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   <front>
      <journal-meta>
         <journal-id journal-id-type="DOAJ">15041611</journal-id>
         <journal-title-group>
            <journal-title>Voices: A World Forum for Music Therapy</journal-title>
         </journal-title-group>
         <issn>1504-1611</issn>
         <publisher>
            <publisher-name>GAMUT - Grieg Academy Music Therapy Research Centre (NORCE &amp;
               University of Bergen)</publisher-name>
         </publisher>
      </journal-meta>
      <article-meta>
         <article-id pub-id-type="doi">10.15845/voices.v19i3.2687</article-id>
         <article-categories>
            <subj-group subj-group-type="heading">
               <subject>Position Papers</subject>
            </subj-group>
         </article-categories>
         <title-group>
            <article-title>Queering Queer Spaces</article-title>
            <subtitle>Journey of a Creative Arts Program for Trans, Non-Binary, and Gender Creative
               Youth</subtitle>
         </title-group>
         <contrib-group>
            <contrib contrib-type="author">
               <name>
                  <surname>Hardy</surname>
                  <given-names>Spencer</given-names>
               </name>
               <xref ref-type="aff" rid="aff1"/>
               <address>
                  <email>spencerhardymusictherapy@gmail.com</email>
               </address>
            </contrib>
            <contrib contrib-type="author">
               <name>
                  <surname>Monypenny</surname>
                  <given-names>Juniper</given-names>
               </name>
               <xref ref-type="aff" rid="aff1"/>
            </contrib>
         </contrib-group>
         <aff id="aff1"><label>1</label>Utah Pride Center</aff>
         <contrib-group>
            <contrib contrib-type="editor">
               <name>
                  <surname>Bain</surname>
                  <given-names>Candice</given-names>
               </name>
            </contrib>
            <contrib contrib-type="editor">
               <name>
                  <surname>Gumble</surname>
                  <given-names>Maevon</given-names>
               </name>
            </contrib>
         </contrib-group>
         <contrib-group>
            <contrib contrib-type="reviewer">
               <name>
                  <surname>Summa</surname>
                  <given-names>Nick</given-names>
               </name>
            </contrib>
         </contrib-group>
         <pub-date pub-type="pub">
            <day>1</day>
            <month>11</month>
            <year>2019</year>
         </pub-date>
         <volume>19</volume>
         <issue>3</issue>
         <history>
            <date date-type="received">
               <day>1</day>
               <month>1</month>
               <year>2019</year>
            </date>
            <date date-type="accepted">
               <day>1</day>
               <month>8</month>
               <year>2019</year>
            </date>
         </history>
         <permissions>
            <copyright-statement>Copyright: 2019 The Author(s)</copyright-statement>
            <copyright-year>2019</copyright-year>
            <license license-type="open-access"
               xlink:href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/">
               <license-p>This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the
                     <uri>http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/</uri>, which permits
                  unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the
                  original work is properly cited.</license-p>
            </license>
         </permissions>
         <self-uri xlink:href="https://voices.no/index.php/voices/article/view/2687"
            >https://voices.no/index.php/voices/article/view/2687</self-uri>
         <abstract>
            <p>As community spaces for LGBTQ+ individuals continue to expand and evolve, a variety
               of music and art-based programs have begun to develop. The potential for creative
               arts therapists to cultivate and expand these programs is without question. This
               article seeks to present one such program targeted towards transgender, nonbinary,
               gender creative, and questioning youth, age 10-14, who were seeking support in
