time of the event. This thesis will address
trauma that results in (symptoms fitting) the following criteria for Posttraumatic Stress
Disorder (PTSD), since most trauma manifests with this cursory list of diagnostic traits.
However, trauma resonates much deeper. There is much hesitation here in pathologizing
survivor as disordered; to label the survivor rather than the traumatic instance as
disordered can often feel exonerating of the traumatic event. Nevertheless, the following
list of traits in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (4th ed., text
revision) (DSM-IV-TR) (American Psychiatric Association [APA], 2000) characterized
most survivors:
A. The person has been exposed to a traumatic event in which both of the
following have been present:
1) The person experienced, witnessed, or was confronted with an event or events that involved actual or threatened death or serious injury, or a threat to the physical integrity of self or others 2) the person’s response involved intense fear, helplessness, or horror. Note: In children, this may be expressed instead by disorganized or agitated behavior.
B. The traumatic event is persistently reexperienced in one (or more) of the following ways:
1) Recurrent and intrusive distressing recollections of the event, including images, thoughts, or perceptions. Note: In young children, repetitive play may occur in which themes or aspects of the trauma are expressed. 2) Recurrent distressing dreams of the event. Note: In children, there may be frightening dreams without recognizable content.
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3) Acting or feeling as if the traumatic event were recurring (includes a sense of reliving the experience, illusions, hallucinations, and dissociative flashback episodes, including those that occur upon awakening or when intoxicated). Note: In young children, trauma-specific reenactment may occur. 4) Intense psychological distress at exposure to internal or external cues that symbolize or resemble an aspect of the traumatic event. 5) Physiological reactivity on exposure to internal or external cues that symbolize or resemble an aspect of the traumatic event.
C. Persistent avoidance of stimuli associated with the trauma and numbing of general responsiveness (not present before the trauma), as indicated by three (or more) of the following:
1) Efforts to avoid thoughts, feelings, or conversations associated with the trauma 2) Efforts to avoid activities, places, or people that arouse recollections of the trauma 3) Inability to recall an important aspect of the trauma 4) Markedly diminished interest or participation in significant activities
5) Feeling of detachment or estrangement from others 6) Restricted range of affect (e.g., unable to have loving feelings) 7) Sense of a foreshortened future (e.g., does not expect to have a career, marriage, children, or a normal life span)
D. Persistent symptoms of increased arousal (not present before the trauma), as indicated by two (or more) of the following:
1) Difficulty falling or staying asleep 2) Irritability or outbursts of anger 3) Difficulty concentrating 4) Hypervigilance 5) Exaggerated startle response
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E. Duration of the disturbance (symptoms in Criteria B, C, and D) is more than one month. F. The disturbance causes clinically significant distress or impairment in social, occupational, or other important areas of functioning. (p. 468)
For this thesis, singing is broadly defined as any oral intonation that may include
but ultimately moves beyond simple conversational speech. It may be what one would
colloquially call musical or melodic, or it may not. Singing, defined as such, includes the
range of vocal sounds inherent to the human organism such as breathing, moaning,
screaming, gasping, and laughing. This can also include melody but may be monotone or
percussive in nature. This sound is inherently vocal but not necessarily verbal or inclusive
of substantive linguistic content. As described by Jung:
Language was originally a system of emotive and imitative sounds—sounds which express terror, fear, anger, love . . . sounds which imitate the noises of the elements: the rushing and gurgling of water, the rolling of thunder, the roaring of the wind, the cries of the animal world. (as cited in Segal, 1998, p. 111)
This thesis does not focus solely on the aesthetics of the voice but also on its role
in trauma as our most primal and native means of expression. This is essential because
trauma also takes place at this most primordial, animal level of the psychosomatic field,
which will be discussed later in this paper. The writing, conversations, and works of
theorists and other practitioners who have also explored the salvific properties of
“content-free vocalization” have been foundational in this research (Starkwather, 1956, p.
121). I offer Compose in the hopes of helping survivors assimilate the conscious and
unconscious effects of intense psychic violation and readjust to PTSD symptomatology
by stirring the voice.
The mysterious potency of the human instrument became of sincere interest to me
through years of ambitious singing, culminating in my attendance at Boston’s Berklee
9
College of Music. Coursing alongside this artistic maturation was the steady development
of a sordid eating disorder that emerged immediately after childhood trauma and reached
its fever pitch in my second year at Berklee. Such intense daily engagement with my
body in music school and its stirring of negative associations with my own physicality
had unanticipated consequences.
As a result of trauma, I unconsciously associated certain aspects of my
embodiment with perilous danger. Intense somatic focus as a result of singing brought
forth an overwhelming flooding of emotions and excessively symptomatic behavior. The
power of contacting the body through singing proved that voicework allows access to
latent trauma. However, it was introduced into my life without the support of
psychotherapy or a rationale for the resulting symptomatic manifestations. When I was
able to engage a psychotherapist and process the feelings, sensations, and, ultimately,
memories that emerged as a result of my voicework, my symptoms began to retreat.
After graduating from Berklee College of Music, I relocated to New York City
and determinedly pursued a career as a singer-songwriter. Like many artists, in spite of
ambitious performing and several award-winning albums, I was unable to support myself
solely on my creative work while living in Manhattan. I began to teach voice lessons out
of my apartment in Greenwich Village. On a number of occasions, after a trusting rapport
was established with a student, they would begin to complain about physical symptoms.
This would soon unfold into their discussion of the accompanying emotional suffering.
Many of these confessional sessions included the disclosure of major traumas.
I felt incredibly privileged to be their supportive confidant but also unprepared to
contain their vulnerability. My scope of worked seemed to be expanding beyond that of a
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singing teacher, but I lacked the professional skills to support these individuals in an
ethical fashion. I was concerned that some of my students were on the threshold of the
same emotional chaos that ensued for me in college due to singing. I had become
mesmerized by this mysterious connection between voice and psyche. My hope was to
learn something that could be of help to those who had sought out my support and trusted
me with their disclosure.
This inspired the pursuit of my master’s degree in counseling psychology with an
emphasis in depth psychology, which prepares its graduates for practice as a
psychotherapist. Alongside this work, I explored additional healing modalities that
engage the numinous and creative. This resulted in my acquiring additional certifications
in expressive arts therapy and transpersonal studies from The Institute of Transpersonal
Psychology.
Today, more than a decade of personal recovery and training has inspired my
professional work as a therapist with anorexics, bulimics, and binge eaters at the inpatient
and outpatient levels of care. The vast majority of the women with whom I work have
trauma in their history and entered eating disorder treatment with co-occurring issues
ranging from substance abuse to mood disorders. Not surprisingly, most fulfill the
diagnostic criteria for Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD).
Many of the eating disordered women with whom I work have returned
repeatedly to treatment, often feeling as though their complexes only marginally evolved.
When I began at these facilities, I noticed the tremendous bias in favor of talk therapy
and was fortunate to have the freedom to explore sensorial engagement through visual
art, body movement, and, ultimately, singing. Since the trauma had happened at the level
11
of the body it seemed natural to me that this is where the healing must begin.
