Movement and Identity

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This trauma-informed approach to counselling and bodywork explores the ways in which varying facets of identity and culture manifest in the body, allowing a much more nuanced, person-centred approach to client care. Marcia Bonato Warren, MA, MA, LPC describes how our bodies interpret our identities, often informed by cultural norms, communication styles, trauma, and systems of power and oppression.
Therapists and bodyworkers reading this book will have the opportunity to engage personally and professionally, learning to build on their own somatic awareness in order to engage with compassionate curiosity rather than resistance when confronted with identity-based differences. Each section uses the SIA Loop, a mechanism representing three entry-points we use to process information: Sensation, Interpretation, Action, which supports the deeper work offered by the Identity Expression Infinity Loop, where identities are invited to move with strength and skill. These pioneering tools allow readers to examine their own somatic experiences, beliefs, behaviours, and choices, all of which is supplemented with journal prompts and questions.
In guiding readers in how to interpret the body’s expression of identity, this unique guide maximises the potential of therapists to foster change, increase empathy, and nurture connection through trauma-informed, somatically aware bodywork.

Reviews

Marcia Bonato Warren has brilliantly highlighted the exquisitely dynamic ways multicultural people navigate the world by introducing the concept of Embodied Code Switching. Through the essential cultural art of storytelling as a tool of knowledge seeking and wisdom sharing, she has opened a pathway to multi-layered ways of knowing and ways of being. Movement and Identity offers the reader a blueprint for checking in with our mind, emotions and body from a cultural perspective with mindful embodied practices to support the varied experiences of moving through the world. This seminal work will be a resource for students and professionals alike for many years to come.
Angela M Grayson, PhD, President of the American Dance Therapy Association