Amy: (This is a continuation for my post from 10/2)
Of all my Jazz Therapy cases, several stand out. Sometimes the response was unexpected, and dramatic. This is such story:
Case: I had been seeing a couple, Steven, and his parter Charles, for about a month. Steven originally approached me for therapy for his depression. He felt, as he called it, “alienated”; his work as a literary agent felt “lackluster”, and he was not his usual social, self-described extroverted self. It soon became clear that Steven felt unhappy in his partnership with his boyfriend of three years, Charles. He said he felt “disconnected” and unappreciated by Charles. He felt that Charles “didn’t know how to be in a relationship” and had withdrawn. Of course, I suggested he come for the next session with Charles.
The Couple: The Charles that I saw in my office was very different than the “Charles” described by Steven. I had the impression that Charles was inept when it came to relationship, and clueless about intimacy. Nothing could be further from the truth.
This couple, both men in their early forties, quickly revealed the nature of their relationship and its imbalances. Steven was clearly the “expert” of the couple: He had lived with a boyfriend before and felt he knew how it was done. And even though Steven described himself as depressed, Charles, in fact, DID seem
As you would expect, the first couple of sessions I worked to subtly identify these patterns, hoping to create a shift. I decided to call on the expertise of my jazz musician consultants. We scheduled a “Jazz Therapy Consultation” for the following week.
The Jazz Therapy Consultation: My musician co-therapists for this session were two talented and accomplished instrumentalists, Peter on tenor saxophone and Diego, multi-percussionist. Both men, friends of mine, were in high demand as jazz musicians. This was the first Therapy Consultation for both of them.
The session began, with Peter and Diego watching on the other side of the one-way mirror. The couple showed their stuff: Steven, with his patronizing, superior attitude toward his partner, and Charles, needlessly trying to please his boyfriend and failing. After about twenty minutes of the session, I invited the musicians in to musically comment:
After the musicians left, it was time for the couple–and me–to respond to this musical commentary. What happened then was stunning.
Steven adopted the same attitude toward these brilliant musician that he used with his boyfriend. He acted unimpressed: He felt he could have played just as well (he was a REALLY amateur musician), and basically, responded as if he had heard nothing new. He conveyed that these musicians didn’t have much show him, and if fact, if given a chance, he could show THEM a thing or two.
That was the first and only time anyone had (non) responded to a jazz consultation that way.
For the remainder of the therapy session, I tried to use their responses to the music to create a new dynamic for this couple. I highlighted the (human) artistry of Charles, and to let Steven’s smallness speak for itself. It’s not that I disliked Steven, by the way. I felt rather sorry for him; though a highly intelligent guy, Steven seemed to be quite blind to his own limitations, and resisted learning about himself.
The session ended. The couple left and I returned to the other side of the mirror to de-brief with my musical consultants. I always enjoy hearing what the musicians were thinking, and what they experienced from the session that shaped their playing.
As it turned out, they both found this couple troubling. While saxophonist Peter seemed sympathetic to both men, he said he felt worried that Charles was always “overshadowed” by Steven. He thought Charles should learn how to
I expected to see the couple the following week. A few days before our scheduled visit, I got a call from Steven. He said they wouldn’t be coming in. Charles had decided to leave the relationship. He had plans to move out the following week. I was shocked. Steven didn’t sound too upset about it, though. He said he thought it was, perhaps, “long overdue”. He thanked me for my help.
I decided to call Charles to check in. We spoke briefly on the phone. Charles said the Jazz Therapy session opened his eyes. He said he was deeply “embarrassed” by Steven’s arrogance. He said it changed how he felt about him: He said, “I realized I didn’t really like him very much.”
I felt bad, and a bit guilty. I always do when a couple breaks up. I always feel a little bit of “If only I could have…would have…). In this case, however, I didn’t really have those feelings that I “missed” something; it’s just that it’s my tendency to vote in favor of the couple.
In retrospect, I think health broke through, and the couple didn’t survive. Their relationship was based on a flawed, static agreement, and good therapy will challenge those patterns. In this case, a couple of amazing musicians became a catalyst for that change. Like good jazz, the results can be both unpredictable and, hopefully, life-affirming.
