The Mystery And Magic Of Metaphor


DIVING IN THE MOON:
HONORING STORY, FACILITATING HEALING

 

The Mystery And Magic Of Metaphor

© Susan Perrow

In simple terms, a metaphor shows us one thing as another, and in doing so extends the way we see the world, also often refreshing and enlivening our perception. In oral and written language, using the medium of picture imagery, metaphor speaks directly to our imaginative faculties, bypassing our rational brain. Such metaphoric byways and pathways enable us to explore the ideas, forces, and powers that lie behind or beyond our rational thought. Overcoming the limitations of our fixed categories and often cumbersome or clumsy everyday human language, metaphor, in a mysterious and magical process, offers a form of “higher” or more holistic cognition.

Metaphor juxtaposes familiar concepts to reveal higher, archetypal concepts. These higher concepts cannot be literally stated in familiar language. The higher concepts are “unnamed”; no single definable word attaches to these “thought beings,” nor are they accessible to abstract, logical reasoning. They are poetical intuitions that incarnate into thought and language through the skilled manipulation of familiar concepts.
(Ken DiBenedette (2005) ‘Metaphor at the Threshold’ http://moonchalice.com)

Metaphor is very different from simile. While simile compares one thing with another and highlights its resemblance using the word “like” (“Your smile is like the morning sun”), metaphor accomplishes the magical transformation of turning something into something else (“Your smile is the sun in my life”). In simile, the process of comparison involves our more rational brain, our thinking processes, whereas metaphor reaches deep into our soul imagination and, simply stated, “touches our heart.”

In Antoine de Saint-Exupéry’s book The Little Prince we learn a simple secret from the fox:

And now here is my secret, a very simple secret:
It is only with the heart that one can see rightly;
What is essential is invisible to the eye.
(1975- p. 68, Scholastic Publications)

Metaphor speaks to the heart and it is only with the heart that one can see rightly. For this reason metaphor has long been the language of mystics, spiritual teachers, poets, storytellers and other expressive artists. Metaphor is a heart-tool that helps us explore the ideas, forces and powers that lie behind our rational thought.

Metaphor in Storytelling

Integrated into storytelling, a metaphor, or many metaphors, can, as in spiritual writings and poetry, take on a mystery and magic that are sometimes subtle, sometimes powerfully medicinal. The metaphors seem to come alive and gain energy from each other in a vibrant and exciting dance, and through this process they have the possibility of producing potent story medicine.

Sometimes this “metaphor dance” can be as simple as the following short story told by a Shanghai mother to her five-year-old boy. It was a creative attempt to encourage him to clean up his spilt cake crumbs (after he had defiantly stated that he would not help clean them up):

Once a upon a time there were some crumbs lying on the floor that needed to get to an important meeting with the crumbs in the garbage bin. A little brush helped them to do this by sweeping them all up into the dustpan (every last crumb!). Then they were carried across the floor by a pair of hands and tipped into the bin, just in time for the meeting.

The mother reported that upon hearing this little story (the first story ever created by the mother), the boy was very excited to be involved in the imaginative process of helping every last crumb get to the meeting. And what great metaphors for co-operation: a dustpan, a brush and a pair of hands!

Sometimes, however, the situation may require the metaphor dance to be more complex. As I currently am fortunate to be devoting my life to teaching therapeutic story-writing worldwide, I am having many experiences of such success, and I would like to share some recent examples.

In April 2013 I was in Bulgaria running therapeutic storytelling workshops for psychologists. One group worked on a story for a five-year-old girl who had, one month beforehand, lost her father to a sudden illness. Because he had died at home in his sleep, the girl was extremely fearful of going to sleep, and also fearful of her mother going to sleep. She would do everything she could to try and stay awake—run around the house, scream and cry, refuse to lie down. . . and when, out of sheer exhaustion she would fall asleep, she would wake up a few hours later and run to her mother and wake her up. The grieving mother had gone to the psychologist with sleep exhaustion, asking for help. The group worked on a story to hopefully help the little girl “want to go to sleep.”

You may wonder where one begins with such a story. The girl’s greatest interests were ballet and ballerina dolls, so this was my recommended starting point (I suggest you refer to my book Therapeutic Storytelling for an extensive list of tips on choosing metaphors).

Here is the completed story, loosely translated from Bulgarian:

There was once a beautiful ballerina that lived inside a music box on top of a strong table in a little colored house at the edge of town. Every day the music box lid would open and the ballerina would dance round and round and round. Oh, how she loved to dance. When she was tired the music box lid would close and she could rest. And so life went on, day after day—the ballerina would dance, then rest, then dance some more.

