How does my background as a performing musician compliment or disrupt a music therapy process with adults living with a traumatic brain injury?
Citation
Abstract
This autoethnographically informed self-reflexive case study explores how a background as
a performing musician compliments or disrupts a music therapy process with adults living
with a traumatic brain injury. The study is set in a neurorehabilitation centre and aims to
investigate the concept of the self as performer or therapist and how both are present
within a therapeutic space. It also explores how music therapy methods such as
improvisation, receptive music therapy and songwriting can differ between the
performative and therapeutic self. The literature available suggests that performance with
clients has been used and researched in multiple context settings. However, the research
was found to be limited in respect of the perception of the therapist and how a
performative background affects decision making in the therapeutic space.
A qualitative approach, guided by a thematic analysis, identified several instances where the
researcher contemplated over his decisions due to contradicting thoughts on whether it was
more entertainment than therapeutic work. Key findings indicate that transferences and
countertransferences played a significant role in thought processes that occurred in music
therapy sessions. Another finding was the adult attachment style of one client and how this
behaviour influenced decisions made in the therapeutic work. The thematic analysis was
undertaken using data collected through reflective journals, clinical notes and audio
recordings.
The methodology was effectively a multiple case study based on sessions with three clients
during a university placement in a neurorehabilitation centre. However, the work was based on one therapist’s experiences and thought processes. It was established that a
performative background can encourage complimentary and disruptive therapeutic
outcomes. If the therapist was able to avoid making decisions based on their own desires,
be fully present with the client and work with the clients’ interests in mind, then
therapeutic was achievable. Limitations included the risk of biased research and small
sample size, however, future research involving more participants and opinions could lead
to more informed outcomes and conclusions.