Guiding Purpose
Carl Jung wrote that an encounter with the numinous was the essence of the
healing experience and releases one from “the curse of pathology” (Jung, 1973, p. 377).
Alex de Mijolla (2005) described Rudolf Otto’s characterization of the numinous as that
which offers a “‘sense of one’s creature state,’ mystical awe (tremendum), a presentiment
of divine power (majestas), amazement in the face of the ‘completely other’ (mysterium),
demoniacal energy, and paradox” (p. 1164).
My aim is to understand the potential numinosity of singing, aspiring to provide
relief for those who have survived terrific pain. Nearly every spiritual tradition makes use
of song for its ability to possess us and lead us toward both the majestas and mysterium,
perhaps pointing toward the inherent numinosity of singing. Our voices allow us to step
into the aforementioned “creature state” and touch upon the many paradoxes that seem
necessary for healing of trauma.
My guiding purpose in this research was to discover a vocal method to trauma
recovery that could simultaneously soothe and empower, a form that would allow a
sensitive survivor to reduce emotional overwhelm while allowing one to be wholly
expressive. I hoped to find a technique to give voice to trauma but not necessarily words
that could never fully capture the experience. I wanted to find a process that was sensual
and physical without being explicitly sexual or athletic, a somatic experience that could
be shared and personal. Singing became the modality that manages to share something
about the human experience that is both personal and universal. The recording that
complements this paper can be used by clinicians and survivors as a resource for
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restoring the emotional and somatic connection shattered by trauma.
Organization of Study
In order to understand the effect of singing as a somatic trauma therapy, I will
begin by reviewing some of the available literature on the psychosomatic phenomena, the
body’s response to traumatic events, and the history of psychotherapeutic vocalization
and trauma. This writing will then explicate the limitations of talk therapy in treating
psychic injury, while introducing the research of others who have brought vocal work to
the healing of human travesty. After exploring these seminal writings, I will introduce
Compose and a summary of research.
Chapter II Literature Review
Overview
In the opening of her seminal book titled Trauma and Recovery, Judith Herman
(1992) said, “The conflict between the will to deny horrible events and the will to
proclaim them aloud is the central dialectic of psychological trauma” (p. 1). As a
therapist attempting to be a harbinger of relief to survivors, the limitations of language to
transform the aftermath of trauma in the face of these contradictory pulls has become
frustratingly evident. The Romantic Victor Hugo (2007) stated that “music expresses that
which cannot be said, and on which it is impossible to be silent” (p. 63). Perhaps a riddle
must be solved with another riddle, and music, in sharing the paradox inherent with
PTSD, can bring healing where other modalities cannot.
For those who have been through horribly overwhelming events, recurring
symptoms like insomnia, nightmares, illusions, and intrusive flashbacks make it seem as
though the event is happening in every moment. In a certain sense, it is. After trauma, the
body remains perpetually locked in a state of arousal, incessantly screening the
environment for threats. This results in prolonged states of sometimes crippling anxiety
and people who are easily startled and can erupt unexpectedly into rage. Yet, trauma is a
riddle, so simultaneously, the survivor alternates with periods of numbness, detachment,
and ghostlike physical states of dissociation (DSM–IV–TR (APA, 2000), p. 468). The
body is still responding as though the trauma is in the present moment. This is because
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trauma is not in the event, but rather, in the nervous system (Levine & Kline, 2008, p. 8).
Therefore, it is imperative to understand not just Psyche but its dialogue with Soma. The
first portion of the literature review will look at various historical views of the body-mind
relationship with an emphasis on the foundational somatic work of psychoanalysts.
By definition, trauma is an occurrence so overwhelming that whatever inner
reserves were possessed prior to this profoundly painful and frightening event cease to
suffice in managing the psychological consequences of the traumatic event. It is a
neglected point that our linguistic capacity is one of these lost resources during a tragic
episode. Although one may have had vocal capacity during a trauma, language is a
separate phenomenon, one that is severely impaired during psychically overwhelming
episodes. The experience is most often processed somatically rather than verbally.
Therefore, the second area of the literature review will explore the deficits of utilizing
language as the primary methodology in therapy.
The final area of the literature review will look at how the vocal rather than solely
the verbal can be involved in the treatment of trauma. The body is the site and location of
every human trauma and in singing, the instrument is the very flesh, bone, and sinew of
the survivor. This allows the practitioner to work at the very site of the trauma and allow
for a healing of the event in situ.
At first glance, singing as a therapy can appear trivializing or minimizing of the
devastating impact of trauma. However, due to the human instrument’s mysterious ability
to capture the historical essence of an event without linguistic narration, singing can be
especially powerful in communicating the experience and aftermath of trauma. The voice
can eloquently reveal emotional nuance without even naming an emotion. This area of
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the paper will extend beyond the bias of image as a visual phenomenon and explore how
the voice can serve as imagistic material. Singing enigmatically allows for the
communication of profound emotion with skillful self-possession, a peculiarity that has
pointed toward my creation of Compose.
The Body in Psychoanalysis
“The body is often the narrator of feelings [one] cannot bear to hold in conscious
thought, much less express in words” (Krueger, as cited in Solnit, Neubauer, Abrams, &
Dowling, 2007, p. 239). From the earliest days of psychoanalysis, the idea of the
indissolubility of psyche and soma has been present. In 1923, Freud reinforced the
primacy of the body, stating, “A person’s own body, and above all its surface, is a place
from which both external and internal perceptions may spring . . . the ego is first and
foremost a bodily ego” (pp. 25-26). Wilhelm Reich took this to its furthest reach,
declaring the body as the countenance of psyche, with the two being “functionally
identical” (1942, p. 41). Adler (1931) claimed that psychology itself is “the
understanding of an individual’s attitude toward(s) the impressions of his body . . . body
and mind are co-operating as indivisible parts of one whole” (p. 34). This all suggests
that to work somatically with trauma through singing is far more than superficial; to work
with the body is to work with the totality of Psyche.
