A man asked me, “If you are a Poetry Therapist do you speak to your clients in iambic pentameter?" I hoped he was kidding.
Nick Mazza, editor of the Journal of Poetry Therapy once quipped, “Against popular belief, Poetry Therapy is not a cure for deranged poets, nor treatment for those suffering a high school poetry class.”
In truth Poetry is the misunderstood child in the Therapy family – one of the family's many expressive children. Poetry’s siblings, Art and Music Therapy, stand front-and-center in the family album. Dance Therapy gets a lot of attention too. In the Who’s Who of Therapy Children, these kids receive plenty of press.
But why not our friend, Poetry Therapy? After all she was born in the first century A.D. when Soranus, a Roman doctor prescribed tragedy reading for mania and comedy for his depressed patients. Indeed, medicine and poetry are entwined even from the beginning of civilization. Mythology buffs remember that Apollo, god of the sun, is the also god of poetry and medicine.
All this might lead us to believe that Poetry Therapy is not one of the kids. Instead, she may be the great-grandmother in the Therapy family. If so, we must wonder why don't more people know her?
Once upon a time. many centuries after Soranus and the ancient Greeks, when the world got around to naming such things. our girl was given a name – and that name was Bibliotherapy. It was a clumsy name – no name for a beautiful child. People outside the family seldom recognized her and oft misunderstood her. Conceding a problem, the kinfolk decided to give Bibliotherapy a new name. “Let’s call her Poetry Therapy,” they said, “so that people will flock to her window. After all,” they reasoned, “poetry is better and more expedient than biblio(books). Poetry is the best healer.”
So it came to pass, in the 1960’s, that Bibliotherapy became Poetry Therapy. Without a doubt, her new name is much more poetic. Still people outside the family – people like you –do not recognize her. They wonder . . . What is this thing you call Poetry Therapy? Why (and how) is poetry a healing tool?
Why Poetry?
Poetry Therapy begins with a poem
Not the Odyssey, the Iliad, or Beowulf
Nor Olde English verse by olde Robert Burns
Wee, sleeket, cowrin, tim'rous beastie
But a lovely poem
An evocative poem
With cadence to echo your heart
Tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow
On the brink, on the brim, on the cusp
Lines sing your song
Hold fast to dreams
e.e. cummings thanks God for most
this amazing day
Words show the way
Poetry Therapy dances with language
Symbols and imagery point the way
Flow like a river
Be like a bird
Rise like the phoenix
Open a door
Why Poetry? Why not?
She arrived with the stork
Before you could speak
Patty-cake, patty-cake
The mouse ran up the clock
And someone sang
Good night, sleep tight
You heard
The owl and the pussycat
Went to sea
Danny O’Dare
The dancing bear
You memorized poetry
Roses are red
Composed a love poem
Someday we will wed
You heard it in church
On the radio too
At school, see you later
In the hallways, alligator
In the subway
On the playground, skipping rope
Round and round
You heard it from lecterns
Speaking to nations
Praise Song For The Day
I have a dream
Poems may inspire
Gather roses while ye may
They tickle and smile
A nose is a nose is a nose - any day.
For this much is certain
Poetry is life
It lives with you
It lives in you
Wherever you turn
It speaks.