One day everything changed in the life of the beautiful ballerina. While she was resting in her music box, a terrible storm came in the night and shook the colored house so strongly that the table rocked backwards and forwards and almost fell over. One of the table legs cracked and fell off, and the music box lid flew open so wide that it wasn’t able to close again. The ballerina woke up and began to dance, round and round and round—she danced all day and all night and all the next day—round and round and round—she danced and danced and could not stop.

One evening the Spirit of Dreams (a character from Bulgarian folklore) was passing by the window of the little colored house. She looked in and saw the ballerina dancing round and round, and knew she could be of some help. So she slipped inside and sang a special song to help the music box lid find a way to close again. That night the ballerina was able to have a long, long rest, and the next morning the Spirit of Dreams was back again, this time to sing a different kind of song—a wake up song. The music box lid opened and the ballerina was able to dance round and round and round. Oh, how this ballerina loved to dance! Now with the help of the Dream Spirit, life could go on, day after day—the ballerina could dance, then rest, then dance some more.

Three weeks later I received the following email from the mother’s psychologist: “This story did something amazing. The girl liked it very much and asked her mother to tell her the story several times. The story reduced the girl’s tension and anxiety to a great extent. She asked a lot of questions about the Spirit of Dreams. We established contact with a young woman studying at The Academy of Arts in Sofia who painted the Dream Spirit on the wall over the girl’s bed. The effect was just like in a fairy tale. The problem with the sleep seems to be solved.”

In this situation, the choice of metaphors (ballerina, music box, table, storm, dream spirit) danced together in a therapeutic story journey and created powerful story medicine to help the girl want to go to sleep each night.

A very different story line was used in a recent workshop in North America. The desired resolution was to find new strength and life following the suicide of a father. The group worked with a nature cycle theme. The story was about a strong oak tree toppled over by a great storm. Where the roots had been torn out, a baby acorn was dropped into the earth. Cradled in the arms of the acorn shell, in the dark of the earth, all alone, the acorn slowly began to sprout. This situation was quite different from the one in Bulgaria, and the group felt it was important that the story should be written for the mother, to encourage her to find strength to cradle and support her child.

Working with the mystery and magic of metaphor, therapeutic stories can address a range of issues, from aggressive behavior to grieving, anxiety, lack of confidence, bullying, teasing, nightmares, intolerance, inappropriate talk, toilet training, bedwetting and much more. Therapeutic stories also have the potential for nurturing positive values and building emotional resilience and character.

Healing Story Workshop in Bucharest

There are so many different situations where a story can offer help …. For children, teenagers and adults. In Portland, Oregon a teacher wrote a story about a Yellow Bird for an adopted Chinese child who was being teased at school.After telling the story several times in class the teacher shared it with the mother, who commented that she knew something had happened because the tears had stopped and the child seemed much happier before going to bed. In Croatia a mother and therapist together worked on a story about a heavy stone necklace, which was for a fourteen-year-old girl who could no longer walk and needed to use a wheelchair, but was refusing to do so. The teenager wrote an email of thanks to me, saying that the story had encouraged her to accept the help of the wheelchair. A twenty-two-year old Kenyan man, approaching his death, used a story about a family of rabbits to say honest and important things about his life, things that his culture would not have allowed him to express. A fifty-five-year-old woman wrote her own story to deal with her sexual abuse when she was three years old – her choice of metaphor was a caterpillar stuck in its cocoon that eventually found a way to fly free.

There is such a need and a thirst today for story medicine.

Intrinsic to the art of therapeutic story writing is the art of using metaphor. In writing a healing story it helps to carefully select therapeutic metaphors and to construct a journey or quest to meet the need of the situation and the age of the child or teenager. The story is not intended to moralize or to induce guilt; this point cannot be stressed enough! The objective is to simply reflect what is happening and, through the story “metaphors” and “journey” provide an acceptable means of dealing with the behavior and a positive resolution. A healing tale should, as much as possible, leave the listener free to come to her or his own conclusion. This way the “power of story” is left to do its work, as Ben Okri suggests, “in silence, invisibly.”