Jung did not see the body as interchangeable with Psyche but did acknowledge
their interdependence, a living image. As Jungian training analyst and author Murray
Stein (1998) wrote,
Jung derives psyche from a combination of physical nature and transcendent mind spirit or mind…psyche and body are not coterminous, nor is the one derived from the other . . . . The ego is based in the body only in the sense that it experiences unity with the body, but the body that the ego expresses is psychic. It is a body
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image and not the body itself. (p. 24) Jacques Lacan has also been particularly influential in the creation of Compose,
with a specifically depth approach to the body that is less literal. Much of the historical
and contemporary writing on trauma focuses solely on the human organism and its
biological functioning. However, Lacan said that the human body is more than the
organism. Rather, it is a phenomenon integrated by an image through which the ego
maintains a sense of realness. Though Lacan’s work emphasizes the linguistic, his mirror
stage suggests that the ego-solidifying image was provided by a visual, such as a
reflection in a looking glass (as cited in Soler, 1995, para. 12)
Since Lacan, many from the analytical and archetypal school, including James
Hillman, have rigorously emphasized that an image need not be visual, but can also be
sensori-kinesthetic and thus somatic. The body symbolically interacts and interprets
rather than solely interfacing with its world on a literal level. This makes somatic
therapies like Compose inherently metaphoric and depth-oriented. In Re-visioning
Psychology (1977), Hillman reminded us the body is
a fantasy system of complexes, symptoms, tastes, influences, and relations, zones of delight, patholigized images, trapped insights . . . body and soul lose their borders, neither more literal or metaphorical than the other. Remember: the enemy is the literal, and the literal is not the concrete flesh but negligence of the vision that concrete flesh is a magnificent citadel of metaphors. (p. 174)
Jung understood a complex as a charged cluster of images and ideas (Samuels,
Shorter, & Plaut, 1986, p. 234). Therefore, if one thinks of a traumatic episode, the
associated images are not solely visual but engage the entire sensate capacity of sight,
smell, touch, taste, and sound. Through the gathering of the senses, viscera, organs,
muscle, and tissue, the whole body itself becomes the symbolic mediator between self
17
and all lived experience. Even if the trauma complex is not held in the form of ideas due
to memory loss or dissociation, it is accessible in the form of images via the body, with
the voice at its epicenter. Roy Hart, a major predecessor of all voicework, also saw the
voice as the harbinger of the healing numinous when he wrote:
For singing, as we practice it, is literally the resurrection or redemption of the body. The capacity to “hold” the voice in identification with the body makes biological reality of the concept “I am.” The ability to hold fast with whole body in vocal production can, with correct training, develop an ability to hold fast in complex real life situations. (Hart, 1967, para. 9)
Trauma and Body Memory
The body is the breathing, living, and moving history of a person, and if that past
includes profound tragedy, that memory becomes embodied and lived out through
movement, sensation, patterns of breathing, and all of the activities of the body. The body
becomes a moving image, an emblem of the event. The idea that memory is stored in the
body can be perplexing to some due to limitations in understanding memory processing
as solely a verbal and narrative affair. The psychoanalytic school has emphasized that
what is both unavailable or unbearable psychically is somaticized. Psychoanalyst and
somatic psychology expert John Conger writes on this in his text entitled Jung and Reich:
Body as Shadow. Conger said (1988), “The shadow is physically revealed. What we have
had such difficulty in gaining access to stands blatantly before us in the body. We are
given the most direct access to what has been rejected and inaccessible” (p. 192).
This aspect of the thesis will look at body memory from a different angle. Wilma
Bucci (1985) clarified a distinction between verbal and non-verbal or perceptual memory.
Verbal memory is language-based and accessed by using words such as in talk therapy.
On the other hand, perceptual memory is the aspect of our recollection that is encoded
18
with our five senses or kinesthetic movement (n.p). This is why a particular perfume can
seem to bring a long-lost friend into the room if she wore the same scent, why a song can
viscerally bring a person back to the initial experience, or why one can remember how to
ride a bike after not doing so for years.
Trauma is primarily stored non-verbally due to the fact that during the exposure to
the traumatic incident, the pre-frontal cortex containing the language centers of the brain
is effectively hijacked by the limbic system, which is responsible for our survival
responses including fight, flight, or freeze. Trauma often leaves us quite literally
speechless, without words to recapitulate what has happened. However, being left
without a verbal narrative does not leave us without a memory of traumatic events.
Perlman stated:
The predominance of somatic expressions in the first stages of recovery of traumatic memories arises out of the . . . original defense against the awareness of the trauma by splitting the memory off into the body. Such an interpretation presupposes the . . . achievement of an integrated experience of the trauma prior to the defensive dissociation of the memory into the body. Although, at times, body memories may serve a defensive function, I propose the likelihood that the original experience may never have been articulated and integrated beyond the level of the physical aspect in the first place, thereby leaving the memory of the trauma locked in a somatic-sensory state, another reason for the abundance of somatic manifestations. (as cited in Droga, 1993, para. 37).
Our wordless encryption of the trauma into memory is what results in often
somaticized symptomatology of survivors, eating disorders and self-mutilation being
cases in point. Due to the traumatic event itself not being coded in a linguistic narrative
but in a body memory, therapies that are verbal are rather limited. Droga (1997) wrote,
“encoding and storage of the experience would be processed in the perceptual mode
(Bucci, 1985, 1994) . . . . Retrieval of these memories would likewise be accessed and
expressed along perceptual channels, that is, in somatic-sensory form” (para. 35). Unlike
19
using the voice to speak, singing with non-verbal sounds could be more effective in
ameliorating trauma symptoms due to the effect of the human instrument dialoguing in
the native tongue of trauma: the un-worded body.
Clinical psychologist and Jungian analyst Donald Kalsched (1996) provided
further support for the argument (theory) that trauma victims benefit from singing. He
noted that in the case of trauma, that which is too unbearable to be conscious splits into
the body:
The affect and sensation aspects of the experience stay with the body and the mental representation aspect is split off into the “mind.” Such a person will not be able to let somatic sensations and excitedly bodily states into mental awareness . . . instead messages from the body will have to be discharged in some other way. (p. 66)
The Human Animal and Seven Stages of Traumatic Response
Another reason why “content-free singing” can be remedial in the treatment of
survivors is due to its emphasis on what is affectively communicated while vocalizing
rather than what is semantically conveyed through words (Starkwather, 1956, p. 121).
This would be useful in the treatment of survivors since much vocal tension and its
affective core has been smothered since the time of trauma. To truly understand the idea
of stifled somatic responses, it is important to look at our primitive, organismic response
to trauma and its relationship to the strangling of vocalization. Researchers Ogden,
Minton, & Pain saw the following in common between adults with trauma and the seven
phases of defensive responses in animals: a) Marked change in arousal; b) Heightened
orientation response; c) Attachment and social engagement; d) Mobilizing defensive
strategies e) Immobilizing defensive strategies f) Recuperation; and g) Integration (as
cited in Norton, Ferriegel, & Norton, 2011, para. 4):
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Each defensive response is typically definitive, primitive, inflexible, and hierarchal because the preceding defense in the hierarchy must be completed before the next one can be initiated (Ogden, Minton, & Pain, 2006) . . . . Repeated use of these defenses without completion either overactivates or inhibits the neurology, short-circuiting the recuperation and integration stages. (para 4.)
Stifled Vocalization During Trauma
There are two responses to danger made by the voice; hyperarousal is first
indicated by a kind of paralysis:
Indigenous opiates are released causing a reduction of fear, pain, and panic and inhibits the production of sound and vocalizations and soothing behavior (Nijenhuis, Vanderlinden, & Spinhoven, 1998; van der Kolk, McFarlane, & Weisaeth, 1996). Because vocalization is especially dangerous at this point, the Broca’s area of the brain is incapacitated by the increased opiates, reducing the possibility of inadvertent, fearful vocalizations that would attract the predator. (Norton, Ferriegel, & Norton, 2011, para. 5)
This points to the benefit of vocalization for the survivor, which at one point may have
been associated as a dangerous behavior in itself. Deliberately engaging the voice, then,
is associated with empowerment and can serve as a indication of a freed state. However,
during trauma, one may cry out with “a primordial scream for mother . . . the involuntary
scream we often make when someone jumps out at us in the dark. For weaker or smaller
animals, this is often suppressed. Freezing is the most common response, even when an
escape is available” (Nijenhuis, Vanderlinden, & Spinhoven, 1998; Ogden, Minton, &
Pain, 2006 as cited in Norton, Ferriegel, & Norton, 2011, para. 7).