               navigating their gender identity and the challenges of identifying outside of the
               “norm” of cisgender. Finding ourselves at a crossroads between traditional clinical
               mental health services and community-based approaches, we discuss the intentionality
               behind “queering” our program development as well as a spectrum of challenges and
               opportunities faced in piloting the program. We suggest that bringing creative arts
               therapy into queer spaces must be done through an anti-oppressive approach seeking to
               minimize power dynamics and increase safety. We must also create inclusive spaces
               that embrace intersectionality in order to provide safe, accessible, and empowering
               programs for LGBTQ+ individuals.</p>
         </abstract>
         <kwd-group kwd-group-type="author-generated">
            <kwd>creative arts</kwd>
            <kwd>art therapy</kwd>
            <kwd>music therapy</kwd>
            <kwd>adolescents</kwd>
            <kwd>youth</kwd>
            <kwd>middle school</kwd>
            <kwd>LGBTQ+</kwd>
            <kwd>transgender</kwd>
            <kwd>nonbinary</kwd>
            <kwd>gender creative</kwd>
            <kwd>questioning</kwd>
            <kwd>non-cisgender</kwd>
            <kwd>queering</kwd>
            <kwd>social justice</kwd>
         </kwd-group>         
      </article-meta>
   </front>
   <body>
      <verse-group>
         <verse-line>“Who am I?”</verse-line>
         <verse-line>Youth 1:</verse-line>
         <verse-line>“Who am I?</verse-line>
         <verse-line>I’m slowly gaining confidence.</verse-line>
         <verse-line>I have meltdowns every day.</verse-line>
         <verse-line>I act like I’m fine, when I’m really falling apart.</verse-line>
         <verse-line>I really fear to be me.”</verse-line>
      </verse-group>
      <verse-group>
         <verse-line>Youth 2:</verse-line>
         <verse-line>“Who am I?</verse-line>
         <verse-line>Why are they asking all these questions?</verse-line>
         <verse-line>I’m under pressure, improving, shooting for the stars.</verse-line>
         <verse-line>But suddenly I’m crashing down and falling to the earth.</verse-line>
         <verse-line>But suddenly I’m crashing down and falling to the earth”</verse-line>
      </verse-group>
      <verse-group>
         <verse-line>Youth 3:</verse-line>
         <verse-line>“Who am I?</verse-line>
         <verse-line>Am I me or who they want me to be?</verse-line>
         <verse-line>Who are you?</verse-line>
         <verse-line>Are you you or who they want you to be?</verse-line>
         <verse-line>Who are we?</verse-line>
         <verse-line>Who the fuck are they to tell us who we are?</verse-line>
         <verse-line>You told me it was weird.</verse-line>
         <verse-line>You told me it was like nobody else.</verse-line>
         <verse-line>You were scared.</verse-line>
         <verse-line>And you believed yourself.</verse-line>
         <verse-line>Like everyone else.</verse-line>
         <verse-line>Like everyone else.”</verse-line>
      </verse-group>
      <!-- sec lvl 2 begin -->
      <sec>
         <title>Introduction</title>
         <p>Studies have shown that transgender and gender creative youth have alarmingly higher
            rates of depression, anxiety, suicidal ideation and attempts, self-harm behavior and
            victimization (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="JLABDMMU2019">Johns et al., 2019</xref>; <xref
               ref-type="bibr" rid="RVLZWSM2015">Reisner et al., 2015</xref>; <xref ref-type="bibr"
               rid="TSS2018">Toomey, Syvertsen, &amp; Shramko, 2018</xref>). The 2017 Gay Lesbian
            &amp; Striaght Education Network (GLSEN) School Climate Survey found that transgender
            students report more hostile school experiences than their LGBQ cisgender peers (<xref
               ref-type="bibr" rid="KGZCT2018">Kosciw, Greytak, Zongrone, Clark, &amp; Truong,
               2018</xref>). In a study of LGBTQ youth service preferences (<xref ref-type="bibr"
               rid="WAHBMB2012">Wells et al., 2012</xref>), transgender-identified youth reported
            higher interest than their cisgender peers in social services for peer support, family
            issues, coping strategies, self-defense and support from older LGBTQ individuals.
