Read more about the article Ingata yúbuzima: The ingata of life – Annonciata Niyibizi Muhayimana 
Coast at Neist point lighthouse, Scotland

Ingata yúbuzima: The ingata of life – Annonciata Niyibizi Muhayimana 

Culturally resonant metaphors can highlight local skills and knowledges and strengthen connections to community, culture and history in ways that can sustain us in difficult times. In this video, Annonciata Niyibizi Muhayimana shows how collective narrative practices like the Tree of Life and Team of Life can be adapted to celebrate local cultures. Annonciata introduces the metaphor of Ingata Yúbuzima, the Ingata of Life, a Rwandan metaphor based on the handmade rings used to carry a load on one’s head. The ingata is a treasured item in everyday use, offering protection to those carrying a heavy load. It can be used with assistance and when help is not available. Annonciata shows how she elicited the knowledge of the mothers she worked with about making, using and caring for ingata, and how this local knowledge became the basis for rich metaphors about values, skills, hopes and connection. Individual ingatas were created as a record of what the women wanted to protect, and a giant collective ingata wove their stories together. Ingata Yúbuzima offers a resonant image of protection formed from everyday materials that enables people to skilfully bear weight without being hurt by it. This video is an extract from a presentation that was part of Annonciata’s completion of the Master of Narrative Therapy and Community Work at The University of Melbourne.

1 Comment
Read more about the article Threads of identity: Using fashion and narrative practice to explore preferred stories within the queer community — Libby Olson
Grass Tree overlooking Stirling Ranges near Albany in Western Australia

Threads of identity: Using fashion and narrative practice to explore preferred stories within the queer community — Libby Olson

This video explores the intersection of narrative therapy, fashion and gender identity through the co-creation of a gender-neutral paper doll dress-up game. Drawing from narrative therapy principles, it challenges the rigid gender norms historically reinforced by fashion games, offering a playful yet meaningful tool for identity exploration. Alongside the game, a community collective document is being created to amplify queer voices, sharing stories of resilience and resistance against dominant societal discourses. By integrating creative mediums into therapeutic practice, I examine how narrative therapy can help individuals shape and express their preferred stories.

0 Comments
Read more about the article Staying alive to prove them wrong: Collaborating with trans people, drag performers and queers in contexts of alt-right violence – Belial B’Zarr and Frankie Hanman-Siegersma 
meadow of wild flowers

Staying alive to prove them wrong: Collaborating with trans people, drag performers and queers in contexts of alt-right violence – Belial B’Zarr and Frankie Hanman-Siegersma 

In recent years, we have seen a rise in anti-LGBTIQ+ violence and hate across the settler colonies of so-called Australia, Aotearoa New Zealand and Turtle Island North America. This video interview describes a response to anti-trans and anti-drag hate. It spotlights an individual therapeutic exchange that grew into a web of collective care, action and activism. In the context of counselling, people’s responses to discriminatory violence are often pathologised, creating contexts of blame and shame for people who are living through oppression. This video conversation retells significant fragments of a therapeutic relationship. It includes collective narrative practices such as letter writing, externalising and deconstructing the effects of doxing. We invite practitioners to reflect on how we might take our practices from the therapy room to the streets for protest and collective action, and to stages for drag, cabaret and performance art, as we take up our solidarity with targeted groups.

0 Comments

End of content

No more pages to load