Trauma expert Peter Levine noted that if an animal escapes after the freeze state it
engages in seizure behavior and discharges the traumatic energy; this is imperative for its
survival because it allows recuperation stages and integration to take place. However,
findings suggest that in cases of PTSD, human beings fail to discharge this contained
energy (Levine, 1997, p. 35). This immobility includes the holding back of the voice.
21
Limitations of Talk Therapy in the Treatment of Trauma
Language has been praised as the pinnacle of human achievement, yet it poses a
number of limitations in the treatment of trauma where the talking cure falls short. As
experts Pat Ogden and Janina Fisher (2006) said:
Traditional “talk therapy” approaches, a category that includes any method that depends on the words of the client as the primary entry point of therapy, have tended to address the explicit, verbally accessible components of trauma. They emphasize the role of narrative, emotional expression, and meaning-making (Brewin & Holmes, 2003; Herman, 1992) . . . . As the narrative or explicit memory is re-told, the implicit, somatosensory components of the memory are simultaneously activated, frequently leading to a re-experiencing of somatoform symptoms which can include: autonomic dysregulation, dissociative defenses associated with hyper and hypoarousal states, intrusive sensory experiences and involuntary movements. This debilitating, repetitive cycle of mind-body triggering can thwart desensitization regimes and keep past trauma “alive,” prolonging rather than resolving, trauma-related disorders (Aposhyan, 2004; Kepner, 1987; LeDoux, 1996; Rothschild, 2000; Siegel, 1999; Van der Hart & Steele, 1999; van der Kolk, McFarlane, & Weisaeth, 1996). (p. 265)
Furthermore, Bessel van der Kolk noted that when survivors later recall a
traumatic event, the Broca’s area of the brain, the center of speech, shut down on the left
hemisphere. However, areas of the right hemisphere connected to emotion and autonomic
arousal become activated (Wylie, 2004, para. 40). Curiously, in the research of A.
Yamadori, Y. Osumi, S. Masuhara, and M. Okubu (1977) on Broca’s aphasia, a condition
characterized by the loss of ability to produce language due to impairment of the Broca’s
region of the brain, the ability to sing text is preserved. This has been well known since
1836, when he described a patient who was able to sing La Marseillaise or La Parisienne
while his speech was limited to “tan-tan”(Behir as cited in Yamadori, Osumi, Masuhara,
and Okubu, 1977, p. 221). When these patients sing, they have access to language while
being otherwise verbally impaired.
I can only offer the anecdotal evidence of my own relative ease in singing about
22
my trauma rather than speaking of the few aspects for which I do possess narrative,
verbal memory. In my own songwriting, I have been able to sing the stories of my
trauma. Implicit memories are sounded in the color, tone, and style while language is
used for non-literal metaphor, simile, and poetic analogy. However, my attempts to
recapitulate literal stories about the trauma in typical speech during talk therapy results in
consistent frustration, with only a few shreds of literal, explicit memory accessible for
conscious recall for the past 20 years. Perhaps further research could scientifically
substantiate the possibility that delivering one’s traumatic memories melodically through
song could circumvent some of the psychotherapeutic challenges associated with Broca’s
impairment in survivors telling their stories (Wilson, Parsons, & Reutens, 2006, p. 23).
If trauma is to be approached with language, it seems to be most effective if it is
facilitated by a return to its most vestigial, right-brained, and emotive form. Merleau-
Ponty (1973) noted:
Our language is less emotional than its rudimentary forms. There would not have been an initial difference between the act of speaking and the act of singing . . . . The initial form of language, therefore, would have been a kind of song. Men would have sung their feelings before communicating their thought. Just as writing was at first painting, language at first would have been song . . . . It is through the exercise of this song that men would have tried out their power of expression. (p. 81) Again, the trauma response initiates from the vestigial level of our being; in cases
of PTSD, proper discharge, recuperation, and integration of the trauma did not occur.
This means full expression of emotion, production of sound, vocalizations, and soothing
behavior was inhibited. An effective therapy for trauma survivors would facilitate the
aforementioned traits of completing the unfinished business in the trauma response cycle
and any narrative, re-exposure, or verbal recapitulation of the traumatic incident may be
23
best accomplished in vocal form. As Samuels said:
The voice, whether worded or unworded, stands as a bridge over the gulf we call mind-body or psyche-soma . . . the voice’s roots are in the functioning and evolution of the human body. Its branches and leaves are in the realms of advanced cognition, spirituality, and interpersonal relationships. Hence the voice itself is a crucial mediation between the sensual world and the life of intellect, spirit, and love. (as cited in Newham, 1994, p. 9)
Singing and Depth Psychology
The idea that vocalization is therapeutic for trauma has origins that long precede
Western analytic psychology and finds its roots in the realms of religious, folk, and
shamanistic healing ways. Vocal therapy in the context of depth psychoanalysis can trace
its roots to Alfred Wolfsohn, an admirer of Jung. Wolfsohn returned from World War I
suffering from psychosis and haunted by aural hallucinations of wounded and dying
soldiers. After taking it upon himself to perform an “oral exorcism,” he engaged several
vocal teachers in order to cathartically replicate the sounds in his traumatized mind
(Salomon-Lindberg as cited in Newham, 1992, para. 23). He was healed of the psychosis
and went on to take on his own protégés, including the renowned Roy Hart.
After Wolfsohn’s death, Hart furthered his work with the creation of an ensemble,
going on to perform pieces often consisting solely of bodily movement and non-linguistic
vocal sounding. The radical and experimental Roy Hart Theatre grounded its training of
singers in the analytic work of Jung. This resulted in a vocal aesthetic that focused not on
narrating the human condition as much as symbolically imbuing the phenomenological
experience of human drama. This was done often while performing recognizable works
such as The Bacchae. Philosopher Catherine Backes-Clement said of their performance,
entitled AND, that the troupe displayed “the meeting point of voice and myth . . . the
voice alone, apparently liberated from the constraint of the rational meaning, finds
24
meaning on the Other Stage; in the presence of the Unconscious” (as cited in Hart, 1998,
p. 380).
Additional seminal work was then put forth by Hart’s student Enrique Pardo, who
joined with post-Jungian James Hillman to expand his work into the post-modern
archetypal school. Hart (1998) described his work as employing “a dance of vocal sound
to paint images in space which, to an audience, resound with an uncanny recognisability
and yet defy reduction to a linguistic or otherwise codified schema”; hence, what could
be called an archetypal image (p. 339).
Organism + Image = Body
We have explored the benefits of singing in accessing somatic responses to
trauma, completing the reregulation and integration of the trauma cycle, and as a
grounding tool. Although these are crucial in the treatment of trauma, this writing has
primarily focused on the organismic level of the body. However, as Lacan suggested, a
body extends beyond the organism and must integrate an image in order to be whole.