            Although this need has been articulated by transgender youth, a 2012 study by Allen,
            Hammack, and Himes surveying LGBTQ youth community-based programs found that only 54% of
            programs surveyed provided transgender-specific services, and of these services, only
            61% (33% of all programs surveyed) required facilitators to have prior experience
            working with the needs of transgender young people.</p>
         <p>This article seeks to explore a merging between mental health services and community
            center spaces as a route towards increasing access and providing care for gender
            creative youth. We come into this discussion as an art therapist, Juniper, and music
            therapist, Spencer at the Utah Pride Center Youth and Family Programs in Salt Lake City,
            UT (USA). Exploring this grew out of the opportunity to develop a pilot creative arts
            program at the center, the first of its kind. That opportunity arose after Spencer
            completed his master’s thesis with the center, conducting a one-day music therapy
            workshop with transgender and nonbinary youth (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="H2018">Hardy,
               2018</xref>). The program, Unique Expressions, is a creative arts group for youth
            ages 10-14 who identify as gender creative, nonbinary, transgender, gender questioning,
            or other non-cisgender identities.</p>
         <p>In creating this program, we found ourselves in the borderlands, to use the metaphor and
            theoretical framework developed by Anzaldúa (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="A1987"
               >1987</xref>), wherein she explored the etiology of existing as “ni de aquí, ni de
            allá” [neither here, nor there]. Anzaldúa examined the discomfort and the adaptability
            of borderland consciousness, of cultural displacement. The borderland we claim is the
            space between more traditional concepts of a mental health treatment program and that of
            community-centered work.</p>
         <p>Furthermore, transgender youth already exist within borderlands, navigating the blurred
            lines of gender expression throughout their lives: across school, community spaces,
            religious institutions, family expectations, and peer relationships. Just as Anzaldúa
               (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="A1987">1987</xref>) honored the pain and celebrated
            the powerful resilience and adaptability her identity encompasses, we wanted to engage
            the wholeness of the <italic>both/and </italic>space that exists between and beyond
            binaries. We asked ourselves: What are the needs of gender creative youth? Can we
            uniquely address them as creative arts therapists? And as our field continues to grow
            into community spaces, including LGBTQ+ centers, we must ask the question: <italic>How
               do we approach this work?</italic>
         </p>
      </sec>
      <!-- sec lvl 2 end -->
      <!-- sec lvl 2 begin -->
      <sec>
         <title>Therapeutic Approach</title>
         <!-- sec lvl 3 begin -->
         <sec>
            <title>Juniper</title>
            <p>I conceptualize my work as an art therapist as a dedicated practice of co-tinkering
               with my clients. We are co-tinkering with ideas, with stories, with feelings: holding
               this one up or that one up, unzipping them, weighing them, listening to the sounds
               they make when we rattle them. We put certain memories with certain feelings; we swap
               out all of these variables in different combinations. We make statements and bold
               assertions. We conclude, we backtrack. We draw hard lines, we soften. We note what
               resonates, we put aside the things that don’t. It often feels like a dance between
               imaginative play and scientific study. I have worked with all ages, in institutions
               as disparate as jails and grassroots afterschool programming, yet the underlying
               commonality has been getting to meet my clients with a sense of respect and awe, and
               a willingness to use their creative process as a springboard for reflection, insight,
               and connection. I hope to intentionally cultivate a space where we can be
               emotionally, psychologically, physically safe through consistency, clear
               expectations, and open communication. It feels like building a world within a world.
               I believe attending to and nurturing that world as a community is the steam in the
               engine that drives progress towards the youth’s collective and individual goals.</p>
            <p>My approach to working with queer young people has been to use the art as a platform,
               a set of steps, a metaphor, and a container that the youth activate and animate with
               their own lived experiences. In this alchemical equation, I may offer some raw
               ingredients, but it is only through energetic collaboration that we are able to make,
               observe, and enjoy the magic. The therapeutic facilitation occurs in attuning myself
               to the timbre of the space we are building, keeping us accountable to our group
               culture of respectful inquiry. As a queer woman whose gender expression and sexuality
               has evolved, expanded, and continues to transform, over my own lifetime, I consider
               it an honor to bear witness to others’ processes of self-discovery.</p>
         </sec>
         <!-- sec lvl 3 end -->
         <!-- sec lvl 3 begin -->
         <sec>
            <title>Spencer</title>
            <p>Music has always impacted me to my soul, as I know it can and does with others. When
               creating music in tandem with others, a deep and powerful connection can often be
               made quickly. As therapists, we harness this connection in developing the therapeutic
               relationship. My goal as a therapist is to work in partnership with my clients,
               developing a relationship rooted in trust, positive regard, and creativity. My role
