Therapeutic Communication Jane Vuong, a 24 year old Vietnamese undergraduate student was admitted into the hospital Emergency Department presenting with anxiety, difficulty speaking, breathing and dusky lips following severe chest tightness during an exercise session at the local martial arts school. On examination she had a wheezing sound when breathing. She has no history of asthma but says she has some allergies which she treats with herbs. Her colleague who brought her to the emergency room also claims that Jane has recently had difficulty breathing while taking the stairs up to the martial arts studio and she no longer rides her bicycle to the studio.…
According to Ledesma, Resilience is the ability to adapt well over time to life-changing situations and stressful conditions” (Ledesma, 2015). David Treuer examines and identifies the concept of resilience in the text by humanizing the harsh realities of life on the reservation, by showing that through it all, despite the issue within these communities, these communities are homes. While he tells stories of immense poverty, crime, and social toxins, Treuer also tells stories of resilience, dignity, and hope. It’s like how Shaye Tibbett’s, one of the women in the book, says: “Don’t pity me. We got it good.…
Aminata’s resiliency is evident in that she “seems to have trouble dying” (1) which compliments her resiliency as she advances throughout her journey of slavery and as an abolitionist. Aminata also stayed resilient even though she “never had the privilege of holding her children” (2). While many would lose their resiliency in tough times, Aminata remained resilient even though she was not with her children. She always remained steadfast that she would overcome through her resiliency even after hearing “You don’t own that baby any more than you own the wool on your head. They both belong to me” (179). She kept steadfast even though she missed her children “the way I’d miss limbs from my body” and the thought of one day being reunited with them. Similar to Aminata’s hardships, Laila also endured the hardships of domestic violence in a war torn…
When faced with a difficult situation, a person usually does one of two things: gives up or shows strength and fights through it. In Farewell To Manzanar by Jeanne Wakatsuki Houston, the author recounts her story of her experience in Manzanar, a Japanese internment camp in California, during World War II. In The Circuit by Francisco Jimenez, the author recalls his journey as a migrant child in the 40’s in California, as his family struggles through all kinds of labor camps. Both Francisco and Jeanne show resilience in the difficult situations they face; however, Jeanne shows defiance towards her father, while Francisco is always sweet and kind. Ultimately, neither character has a lot of control over their fates,…
Diedre could benefit from the transference and countertransference intervention in Jungian therapy. She can link her past personal dramas which represent an archetypal struggle, comprised of images and symbols from the past, to a new self-realization (Capuzzi & Gross, 2011). This goal can also be achieved by unlocking other elements of her unconscious including her desires, memories and past events by engaging in art, dream interpretation and/or spirituality. These methods can help Deidre gain a new insight into the grieving she has experienced in losing her father and the lack of her mother’s support due to her mental health issues, mood swings and hoarding problem. Deidre is essentially grieving a loss of both parents, even though her mother is alive. Deidre’s mother was not available to her and not capable of nurturing her.…
The novel, Mahtab’s story, by Libby Gleeson, focuses on the many horrific obstacles that the protagonist, Mahtab, and her family face their homeland of Afghanistan as well as the obstacles they face when they flee from Afghanistan in search of a safe and secure home. Some of the hardships they face include: the constant fear and insecurity they experience as a result of living under Taliban rule, the sense of dislocation and alienation they experience as a result of leaving behind loved ones, their possessions, and their culture and the way of life to go to an unknown or unfamiliar place, and the grave uncertainty and insecurity they feel about their futures and loved ones. Despite the enormity of these immense hardships however, Mahtab and her family members, are able to overcome them because they remain resilient and indomitable. Remaining focused on their goal, thinking positively, finding strength in each other and familiar family customs or habits, such as praying, singing, telling soties and counting, are some of the coping mechanisms that Mahtab and her family use which enables them to remain indomitable in the face of her troubles.…
Despite their many restrictions, females in Iran are anything but fragile. Iranian women are proud, strong, and work at changing the society they live in. In Erika Friedl's book, Women of Deh Koh, Lives In An Iranian Village, she shows the reader what it is like to be a woman in Iran. She explains how nothing really stays the same for long, there is always change. She says, "...men grow tall before they wither and die; girls, like flowers, bloom shortly, only to wrinkle and dry up..." The men are really the caretakers and the "bosses." In the story of Maryam and Kosrshid, it says that she is illiterate and had to do all of her book keeping in her head. She was successful at doing this. She really was taking control in many situations. She wanted the school administration to buy one vineyard that was located in a convenient spot. She was successful at this as well.…
The novel Prisoner of Tehran by Marina Nemat is a memoir about the many challenges of growing up in Iran. Some of the challenges that she faced were serving time in the Evin Prison for speaking out against the Iranian government, escaping a death sentence and finally fleeing Iran for a new life in Canada. Persepolis is a memoir written by Marjane Satrapi, which is an autobiographical graphic novel that explores a childhood in Iran during the turbulent years surrounding the 1979 Iranian Revolution. It also talks about how the government was overthrown, the theocracy that was introduced, and the war with neighboring Iraq. Marina and Marjane are both heroes because they stand up for what they believe in, they try and promote equality for women and they both do things so that the world can see what is really happening in Iran; however, they show these qualities in different ways throughout the novels.…