Using the voice to provide what Jung called “acoustic images” (Jung, 1926/1970, p. 322
[CW 8, para. 608]) is what allows Compose to be relevant to the depth psychology and
psychoanalytic tradition. The first section of Compose focuses on the organism and the
second on the image; the two aim to provide a healing synthesis for the interrelated
phenomena of body and psyche.
For this psychosomatic field to be healed from trauma, the organism requires
interaction with its images for the complex to be mediated. One must differentiate
between the classical and archetypal schools of depth psychology as approaches to
healing, since each suggests a different role for the therapist. To analogize: if a suffering
25
self is a building on fire, the classical analyst wants to discover the origin of the flames,
find the course of the flames, and ultimately save the building while maintaining his or
her distance from the crisis as much as possible. A therapist from the archetypal school
works through James Hillman’s (1977) approaches of personifying, pathologizing,
psychologizing, and dehumanizing. The therapist animates, embodies, and cries out as
the fire, demanding its right to be witnessed rather than deemed an affliction and
extinguished. Rather than being concerned with firefighting, the therapist enters the
burning building and goes down in flames. The classical method is heroic (though often
beautiful) and the archetypal is aesthetic and empathetic (though often heroic). Classical
analysts works against the symptom; the archetypal analyst takes “a more homeopathic
approach, accepting what is given in the symptom while at the same time deepening it”
(Moore, 1992, p. 70).
Therefore, my efforts to be remedial through the voice and its imagery may spring
forth from the classical Jungians and could be perceived as tyrannical of the imaginal by
the archetypalists. However, the approach toward image which eschews cracking its code
for grand archetypes or additional meaning specifically springs forth from the archetypal
school. This method does not seek to collect and mine the image for any particular
meaning. It trusts that the way out is through the embodiment and imagination, not
insight alone.
Chapter III Compose: Singing as a Depth Modality in the Treatment of Trauma
Voice movement therapy is conducted with individuals and with groups. The clients begin by making their most effortless and natural sound while the acoustic tones of the voice are listened to and the muscle-tone of the body observed. In response to an informed analysis of breathing, sound, and movement, the therapist massages and manipulates the client’s body, gives instruction in ways of moving, and suggests moods and images which the client allows to affect and infiltrate the vocal timbre. The voice is thereby sculptured and animated by subjection to a kaleidoscope of shifting moods and shapes, colors and images, by which it increases radically in range, tone, and substance.
Newham, 1994, p. 18
Introduction
The paragraph above provides a good working synopsis of voice movement
therapy, which serves as the basis for this method. Therefore, Compose is best practiced
with someone trained in singing and psychodynamically oriented toward trauma. One
would need some pedagogical awareness of vocal anatomy, breath, onset, resonance,
registration, and range. This allows for an understanding of the dynamism and range of
the human instrument. Yet, understanding of only the aforementioned areas may make
for a therapist who is a thorough vocal technician but lacks a capacity for aesthetic
appreciation, nuance, or imagination; the method requires both attitudes.
The aim of Compose is to take an appreciative artistic approach to trauma that
beatifies the symptom into its ultimate appreciation and thus transformation. In this sense,
Compose does not strive for a permanent cure in the typical way it is understood but
rather a “readjustment of psychological attitude,” a new perspective toward symptoms
27
which may bring relief (Jung, 1916/1970, p. 72 [CW 8, para. 142]). For example, the
croaking tension heard in the throat of a survivor while singing may not initially change.
However, that does not mean no transformation has occurred. The shame and associated
with that tension (and thus the trauma) may be ameliorated when the client is able to find
what is praiseworthy, true, and beautiful in that strain. Thus, what Wilhelm Reich (1961)
called the defensive and muscular “character armor” of an individual is ultimately
softened by realizing one is sufficient (p. 10). One becomes less defensive and
symptomatic—a byproduct of Compose’s aesthetic orientation but not its aim.
The attitude of Compose is one of honor and acceptance. This may intrinsically
appear riddling, but as Carl Rogers (1961) noted, “the curious paradox is that when I
accept myself, then I can change” (p. 17). When the traumatized individual decides some
symptom is an emblem of a damaged and defective nature, the defensive character armor
only becomes more dense, possessive, self-identified, and impenetrable. On the other
hand, looking at one’s symptoms through the eye of an artist or poet, an individual can
see beyond his or her unique pathology (Hillman, 1975, p. 57). If I see a rotten apple
from the medical model or religious model, I see a problem because both of those spheres
have a certain teleological understanding, orientation, and aim. If I see the apple from the
eye of an artist, it simply is what it is without needing to become something else in order
to suffice.
Compose begins by grounding in the present moment. It then guides the survivor in
initiating internally derived touch through vocal vibration. This stimulates free-
associative imagery which then manifests in a scene, much like a dream. Finally, this
dream is embodied through the sounding of the voice, movement, and detailed
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mindfulness of somatic responses similar to what is found in Robert Bosnak’s embodied
imagination (2007, p. 117). The Compose method lacks the manual manipulation often
used by voice therapists; touch is often met with intense hypervigilance by many
survivors and is generally disapproved of in psychotherapy.
Compose and its accompanying recording addresses what Colette Soler (1995)
summarized as Lacan’s total body, the synthesis of the organism and image (para. 12).
The rationale for each part of the recording engages the literal biological effect of trauma
while holding simultaneous awareness of its symbolic nature.
Session Structure
Typical therapeutic hours utilizing the Compose method will begin with some time
for the patient to check in about his or her symptoms, move into utilizing the recording,
and then close with some time to process the session that day. One of my initial
postulates in creating this method was that communicating about trauma is both desired
and repulsive to survivors. In many of my own talk therapy sessions intended to focus on
trauma (ranging from EMDR to somatic experiencing to Jungian analysis), I spend much
time reporting on the events of my week and other minutia while avoiding discussion of
trauma symptoms. Of course, the symptoms were present in my tone, pace, tempo,
breath, and other vocal indicators. The Compose method emphasizes immediately giving
attention to vocal indicators in the session, directing the practitioner to focus on process
and prosody of the vocalization rather than its linguistic content.
Another initial postulate in this research was that language is limited in the
treatment of trauma. Although the literature review focused on language as a
handicapped means of communicating about trauma due to a number of biologically
29
derived limitations, I have found that verbosity can also be a form of psychological
resistance, particularly in the form of intellectualization.
In his research, Leon Wurmser (1996) posited that intellectualization “may become
necessary during severe affect regressions and provide a momentary relief from anxiety
and a reduction of tension in the analysis, and can thus protect the continuation of our
work. Here, the distancing, even intellectualization, may mean a kind of guard-rail at the
edge of the abyss” (para. 142). Remaining in the realm of words and concepts is a means
of staying away from the body and emotions. Due to the affective/somatic coding of
trauma, intellectualization affectively allows the survivor to be insulated and remain at a
distance from the catastrophic event.
Intellectualization was definitely present in my development of this method, which
involved tremendous procrastination from the vocal research and the somatic exploration.
Instead, I would continuously review the literature and feel unfounded in my subjective
experience, not trusting my body to be substantive enough as a basis for this method. I
needed words as proof and evidence, giving them more credence than my own embodied
experience. If this mistrust of the body becomes the case in a session, it is important that
the therapist mirror verbosity, intellectualization, or isolation of affect in a timely and
sensitive manner, reminding the patient that “your body doesn’t lie” (Diamond, 1997, p.