               is to be on a journey with them that can enable their own desire for growth and
               change within themselves. At times, my role is to step back to occupy the space as
               simply a facilitator, while a powerful relationship between the client and their own
               musical expression grows from bud to blossom. With influences from resource-oriented
               music therapy (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="R2006">Rolvsjord, 2006</xref>), my approach
               is rooted in empowerment and in an individual right to music. Focusing this work in
               anti-oppressive practices (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B2013">Baines, 2013</xref>)
               that de-pathologize queer individuals, this comes from my own experience as a queer
               non-cisgender person. Hadley (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="H2013">2013</xref>)
               stated that as creative arts therapists “our personal identity <italic>is</italic>
               our professional identity” (p. 375, emphasis in original) in that we cannot separate
               our personal experience and how this influences our work as clinicians.</p>
            <p>These concepts are not rooted in a traditional music therapy pedagogy and took some
               time for me to discover for myself while growing and expanding as a clinician. I have
               grown to understand that my own countertransference within a clinical relationship
               may act as a mirror, blocking me from recognizing my client as an individual. Or it
               can actually become a microscope, to help me consider my own experience and better
               recognize the experiences of those I am with seeking change. This is evident within
               all settings I have found myself as a clinician but certainly true when working with
               LGBTQ+ youth.</p>
         </sec>
         <!-- sec lvl 3 end -->
         <!-- sec lvl 3 begin -->
         <sec>
            <title>Queering Our Approach</title>
            <p>Our understanding of <italic>queering</italic> is taken from concepts of queer
               theory. Queer theoretical approaches include “resisting the categorization of people,
               challenging the ideas of essential identities, questioning binaries…demonstrating how
               things are contextual…[and] examining the power relations underlying certain
               understandings, categories, identities, etc.” (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="BS2016"
                  >Barker &amp; Sheele, 2016, p. 31</xref>). Sullivan defines the act of queering as
               “to make strange, to frustrate, to counteract, to delegitimize, to camp up -
               heteronormative knowledges and institutes and the subjectivities and socialities that
               are (in)formed by them and that (in)form” (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="S2003"
                  >Sullivan, 2003, p. vi</xref>).</p>
            <p>In the field of social work, LeFrancois (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="LF2013"
                  >2013</xref>) endorsed the concept of queering an inpatient mental health setting
               in the UK, defining the term as “the troubling or disrupting of implicit normative
               approaches to working with psychiatrised [sic] young people” (p. 2). Within this
               definition, the sexual identities of the youth are not significant, but rather the
               approach; to destabilize intersecting forms of oppression within the clinical work.
               Within queer spaces, this approach can be incredibly powerful, reminding queer
               individuals that they are not wholly defined by their sexual identity. But outside of
               queer spaces this approach can be equally effective, as all individuals across
               marginalized communities can benefit from this type of anti-oppressive work and it
               may offer all individuals opportunities to examine their own privilege.</p>
            <p>In the creative arts field, queer theoretical approaches to art therapy have been
               proposed to “disrupt social hierarchies of gender” and “challenge the pathologization
               of gender” as well as challenge systemic oppression and reduce power dynamic in
               research (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="Z2017">Zappa, 2017, p. 129</xref>). In the field
               of music therapy Bain, Grzanka, and Crowe (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="BGC2016"
                  >2016</xref>) acknowledged the problematic nature of “incorporating diverse sexual
               orientation and gender identity issues into an existing disciplinary framework that
               has an historical hostility towards non-normative sexualities and genders” (p. 22),
               and they suggested instead drawing from queer theory as a more inclusive and
               anti-oppressive approach. Literature on queering in the creative arts field is
               limited, but similar concepts can also be seen in the work of feminist approaches to
               art and music therapy (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="H2006">Hadley, 2006</xref>; <xref
                  ref-type="bibr" rid="H1997">Hogan, 1997</xref>), anti-oppressive music therapy
                  (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B2013">Baines, 2013</xref>), and social justice
               approaches to creative arts therapies (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="C2012">Curtis,
                  2012</xref>; <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="G2005">Golub, 2005</xref>; <xref
                  ref-type="bibr" rid="T2010">Talwar, 2010</xref>; <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="V2012"
                  >Vaillancourt, 2012</xref>).</p>
            <p>When entering into work with gender creative youth, we first seek to identify the
               dominant messages these young people are receiving and the ways these narratives are
               serving or disserving their interests, emotional wellbeing, and ways of functioning.