It is easy to forget how mysterious and mighty stories are. They do their work in silence, invisibly. They work with all the internal materials of the mind and self. They become part of you while changing you.
(
1996, p.34, Birds of Heaven, London: Phoenix)

As a vital ingredient in therapeutic story making, metaphors help to form imaginative connections that draw in and “enchant” the listener. As integral parts of the story journey, they often play both negative roles (obstacles, hindrances and tempters or temptations that help to pull a behavior or situation out of balance) and positive roles (helpers or guides that bring the behavior/situation back into wholeness or balance).

Try to picture the following: a story is written for a child who is annoying other children, and the story is directly about a child who is always annoying other children but learns to stop when the other children refuse to be friends. If such a story is told in class, because it lacks metaphors to help “lift” the listeners into their imaginations, the group could be trying to work out who the story is about, and suddenly the teacher could be interrupted by someone calling out, “Josh does the same, he annoys everyone!” It is even questionable whether such an example, devoid of metaphoric imagery, could be called a story.

Let us now take the same example and build a story with metaphor. Starting first with “simile” can be a helpful inroad to story making. “It’s as if an annoying, obnoxious child is like an Octopus whose tentacles are getting into everything.” Then drop the “as if” and “is like” and our story can begin:

Occy Octopus was a continual worry for his ocean friends. He always seemed to be annoying one, or pestering another, or bothering all of them at once. Whatever the friends were doing, wherever the friends were going, Occy’s eight long tentacles would get in the way. One tentacle might be hooked onto Crab’s claw, another one reaching inside Groper’s mouth, another tickling Star Fish’s feet, another dragging clumps of seaweed into their play.

As well as Occy’s tentacles being obstacles in the story, the ocean friends, because of their negative chanting, also become obstacles.

Go away, Occy, go away, we don’t like the way you play,
Go away, Occy, go away, your tentacles are in the way!

Then Turtle enters as the wise helper. More “helping” metaphors along the story journey are the long piece of seaweed, and the community involvement to help pull it along. The resolution is Occy’s “self progress” towards keeping his tentacles under control—and learning the true way to swim.

This story, with the use of both obstacle and helping metaphors, offers a simple transformational journey from “annoying friends and lack of control” to “enjoyable friendships and better self-control.” Through a light and humorous approach, the story, printed below, leads to a positive resolution and the behavior is restored to balance.

Obnoxious Octopus
© Susan Perrow 2013

EDITOR’S NOTE: The following story, Obnoxious Octopus, can be found under “O” in Susan Perrow’s new e-book: ‘A Spoonful of Stories: An A – Z Collection of Behaviour Tales for Children’

Occy Octopus was not very popular with his ocean friends. He always seemed to be annoying one, or pestering another, or bothering all of them at once. Whatever the friends were doing, wherever the friends were going, Occy’s eight long tentacles would get in the way. One tentacle might be hooked onto Crab’s claw, another one reaching inside Groper’s mouth, another tickling Star Fish’s feet, another dragging clumps of seaweed into their playground.

One day the ocean friends decided they had enough of Occy’s annoying ways. As soon as he came close, they all decided to chant at once:
Go away, Occy, go away, we don’t like the way you play,
Go away, Occy, go away, your tentacles are in the way!

But Occy Octopus ignored the chant and kept on following the friends. And Occy’s eight long tentacles continued to get in the way. One tentacle might be wrapped around Crab’s legs, another one pulling on Groper’s tail, another tying Star Fish’s points together, another one stirring up the sand in the middle of the playground.

The ocean friends kept on chanting:
Go away, Occy, go away, we don’t like the way you play,
Go away, Occy, go away, your tentacles are in the way!

This time they were making so much noise with their chant that they woke up Old Man Turtle. He drifted over to see what was happening, and as he swam closer, he saw Occy’s tentacles busily annoying and pestering all of his friends. Straight away Old Man Turtle could see the cause of the problem. Little Occy hadn’t learnt the true way to use his tentacles. Little Occy hadn’t learnt how to swim like an octopus!

Old Man Turtle quickly gathered a long piece of seaweed from the ocean floor. He put one end in Occy’s strong beak. ‘Take hold of the other end’, he called out to the ocean friends, ‘we are going to pull Occy along’. So Crab, Groper and Star Fish held onto one end of the long weed rope and helped Old Man Turtle to pull. They all pulled as hard as they could. They pulled and they pulled and they pulled.

Occy followed along, his eight tentacles trailing out behind him. But he hadn’t gone far when something amazing happened. He realised that something else was now doing most of the work – the ocean water was going in one part of his body and straight out another – propelling him along at jet-like speed. Whoosh went Occy – whoosh whoosh along. Occy realised he could now let go of the weed rope. Soon he had passed all the friends with his jet-like speed.