23).
Another initial hypothesis in the research was that vocalizing can be prone to
inauthenticity and self-consciousness, arising in tension especially if understood as
performative. It is difficult to derive here if the ongoing sense of my own illegitimacy in
the creation of this work was due to singing or due to being a trauma survivor.
30
Adult survivors . . . may have painstakingly constructed a public persona that is superficially friendly, vibrant, and efficacious, this identity is experienced as inauthentic and extraordinarily fragile. Just below the surface of this often impressively functioning veneer, the trauma survivor is trapped in an inner world of fragmentation, dissociation, terror, and rage. Often frightened that others will discover the hidden truths about them, trauma survivors . . . remain essentially disconnected from others. (Davies & Frawley-O’Dea, 1994, p. 33)
This fear of being “found out” is why it was imperative for me use a heuristic
method that utilized me in the research; exploring fragility in the survivor (whether
therapist or patient) will impact the efficacy of Compose. In summary, I think it is helpful
for both parties to be transparent about feelings of inadequacy and inauthenticity.
One of the limitations of utilizing myself as a subject in this research was the
inability to conduct an intake session and introduce the Compose method. This was
important since in my own history as a patient, the assessment session was a time where
my tendencies toward inauthenticity were at their strongest. Particularly as a teenager, I
tried to appear less symptomatic to therapists. As an adult, I have often tried to impress
upon therapists that despite my poise, I can often feel like my stability is delicate.
Therefore in the assessment, it is also important to pay attention to the body since it can
be more honest than words. I already discussed the importance of paying attention to
process, especially vocal cues, rather than content, but there are other considerations as
well.
In her book Cultural Competence in Trauma Therapy: Beyond the Flashback,
Laura Brown (2008) presented a thorough framework for intake of survivors that I
recommend for use in sessions. She began by discussing assessment and the initial
Compose session. Several guidelines are worth bearing in mind when doing a trauma-
minded intake. Brown (2008) stressed the importance of staying away from specific
31
terms like trauma or disaster during assessments, because many survivors don’t feel their
experience “qualifies as traumatic.” She suggests the therapist simply ask if the patient
has experienced anything they would consider “painful, humiliating, or frightening”
because these are emotional responses to trauma that can be followed up with clarifying
questions (p. 65). Additionally, Brown focused on the importance of using language that
is more open than specific when trying to elicit information about trauma. As an example,
Brown referred to the research of Estrich and Koss:
Research on sexual assault trauma, particularly at the hands of known others, has shown that if women are asked if they were raped, many who are survivors of acquaintance rape will respond in the negative because the term rape is coded conceptually as representing a violent act perpetrated by a stranger, what Estrich (1988) calls “real rape.” However, asking the same group of women if they have experienced sex that was un-wanted, coerced, or occurred while they were asleep or drugged yields more accurate information about a type of trauma that may indeed have long-lasting psychological consequences (Koss, 1988). (2008, p. 64)
It is also important to remember that the therapist may unknowingly trigger a
hypervigilant, traumatic response in the survivor. This can occur whether or not the
survivor experiences him or herself as part of the outgroup or ingroup. For example, in
the case of a female sexual abuse survivor, being alone in a closed room with a male
therapist could be highly triggering due to the sexual differential. Alternatively, even
when there is an apparent shared ingroup (for example, if both parties are Catholic), the
survivor may fear coming forward about abuse at the hand of a priest or speaking badly
of the church if she notices a cross around her therapist’s neck (Brown, 2008, p. 66).
Each of these situations requires skillful negotiation and power dynamics are best
handled by being discussed candidly in the first session.
In addition to gathering information about the trauma, it is important in an intake
session using Compose to discuss the rationale behind the method, as well as making
32
clear that the survivor is in charge of the timing, pace, and activities of every session. It is
not recommended to utilize the method on the first assessment beyond the first few
minutes of the recording which emphasize breathing and relaxation. This following
section of this thesis focuses on how to use the recording.
Using the Recording
Part one: Introduction, flooding, grounding. Compose initially orients sessions
around becoming present and is based on Babette Rothschild’s (2000) dual awareness as
discussed in her book, The Body Remembers. Dual awareness brings survivors into an
awareness of their body’s paradoxical response to trauma. Even though they are
physically observing the present, their nervous system is physically experiencing the past.
This method emphasizes that “both realities count” and that being able to hold them
simultaneously is healing (p. 132). However, hyperarousal ultimately leads to a
survivor’s sensory dissociation from the present moment, which prevents dual awareness.
Becoming present in the Compose method is assisted by a guided
introduction/meditation in the accompanying recording. The first part of the recording is
about setting a safe container and grounding the individual by engaging their sensory
systems toward awareness of the present moment. As electricity is grounded to allow
energy to pass through safely, so a survivor can ground his or her body in sensory
awareness to allow the stored traumatic energy to move through the body without
dissociative shock or overwhelm. One of my initial postulates was that trauma is stored
somatically and sensorially, so these are the areas to which a therapist must be attuned in
order to continually reflect to the survivor any signs of dissociation or hyperarousal.
According to the Clinician-Administered Dissociative States Scale (CADSS), the
therapist can note several somatic indicators of dissociation including “show[ing] no
33
movement at all, being stiff and wooden . . . unusual twitching or grimacing in the facial
musculature . . . unusual rolling of the eyes upward or fluttering of the eyelids” (Bremner
et al., 1998, p. 131). Additional signs include a general sense that the survivor is
“separated or detached from what is going on” or if they “blank out or space out, or in
some other way appear to have lost track of what was going on” (p. 131).
On the other hand, hyperarousal indicates being overly vigilant and attuned to the
environment. The somatic manifestation of this is observable in the form of “trembling,
shaking, hot and cold spells, heart palpitations, dry mouth, sweating, shortness of breath,
chest pain or pressure, and muscle tension” (Barlow as cited in Clark & Beck, 2010, p.
17). These are all indicators of a stimulated sympathetic nervous system primed for a
fight/flight response. These are all areas that the therapist can bear in mind as signs of
increased agitation and mirror to the patient.