               By breaking down social expectations and dominant narratives, we can create a space
               for youth that offers alternatives to the dominant discourse and allows them to
               express and explore their gender more freely. Within this breakdown, we can reimagine
               a social space in which the pressures of identity formation are lessened, and youth
               might feel safer to express and explore a range of questioning and queering of their
               own identity. Within our experience at the Utah Pride Center, this safety in
               expression can be recognized through youth freely requesting changes to their name
               and pronouns across the 10-week program, as well as sharing openly details about
               their gender exploration outside of group. The intention behind this is to create a
               space that operates without traditional labels and binaries. For many of the youth in
               our groups, this may be the only space where unlearning these binaries is normalized
               and encouraged for them.</p>
            <p>The youth participating in Unique Expressions have often interacted with providers
               and systems that have labeled the distress they feel as a fixed, unyielding “problem”
               and that this problem is linked to their identities inextricably (<xref
                  ref-type="bibr" rid="RBC2012">Richmond, Burnes, &amp; Carroll, 2012</xref>). We
               seek to dismantle this assumption by cultivating a psychological and community space
               where youth can explore their identities with the utmost respect for their autonomy
               and self-knowledge. Here, we are seeking not to fix the “problem” but to assist them
               in naming and clarifying the ways external factors, binary systems, and dominant
               discourse creates and contributes to their distress. This approach is aligned with
               narrative therapy practices where clients are engaged in reflecting on the influence
               of the externalized problem in their lives and relationships, and inversely, on their
               influence in the life of the problem as a way to begin re-mapping and re-authoring
               their stories of identity (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="WE1990">White &amp; Epston,
                  1990</xref>). Counseling approaches tend to personalize the problems that
               individuals experience as intrapsychic turmoil; queer-informed narrative therapy,
               however, can acknowledge the impact social structures have on our experiences of and
               within ourselves. We found that when we embraced the young people we worked with as
               whole, we inherently rejected the idea that their identity is the problem. The
               therapeutic work has been in collaboratively recognizing and naming the context for
               their distress while expanding the coping skills youth have to mitigate the harm of
               these problematic systems. When these processes take place within a community context
               that does not pathologize them, youth are likely to engage in dialogues with peers
               and adults surrounding the ways they practice their selfhood in resistance to
               cisnormativity. Nylund and Temple (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="NT2017">2017</xref>)
               pointed out that through queer-informed narrative practices, namely by externalizing
               problems and linking them to transgender oppression, we can equip our clients with
               tools that re-story their experiences, highlighting their persistence and defiance of
               societal expectation.</p>
            <p>Within the legacy of mental health, psychiatry and counseling approaches, many of
               these approaches have been about correcting, eradicating, or fixing queer people who
               are accessing mental health services (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="K2017">Kunzel,
                  2017</xref>). This is a part of queer history, and we argue that this is carried
               within our community as a form of trauma. In his book, Nadal (<xref ref-type="bibr"
                  rid="N2018">2018</xref>) discussed the relationship between microaggressions
               and psychological trauma, including how everyday microaggressions and experiences of
               discrimination may lead to psychological distress including symptoms of posttraumatic
               stress disorder or what he defined as “microaggressive trauma” (p. 13). Sotero (<xref
                  ref-type="bibr" rid="S2006">2006</xref>) presented a “historical trauma theory”
               with mass trauma inflicted upon a minority population over a period of time,
               impacting an entire community and creating a “universal experience of trauma” that
               resulted “in a legacy of physical, psychological, social and economic disparities
               that persists across generations” (p. 94-95). Michaels (<xref ref-type="bibr"
                  rid="M2010">2010</xref>) gave examples of historical trauma including “planned
               violence or segregation (genocide, massacres, imprisonment) [… and] prevention of
               cultural or spiritual practices (forced conversion designed to deculturate and
               assimilate an entire group of people)” (p. 1).</p>
            <p>When considering the historical trauma of the LGBTQ+ community, we as LGBTQ+
               individuals immediately recalled the medical neglect and refusal of care towards gay
               men during the AIDS epidemic (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="CJ2011">Curran &amp; Jaffe,
                  2011</xref>; <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="F2018">Fitzsimons, 2018</xref>) and the
               now medical neglect towards an aging LGBTQ+ community (<xref ref-type="bibr"