Building on strengths and promoting resilience: using a child or young person's existing networks and support where possible or establish new support structures.…
What prompted the author to write this piece was originally a need to assess and to have a hold of the present anxieties that were taking over during the times the author writes about. The event that led to the development and publication was the feeling of a moral obligation that the author felt to tell people a story that could bring hope and a sense of courage through any struggle in a family.…
From merely the last two decades, women have begun to show out in society with their vast achievements and accomplishments. In the early days of the Iranian revolution, a young woman named Azar Nafisi started teaching at the University of Tehran. However, in 1981, Nafisi was expelled from the University of Tehran for refusing to wear an Islamic veil. Seven years later, however, she did indeed resume teaching but soon resigned in protest over the increasingly cruel punishments of the Iranian government toward women. She dreamed of working with students that carried a great passion for learning. In Reading Lolita in Tehran, Azar Nafisi and her seven students join together every Thursday morning at her home and discuss classic texts of Western literature that have to do with prominent figures. In the conditions Nafisi lived in , however, it was illegal for women to form small study groups that didn 't have to do with what the government wanted them to learn about. Nafisi, herself, knew the risks and how dangerous it would be to betray the laws of the Iranian government. At that time, women were forced to live by dreadful laws; laws that made women dress a certain way when being seen in public. They were only allowed to dress up in black robes and head scarves, only their face and hands being uncovered. With the conditions that Nafisi and her students lived under, it is more dangerous to withdraw into their dreams rather to resign themselves to a disturbing reality because of how restricted the laws were forced upon the citizens of Iran.…
Despite the extreme pain and suffering Mariatu’s story is one of hope and redemption. She now lives in Toronto where she attends college. She also tours North America as a UNICEF Special Representative for Children and Armed Conflict.…
It is intrinsically human to experience conflict; thus, we will all be forced to respond to conflict at various times and in various forms throughout the course of our lives, and in order to live serenely we attempt to avoid and resolve conflict. Whilst conflict may merely involve two parties disagreeing over minor differences of opinion (the permutations of which being largely insignificant), we have seen throughout history that major conflicts in the form of war and international political unrest, lead many to experience horrific and life-changing conflicts of a larger scale. Our challenge is to deal with conflict that might be well beyond the reaches of our control, and wholly influenced by the actions of others. Noting the diverse contexts of such conflict, what emerges is the extraordinary way that we can be tested, and how we emerge from such harrowing circumstances. We begin to question not the battle itself- conflict has occurred and will occur again- but the human behavior behind the conflict and our responses to such conditions. Those who experience conflict are truly tested and the core of their characters brought into sharp focus as they make sense of their experiences and those of the people around them. For the woman incarcerated at the end of Bruce Bereford’s ‘Paradise Road’ it is the conflict of enduring a war and all that this encompasses, including cultural prejudice and misunderstanding, violence and torture. For others in our world’s recent history such as Nelson Mandela, it was the conflict of enduring persistent ignorance, discrimination and injustice. Through the stories of these people we can see that while conflict can often breed further disagreement and suffering, it may indeed prompt some to act in extraordinary ways that are bigger and more complex than they might have realized themselves. They are led to articulate through their responses to conflict, who they…
In this essay, I am going to give a structured reflective account on the development of a therapeutic relationship with a client on one of my clinical placements as part of my training as a student nurse. I will be using a reflective model which explores the processes involved in developing and maintaining such relationships bearing in mind theoretical knowledge and how it applies to this clinical experience. Jasper (2003) describes reflective practice as one of the ways that professionals learn from experience in order to understand and develop their practice. As a trainee health care professional, I have learnt the importance of reflection in practice as a platform for judging one’s progress, strengths and weaknesses and also as a tool for appraising what went well during an intervention and what needs to be improved upon. Reflective practice is an important factor for nurses when building a therapeutic relationship with clients. Though this is essential in all nursing practices, it cannot be over emphasised in Mental Health nursing as this is based on quite a lot of understanding and trust between nurses and client. It is also now a respected and required learning and assessment method in many nursing programmes worldwide. The Nursing and Midwifery Council (NMC, 2008) requires nurses to keep knowledge and skills up to date throughout their working life. Considering the importance of clinical competence in the nursing profession, then it will suffice to say that reflection is an important tool in the nurse’s range of skills which aids the achievement and maintenance of clinical competence and performance (Mattews, 2004).…
In this essay I will discuss and evaluate “The relationship is the theory” Judgements are based on personal knowledge & experience as well as written material composed by others. The basic principle being “the therapy is the relationship”, does this imply engaging a therapist equates to therapy or does it propose more?…