Babette Rothschild outlined the two methods of sensory perception: interoception,
which receives information from inside the body using viscera, muscles, and connective
tissue, and exteroceptors, which engage the five senses in receiving information from
outside of the body (2000, p. 41). Singing requires tremendous interoceptive awareness,
of which Bessel van der Kolk noted the importance:
Interoceptive, body-oriented therapies can directly confront a core clinical issue in PTSD: traumatized individuals are prone to experience the present with physical sensations and emotions associated with the past. This, in turn, informs how they react to events in the present. For therapy to be effective it might be useful to focus on the patient’s physical self-experience and increase their self-awareness, rather than focusing exclusively on the meaning that people make of their experience—their narrative of the past. If past experience is embodied in current physiological states and action tendencies and the trauma is reenacted in breath, gestures, sensory perceptions, movement, emotion and thought, therapy may be most effective if it facilitates self-awareness and self-regulation. Once patients become aware of their sensations and action tendencies they can set about discovering new ways of
34
orienting themselves to their surroundings and exploring novel ways of engaging with potential sources of mastery and pleasure. (2006, p. 289)
Part two: Breathwork and relaxation. Compose also assists the survivor in
reducing agitation by engaging the parasympathetic nervous system (PNS) or relaxation
response. The ability to engage the PNS is indicative of the recuperation stage taking
place, an important function in healing PTSD, as previously noted in this research. The
clinician and survivor can observe a number of signs to see if this response is taking
place, including “decreased heart rate and force of contraction, constriction of pupils, and
relaxed abdominal muscles” (Barlow as cited in Clark & Beck, 2010, p. 17). Relaxing of
the abdominal muscles is a common instruction in singing as it assists in the
diaphragmatic breathing required to power the voice. Diaphragmatic breathing is not only
the sine qua non of singing but is also our only means of tapping into the otherwise
uncontrollable processes of the sympathetic nervous system such as sweating and pupil
dilation. The breathing that is required for singing is a powerful means of regulating the
fight/flight response in trauma survivors. Those familiar with singing can use a number of
means to assist survivors in breathing from their diaphragm. Signs for the practitioner
that breathing from the diaphragm is not occurring include tension in the clavicle,
movement of the shoulders, a puffing out of the upper chest, and a contraction of the
abdomen during exhale. Instructions for diaphragmatic breathing are included on the
accompanying recording.
Diaphragmatic breathing can assist an individual an entering a hypnagogic state, an
image-rich waking state which precedes sleep onset and REM sleep. This state may be
instrumental in processing traumatic information, something that may be responsible for
the efficacy of EMDR in the treatment of trauma. A description follows:
35
REM sleep enables emotional processing, which is certainly paralleled in EMDR. Clients begin with feelings of shame or guilt and progress to anger, acceptance, or forgiveness. In addition, EMDR clearly process(es) experiential information, as is the case with REM sleep. That is why dream images seem to make perfect EMDR targets. For instance, one woman complained about a nightmare in which she was being chased by a monster through a cave. We targeted the image, and after a couple of sets, the symbolic overlay peeled off and she said, “oh, that’s my stepfather chasing me through my childhood home.” When a recurring nightmare image is targeted with EMDR, people generally uncover the real-life experience involved and process the incident, and the dream does not recur. (Shapiro & Forrest, 1997, p. 92)
Furthermore, diaphragmatic breathing as a harbinger of the hypnagoic state allows
for liminal, dual state of consciousness between waking and dreaming. Similar to Robert
Bosnak’s embodied imagination, Compose enables the user to enter the hypnagogic state
using breathing to source images from the body, manifesting them into a dreamlike scene
for further exploration.
Part three: Resonance. The breath work is continued on the recording while the
third part enlists the survivor in observing and describing energy in different areas of the
body; this requires use of the interoceptors. The recording guides the survivor in
observing the body from head to toe, asking him or her to describe in detail the sensation
noticed and then to give it a sound. This is a chance for the survivor to engage internally-
derived touch and vibrate that tone against the areas that are storing the trauma. Peter
Levine (2005) devised the following helpful list of sensations which can supports the
survivor in generating a word to describe the sensations he or she is feeling as each tone
is sounded:
• Dense Thick Flowing
• Breathless Fluttery Nervous
• Queasy Expanded Floating
36
• Heavy Tingly Electric
• Fluid Numb Wooden
• Dizzy Full Congested
• Spacey Trembly Twitchy
• Tight Hot Bubbly
• Achy Wobbly Calm
• Suffocating Buzzy Energized
• Tremulous Constricted Warm
• Knotted Icy Light
• Blocked Hollow Cold
• Disconnected Sweaty Streaming (p. 50)
The therapist can make note of these qualities in the chart found in the appendix
while guiding the survivor to describe their sensations in detail. One of my initial
hunches was that tone resonance, quality, and pitch can indicate hyperarousal, vigilance,
and anxiety indicating possession by the trauma complex. Depending on the degree of
breath and tension a patient is holding in the body (and thus the level of hyperarousal),
tone, resonance, quality, and pitch are effective in obvious, trackable ways. Again, the
therapist here may be very interested in the word used to describe the sensation found in
the body, but much information can be derived from the sound, particularly the degree of
tension in the survivor. While in this phase the survivor is noticing tension being felt, and
the therapist takes this report and also notes tension he or she can hear and see.
A trained singer and therapist will recognize many signs of muscular tension but a
few include obvious reports of soreness, pain, strain, fatigue, hoarseness, or losing the
37
voice altogether. Otherwise, the therapist should be mindful of other cues of muscular
tension such as visible or reported tightness or redness of the muscles in the face, jaw,
neck, shoulders, and upper chest as well as fatigue in these areas. Vocal tension can be
heard through hard glottal attack during vocal onset, some pitch breaks, high laryngeal
position resulting in a sound of reaching for the notes, and excessive medial compression,
which can sound excessively loud and forceful (Colton, Casper, & Hirano, 1996, p. 78).
The table below, adapted from Ingo Titze (1994) at the 8th Vocal Fold Physiology
Conference, can also be helpful for therapists in describing vocal qualities.
Voice Quality Perception aphonic no sound or a whisper biphonic two independent pitches bleat (see flutter) breathy sound of air is apparent covered muffled or “darkened” sound
creaky sounds like two hard surfaces rubbing against one another
diplophonic pitch supplemented with another pitch one octave lower, roughness usually apparent
flutter often called bleat because it sounds like a lamb’s cry
glottalized clicking noise heard during voicing hoarse (raspy) harsh, grating sound honky excessive nasality jitter pitch sounds rough nasal (see honky) pressed harsh, often loud (strident) quality
pulsed (fry) sounds similar to food cooking in a hot frying pan
resonant (ringing) brightened or “ringing” sound that carries well
rough
uneven, bumpy sound appearing to be unsteady short-term, but persisting over the long-term
shimmer crackly, buzzy
strained
effort-fulness apparent in voice, hyperfunction of neck muscles, entire larynx may compress
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strohbass popping sound; vocal fry during singing tremerous affected by trembling or tremors twangy sharp, bright sound ventricular very rough (Louis Armstrong-type voice) wobble wavering or irregular variation in sound
yawny quality is akin to sounds made during a yawn (n.p.)
Part four: Range and images. The fourth part of the recording leads the
individual to return to each sound associated with a body part, toning from the lowest
point to the highest point in one’s range. For example, if the sound of vrooom is
associated with the foot, the individual will be guided to sound that tone on the lowest
note possible all the way to the highest reach of the voice, finally sounding the tone once
where it intuitively feels “just right” and is most expressive of the sensation. This allows
the therapist to see whether the survivor is moving through his or her full vocal range and
shifting registers without breaks, indicating a tension-free placement of the voice that
allows for best use of the relaxed body as a resonant cavity. One of my initial research
lenses was that registration and range were affected by trauma since resonance and range
are affected by tension. After noting registration and range, the therapist then asks if there
is an image associated with this sound. In this instance, say the image suggested is that of
a car. The therapist writes down this association on the chart in the appendix. Depending
on how prolific the survivor is with generating images and how emotionally activated the
individual is by this process, the therapist may decide to work with only a few images at a
time so as to not overwhelm either party.