                  rid="CM2016">Choi &amp; Meyer, 2016</xref>); the history of police raids and
               attacks on LGBTQ+ individuals in bars (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="O2017">Ogles,
                  2017</xref>) and the now more recent Pulse Nightclub shooting (<xref
                  ref-type="bibr" rid="APP2016">Alvarez &amp; Pérez-Peña, 2016</xref>; <xref
                  ref-type="bibr" rid="SKKKH2017">Stults et al., 2017</xref>); the history of
               “homosexual” as a mental health disorder (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="D2015">Drescher,
                  2015</xref>) and the continued stigmatization and abuse of LGBTQ+ individuals in
               the mental health field with the use of conversion and reparative therapies (<xref
                  ref-type="bibr" rid="MBC2019">Mallory, Brown, &amp; Conron, 2019</xref>); and the
               murder of Matthew Shepherd (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="CNN1998">CNN, 1998</xref>),
               Brandon Teena (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="M2014">Molloy, 2014</xref>), Rita Hester
                  (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="A2017">Allen, 2017</xref>), and the ongoing epidemic
               of murders of transgender women of color (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="HRC2019">Human
                  Rights Campaign, 2019</xref>). The pain and emotion that come up as an LGBTQ+
               person just putting these words to page and recalling the collective memory or our
               community’s experience of these traumas is our own personal testament to the
               historical trauma experienced by our community. As clinicians, we also recognize the
               way this impacts LGBTQ+ youth — a new generation taking on this historical
               trauma.</p>
            <p>This shared history and collective memory informs the way that queer people continue
               to navigate relationships with care providers, whole systems of care, and the
               institutions that these providers and systems are a part of. Even as we write this
               paper, we continue to navigate our professional fields alongside mental health
               clinicians who maintain an oppressive attitude and approach towards the LGBTQ+
               community. Interactions with providers could be as direct as a pathologizing
               perspective of treatment or as insidious as gaps in understanding and education in
               regard to gender and sexuality. Whether harm from providers and systems is explicit
               or subtle, there is great potential for helping relationships to perpetuate trauma.
               Shelton and Delgado-Romero (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="SDR2011">2011</xref>)
               explored the experience of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and queer clients in
               psychotherapy, finding eight themes of microaggressions perpetuated against
               participants, including assuming an individual’s sexual orientation was the cause of
               all their issues in therapy, perpetuating stereotypes, “warning” individuals about
               the challenges of living outside the “norm” of heterosexual, avoiding discussion of
               their sexual/gender identity, or assuming superiority as a heterosexual provider.</p>
            <p>As queer therapists, we too carry our community's collective memories of harm. We
               choose to situate ourselves within conversations and efforts toward disrupting that
               narrative of marginalization and suppression in the relationship between providers
               and consumers of mental health care. Because we have experienced our own
               relationships with providers who did not affirm or validate us in our own care, we
               refuse to perpetuate that trauma in the youth with whom we work. We do this by
               striving to create the safest place possible for our clients, by sharing our own
               personal stories and experiences with the youth when it serves them, by working
               towards minimizing and deconstructing power dynamics within the therapeutic
               relationships, and also by constantly questioning systems of oppression and fostering
               that same questioning attitude with the youth. We must also acknowledge that at times
               we as clinicians are working within systems and institutions that perpetuate trauma
               and that we ourselves may unknowingly or unintentionally cause harm.</p>
            <p>Queer youth deserve access to quality care from providers who are a part of their
               community. LGBTQ+ youth deserve the visibility and conversation surrounding queer
               narratives to exist not within the margins, but at the center, at the beating heart
               of the therapeutic work. In a study of youth service preferences, transgender youth
               expressed a higher interest in the services provided within a queer-youth specific
               agency and with services provided in small groups led by LGBTQ adults (<xref
                  ref-type="bibr" rid="WAHBMB2012">Wells et al., 2012</xref>). Furthermore, Wells
               and colleagues found that self-disclosure of LGBTQ+ identities by facilitators aided
               in developing a therapeutic relationship with youth participants. Within Unique
               Expressions, our own queer identities are a part of leveling the power dynamics
               within the therapeutic space. We reciprocally perform and witness our identities from
               peer:peer, facilitator:participant, and facilitator:facilitator, allowing for
               communication which attempts to minimize hierarchies and maximize skill-sharing and
               resource-pooling.</p>
         </sec>
         <!-- sec lvl 3 end -->
      </sec>
      <!-- sec lvl 2 end -->