Occy had learnt to swim like an Octopus! There was no stopping him …….. along the ocean floor, up to the top of the waves, in and out the rocky reef. Occy couldn’t believe what a wonderful world he could now discover by himself.

From that day onwards Occy’s life changed forever. He could swim like an Octopus! He could jet along. He could go wherever he wanted to go.

Sometimes he would stop by to visit his friends, and play fun games like hide n’seek, and races, and chasings. Now that he knew how to swim, what a different kind of player he had become. The ocean friends loved having Occy come to play. They loved the new games that Occy wanted to share. Soon they were chanting:
Stay, Occy, stay, we really like the way you play,
Stay, Occy, stay – stay and play all day!

As an exercise in experiencing and understanding the use of metaphor in story making, I suggest you read some folk and fairy tales, then make up a table of your own, identifying both the obstacles and the helpers. But be forewarned! You may find a story that has metaphors that don’t fit either of these categories. An interesting discovery at a recent workshop was that some metaphors seem to play a “transitional” or “transformational” or “turning point” role. And sometimes a metaphor may play a ‘thread’ or central role. What other roles can metaphors play? This is work in progress for me, so the question is genuine!

It is also important to note that, depending on the story journey, the same metaphors can assume different roles. For example, in one context a “lagoon” can be an obstacle for a trapped whale to escape from (to overcome); in another it can play a protective, helping role for a boat that is seeking shelter from the storm. This of course reflects the fluid nature of life and the dynamic changes of meaning that occur depending on context and situation.

Metaphor Seeds

Susan Perrow telling ‘The Star Apple’ in China

Sometimes a metaphor may be used as a seed idea only, not even a full story. In my first book I wrote about a wise dentist who explained to my seven-year-old that one of his teeth needed a silver star to make it strong. The use of picture language here (instead of the word “filling”) made a considerable difference in the attitude of my son in accepting the situation. I also reported on a father who used the image of a waterfall to successfully teach his four-year-old son to pee directly into the toilet and not all over the sides and top. I have since heard that a teacher in Croatia helped to potty train her two-and-a-half-year old nephew using the same picture language. Apparently there was a stream near the boy’s home with a little waterfall, and after visiting it for several days he loved the idea of being able to pull down his nappy and make a waterfall himself. From then onwards he would cry “waterfall” in time to reach the toilet and did not need a diaper anymore, for both watery and rocky waterfalls!

I am fortunate to know some creative health professionals who work with metaphor in clinical practice, for all ages of patients. Some draw metaphors from the patients’ interests or professions to help them build links to their diagnosis: the connection of goal scoring to winning, for a keen football fan who needs a healthier life style; poor structural beams, for an engineer who needs to do more exercise to build up basic muscle tone; clogged pipes, for a plumber with a cholesterol problem; an out-of-tune instrument, for a musician with a broken leg who needs to do physiotherapy to help retune/re-strengthen his muscles. Some use metaphors related to the illness: for example, a pressure cooker without a safety valve (blood pressure). One doctor keeps a collection of figurines on a tray on his desk (including people, animals, trees, houses, fairy tale characters) as a point of lateral reference for his patients to start connecting with their condition in a metaphoric way. This way the patients are helped to find their own metaphors for their own unique situation.

All of the above report that this pictorial approach seems to reach the patients in a more effective way and also helps them feel truly “heard.” The healing power of metaphor has no bounds.

Perhaps there are some storytellers reading this article that have their own repertoire of metaphor seeds (picture talk) that they use within their story programs. I invite you to email some examples to me—perhaps they could be the basis of another article on this mysterious and magical subject.

Happy metaphor dancing!

Susan Perrow, M.Ed.Hons, has an extensive background in teaching, writing and storytelling. She is based in Australia but travels internationally giving workshops and training seminars for teachers, parents and therapists – in Africa, Europe, the US, the UK, Asia and China. Her story work has led to the publication of two resource books – ‘Healing Stories for Challenging Behaviour’ and ‘Therapeutic Storytelling: 101 Healing Stories for Children’ (Hawthorn Press, U.K.). Both have been translated into several languages, including Chinese, Korean, Japanese, Portuguese and Croatian. ‘A Spoonful of Stories’, Susan’s e-book series, was launched on Amazon in 2013. www.susanperrow.com Email: [email protected]

 

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