Part Five: Embodiment and free association with the image. At this stage in
the session, there is a collaborative return to the images generated by the body and the
recording is stopped to allow for the session to take its own pace. There are a number of
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ways the images can be worked with but this technique emphasizes the primacy of the
image and shies away from attempting to crack any code or get to some underlying issue
or encrypted meaning. As in Gestalt dreamwork, a scene has been created by the
collection of images and the therapist and survivor enter the images and simply express
the energy of the scene rather than searching for new insights or recovering old
memories. For example, a session might begin like this:
Therapist: When you were scanning your body, there were images of sparkles and a lamb that came forth. Can you tell me more about that? Patient: The lamb is small and white, very precious and sparkling. Therapist: So there is a sparkling lamb, does this lamb make a sound?
Patient: Yes, the sound is like ting-ting-ting-ting.
Therapist (mirrors): Ting-ting-ting-ting.
After a few rounds of repeating the sounds, the image can lead to additional associations.
Therapist: Does that ting-ting-ting-ting remind you of anything else?
Patient: I guess it reminds me of a needle.
Therapist: So we have an image of a needle and a sparkling lamb—can you say more about that?
Patient: The needle is going to stab the lamb if she isn’t careful.
Therapist; What does the needle sound like?
Patient: That horror movie sound, you know, dum dum dum dum.
Therapist: Dum dum dum dum—what movie is that from?
Patient: I don’t know, I think it’s from that new picture out, you know, the one with the girl on the train. Therapist: I don’t know if I know that movie but tell me, in your imagination, what does a girl on a train sound like?
40
The session may continue on like this and, simultaneously, the energy of the trauma
stored in the body is released with the sounding of each freely associated image. The
metaphorical storyline sourced from images from the body may also be related to the
literal storyline of the trauma.
One of the initial lenses is that the voice is a symbol of Psyche, so as the voice
changes, Psyche is simultaneously shifting. As I worked through this process, cultivating
my own cascade of images sourced from my body, I came to have a new appreciation of
what my trauma offered aesthetically to my life. Holding the tension of this beauty
alongside the terrific horror of my trauma unifies the conscious elements of my wounds
available to me and their unconscious aspects, realized only through sound. The mind
says the trauma is terrible but the psyche, through its own aesthetic and soulful lens, says
that trauma brings beauty. From a Jungian perspective, healing occurs when one “enters
the conversation of opposites, lets each side have its say, endures the struggle between
the opposing points of view, suffers the anguish of being strung out between them, and
greets the resolving symbol with gratitude” (Young-Eisendrath & Dawson, 1997, p. 328).
For a survivor to do this time and again may allow for the manifestation of Jung’s healing
transcendent function, one which “makes organically possible the transition from one
attitude to another, without loss of either one” (Jung, 1916/1972, p. 73 [CW 8, para.145]
The survivor need not exonerate the trauma as terrible by praising its creative fruits—the
beauty and terror equally hold true, resulting in the synthesis of a third, transcendent
view.
An initial contention in research was that singing must be vocal but not
necessarily verbal, but my own heuristic self-searching with this process led to many
41
moments of truly contented silence. Silence is certainly part of singing, and it is
important to differentiate between the stamped-out muted survivor who is lost in
alexythymia and one who is experiencing moments of silent repose. Ultimately, my hope
is that Compose will allow survivors to use their voices to arrive in the place where
soundlessness is no longer a sign of shock, but rather relief.
Chapter IV Summary and Conclusions
Transformation of a trauma complex does not require the survivor to have a new
mental concept of the traumatic experience, but rather, a new physical experience of the
body. This ultimately allows for the development of a new psychological framework.
Jung understood: Psyche and matter interact much like water can become ice or ether—
the body and psyche are two expressions of the same phenomena (1947/1970, p. 215
[CW 8, para. 418]). To address the body is to address Psyche. Rather than insight alone,
the patient must habitually have a new felt experience in the body. Over time, this allows
for the interdependent responses of cognition, soma, and emotion to create a new
framework, a new Gestalt, around the event.
Most importantly, singing offers the traumatized person new sensations, but also a
new embodied consciousness. The survivor can experience a sense of boundaried
individuality by discovering the unique resonance and timbre felt in the body cavity.
Through singing, the body has a chance to move from the frozen, dissociative numbness
associated with trauma toward awakened sensation and full expression.
Most survivors of trauma enter therapy in some degree of the arousal state and, if
abused at the hand of another, will likely be stimulated solely by being alone in a room
with a therapist whom they may not know very well. Thus, they are rapidly agitated
through the nervous system into archaic psychological defenses, making them
43
impenetrable to therapeutic intervention.
Singing is effective in these cases as a method of grounding. In Paul Newham’s
comprehensive text The Healing Voice, he discussed the research of sound healer Don
Campbell, who found that vocalization “can ‘directly and efficiently effect the limbic
system,’ creating a positive ‘response within the hypothalamus,’” all of which are areas
that keep a trauma survivor stuck in the holding pattern of the trauma and the past (1998,
p. 290). Singing offers a way to ground the organism in the present moment, re-regulate
sensory response, and reestablish an awareness of being in the present moment rather
than the past. Through the use of interoceptors and exteroceptors in singing, receptivity in
the organism can return.
Naturally, the healing of trauma requires a re-regulation of body responses to
triggers, and the sensation of touch is often a trigger, such as in the case of sexual and
physical assault survivors. However, this is often the most difficult task due to the intense
hypervigilance of the survivor in the presence of another as well as the sanction against
touch in traditional psychotherapy. Singing is a somatic modality that allows for sensory
connection that is different from most. Singing can be thought of as internally derived
touch rather than externally applied sensation, which can assist in re-establishing body
connection and re-regulating somatic responses in trauma survivors. Voicework offers
the opportunity for survivors to experience the sensation of touch from within their own
body by allowing for the self-modulation of vibration and pressure through the use of the
singing voice.
Furthermore, singing allows for breathwork, which assists in re-regulating the
system and is a soothing behavior that was inhibited during the trauma. Hypervigilance is
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calmed through singing’s engagement with the breath and the body relaxation required to
sing. Emotional expression is somaticized and expressed rather than intellectualized or
repressed. The voice is permitted its full breadth and range of authentic feeling where it
was once stifled and held back due to the silencing of the Broca’s area during the trauma.
The body is sensed and felt from the inside out rather than objectified from the outside
inward and intellectualized. Each of these results addresses a phenomenon or symptom
typically associated with trauma and helps to repair the body-mind split in survivors.
From this point, the survivor is able to freely associate between body sensation
and imagery through song, which allows a sequence of images to be created, much like in
a dream. In this method, the therapist allows for the further embodiment of these images
through singing; the expression creates a new aesthetic experience around the trauma,
inspiring the transcendent function. With the Compose method, the patient is able to hold
the tension of pain and beauty arising from unbearable trauma, which, in turn, results in a
new transcendent view.
Appendix A Worksheet for Therapists
Body Part:
Reported Sensation:
Observed Tension:
Sound:
Image:
Notes:
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