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Psyche: Case study
Jenny Pearson
looks at how story works in a Sesame session.
Simon was a
boy aged nine years living in a home. Simon had been sexually abused
by his mother and often behaved violently in the Sesame Drama &
Movement Therapy sessions, attacking the female therapists. He had
great strength. Mary brought in a story we had never used before,
which she felt might work with Simon. It was 'Cap O'Rushes' - an
English folk tale that has something in common with Shakespeare's
King Lear. To enable Simon to play the main part she did something
we sometimes do when we use traditional tales: she transposed the
sexes. The story, as she told it, went like this.
There was once
a queen who had three sons. One day she called them all to her and
said to the oldest, 'Tell me - how much do you love me?' The first
son said, 'I love you as much as I love my life.' And the Queen
said, 'That's good.'
She called her
second son and said, 'How much to do you love me?' Her second son
said, 'I love you more than the whole world.' And the Queen said,
'That's good.'
Then she called
her youngest son and said, 'How much do you love me?' And he said,
'I love you as meat loves salt.' When she heard that she was very
angry and she told him to get out of the Palace and out of her kingdom
for she never wanted to see him again.
So he went away,
out of the country, not knowing what he was going to do, until he
came to a river where there were rushes growing by the bank. He
picked some of them and made himself a beautiful hat, which he put
on. He went on and came to a big palace and asked if there was any
work he could do. He was told that he could work in the kitchens
and that is what he did, washing up dishes and chopping up food
and helping in every way he could. The other servants called him
Cap O'Rushes because of his hat, which he always wore.
One day everyone
was dressing up to go to a big dance. Cap O'Rushes said he was too
tired to go. Then, after everyone had gone, he took off his hat
and made himself smart and went along to the dance. The Princess
was there and she danced with him all evening. There were two more
dances and at each of them Cap O'Rushes arrived late and danced
with the Princess. On the third night she gave him a ring, but he
left early and was back in the kitchens before the others came home,
all talking about the handsome man who had danced with the Princess.
After that there
were no more dances and the Princess pined for her young man until
she became ill. When she was ill she asked for some soup. Cap O'Rushes
made the soup, slipped the ring she had given him into the bowl
and handed it to her. She recognised the ring, he took off his hat
and there was her young man, standing before her.
They were both
very happy and soon a wedding was announced with Cap O'Rushes giving
special instructions that the meat for the wedding feast must be
cooked without salt. Among the guests at the wedding feast was the
Queen, his mother. When she tasted the food she complained that
it was horrible because it had been cooked without salt.
Then she remembered
her youngest son and what he had said. She began to cry, saying,
'Now I understand! How cruel and stupid I've been. I sent him away
for saying that he loved me as salt loves meat, but now I know that
he really loved me. Oh how I wish I could find him and tell him
how sorry I am.' Then Cap O'Rushes stood before her and said, 'I'm
here Mother!' And she recognised him and hugged him and said, 'It's
you. It really is you. I'm so sorry for what I did.'
Simon played
the part of the youngest son with total concentration and a lot
of feeling. As the Princess, I was charmed by him and heartbroken
when he disappeared. He brought me the bowl of soup and watched
eagerly as I found the ring and recognised him. Roya, who had recently
joined the Sesame team, was the Queen. As she was crying at the
wedding feast over the loss of her son and her own stupidity at
not understanding how much he loved her, Simon stepped forward.
He was at once totally in role and totally himself as he said, 'It's
all right, Mum. I love you, Mum. I love you!' He flung himself into
her arms and hugged and repeated over and over, 'I love you, Mum.
I really love you!'
The moment was
real, but it was also held in the story. We were all close to tears,
but the three of us had the task of containing these powerful feelings
within the drama. As the princess, I walked quietly across the room
and stood close to the queen and her son. The Queen looked up, noticed
me and asked gently, 'Who is this?'
Cap O' Rushes
replied (without any prompting), 'This is my wife.' It was quite
a formal introduction and my mother-in-law took me by the hand in
greeting. The story ended with us all in role.
We needed a
thorough grounding after that and Mary gave us one: all holding
hands, shaking off our dramatic roles and coming back to ourselves
in a circle that never once broke to admit the possibility of aggressive
acts. Still in a tightly held circle we escorted Simon to the door,
breaking our hold only to open the door and wave him out saying,
'See you next week!'
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