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London Times Article about Shadow Work and Dmitri Bilgere
Me and My Shadow
Shadow Work is a gratifying way of getting rid of all your
pent-up anger, says KAREN KRIZANOVICH. Just take it out on a helpless toy
Everybody loses their temper once in a while - but, for no apparent
reason, I found myself flipping into a blind rage almost daily. Snapping
at my parents? Screaming at my partner? That wasn't me. The obvious solutions
- counting to 10, walking away, deep breathing, cutting out caffeine - did
not work. I drank less, slept more and took three holidays. Nothing helped.
Feeling like a walking time bomb, I started to worry. What was happening
to me? Where would it end? So, here I am in Madison, Wisconsin, USA, beating
up a little doll and feeling good about it. It's part of my one-on-one session
of Shadow Work, a therapeutic process designed to root out all kinds of problems
quickly, easily and, in many cases, permanently. Developed in 1990 by former
minister Cliff Barry, Shadow Work uses role-playing and Jungian archetypes
as short cuts to repetitive or deeply embedded troubles - or problems such
as mine that seem to have no cause.
"Any time you say, 'I don't know what came over me,' or 'I just wasn't myself,'
you were in your shadow," says Dmitri Bilgere, author of Beyond the Blame
Game (Bioenergetics Press, from amazon.com $8.76) and part of the Shadow
Work team. The shadow is a term first coined by Jung to describe the repressed
part of the self that has both good and bad qualities. For example, part
of you knows you should visit your parents more often. Another part knows
it isn't a barrel of laughs. What happens? On the way to your parents, you
call in at a pub and stay there. That's your shadow for you.
Acting as a facilitator - a coach certified by the therapy's rigorous training
programme - Bilgere hands me a muslin doll. It is featureless and squishy.
"This doll represents people who make you angry. What are they like?" Under
Bilgere's guidance, I begin to imagine that the doll has all the characteristics
I hate in others - it is lazy, weak, a victim. I can feel myself going into
a red-hot rage just looking at the doll's stupid little face.
Bilgere encourages me to direct my feelings at the doll's weakness. "What
do you want to happen when you see this weakness?" "I want to beat it up,"
I say. "You can," Bilgere says. I grab a foam bat and give the doll a mighty
thrashing.
"Most people have fun doing it and they feel free, powerful and happy afterwards,"
Bilgere says to me when my session is over. "Using the power of emotion is
what makes this process so effective. There are things that happen to us
in a moment - a traumatic experience, for example - that can make our lives
much worse. What most people don't know is that it is possible to set up
circumstances where your life can also get much better in a moment."
Shadow Work is more than simple role-playing. It is serious psychological
work. "Psychiatrists attend workshops and they are astonished by what we
can do. They'll say, 'Wow, we just did six to nine months' work in an hour,'
" says John Kurk, who, with his wife Nicola, facilitates Shadow Work seminars
in the UK, Europe and the States.
A workshop involves 12 to 24 people. The group gathers in a circle. Willing
participants step out and describe their problems, which could be anything
from yelling at the children to abuse and addiction. Under the facilitator's
guidance, each problem is broken into parts that are then voiced through
role-play.
Nothing in Shadow Work is forced; participants always understand what is
going on and the logic behind it. They choose the level of their own participation.
You can step into the middle of the group and start dealing with your own
problems, help with someone else's or choose to observe.
What happened with my dolly? As I was thumping it, I began to feel sorry
for it, compassionate even. Through Bilgere's questioning, I started to understand
why I hated weakness in myself. The rages, it seems, stemmed from me beating
up other people's weaknesses when I really needed to come to terms with my
own. It sounds daft, I know, but months after my session, friends still comment
on a change in me. I am more relaxed, flexible, a better listener. I still
get angry once in a while. But the blind rages? Gone. Funny that.
- Karen Krizanovich
June 6 1999 LIFESTYLE: MIND & BODY, article copyright
©1999 London Times.
View this article at the London Sunday Times website
at
http://www.sunday-times.co.uk/news/pages/Sunday-Times/stiheamab01001.html?999
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