      <!-- sec lvl 2 begin -->
      <sec>
         <title>Developing Unique Expressions</title>
         <p>At the Utah Pride Center, approximately 70% percent of youth accessing the Youth and
            Family Programming space identify as non-cisgender (L. Archbold, personal communication, April, 2019). When envisioning a
            creative arts program, it was a targeted decision to first offer this platform to those
            non-cisgender youth who, as studies have shown us, are at a higher risk than their
            cisgender peers for depression, anxiety, suicidal ideation and attempts, self-harm
            behavior, and victimization (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="JLABDMMU2019">Johns et al.,
               2019</xref>; <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="RVLZWSM2015">Reisner et al., 2015</xref>;
               <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="TSS2018">Toomey, Syvertsen, &amp; Shramko,
            2018</xref>).</p>
         <p>In addition to considering the gender identity of participants in a pilot program, age
            was also an important factor. The 2017 GLSEN School Climate Survey reported that
            students attending schools with LGBTQ-related school resources were less likely to
            report feeling unsafe; however middle school students were less likely to have access to
            these types of resources and reported higher rates of victimization and discrimination
               (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="KGZCT2018">Kosciw et al., 2018</xref>). Because of this
            discrepancy, our program was also piloted to specifically reach those youth, ages 10-14,
            who may have less access to networks of support, resources, and skills than their older
            peers. The increased risk factors and lack of access for this community is not due to
            the youths’ personal identities, but rather a result of external forms of oppression,
            heteronormativity, and cisgenderism which impact these youth throughout the various
            institutions and communities through which they navigate.</p>
         <p>To date the Center has supported three cycles of Unique Expressions cohorts, with
            programming continuing through 2019. The group was designed as a closed group, unlike
            some LGBTQ+ community center programs which operate on a drop-in basis. It occured in
            10-week cycles, with intakes for each participant conducted prior to the beginning of
            that cycle. This gave time for the facilitators between cycles to conduct intakes,
            promote the group in the community at large, and conduct any additional planning and
            fundraising for the next cycle.</p>
         <!-- sec lvl 3 begin -->
         <sec>
            <title>Intakes</title>
            <p>A primary goal in crafting the structure of the program was to offer youth a space
               that was inherently theirs, wherein they could articulate and form their own goals,
               pursue those goals in ways that felt authentic to their needs, and furthermore, claim
               ownership in the process of tracking and measuring their progress. This culture of
               placing young people in a position of influence, revered and respected as the experts
               of themselves, started from our initial meeting of each young person for their
               required pre-cycle intake. This intake was an interview, gently shaped around
               open-ended prompts, allowing each participant to describe the landscape of their
               lives. This qualitative approach was a queering of traditional clinical assessments
               which rely on self-report scales, checkboxes, and fixed categorical questions that at
               times can constrain individuals’ challenges in living.</p>
            <p>The facilitators took on the task of writing down and recording the young person’s
               thoughts, observations, hopes, and worries, letting each interviewee relax into
               reflecting on their current experiences of selfhood, identity, resilience and coping,
               social and school concerns and supports, and family life. In designing our program,
               we believed the queering of typical power dynamics had to begin at intake; we
               hypothesized that by placing the young person in control of the needs-assessment
               process, we could achieve better outcomes in group. We wanted to cultivate a
               transformative experience for youth who have been scrutinized and pathologized,
               perhaps in many contexts and by multiple types of adults and professionals.
               Therefore, we made our assessment process a relational and attachment-based process.
               We hoped that from the first interactions with us as facilitators, youth could have
               opportunities to exercise their autonomy.</p>
            <p>An additional intention behind the intake process was not to pathologize or limit
               access to participants. The therapists asked participants questions about mental
               health conditions and assessed suicidality in order to have a full picture of each
               participant and an understanding of their resources and access to mental health
               services outside of the group. For participants with higher acuity of mental health
               needs, the therapists conducted safety planning with the participant and their
               parent/guardian and made appropriate inquiries and referrals. At this date, no youth
               has been turned away from group based on their mental health needs. What resulted was
               group cohorts with a wide range of mental health statuses, including participants who
               ranged from actively suicidal to those with no history of suicidal ideation. In a
               traditional psychotherapeutic group, facilitators may choose to build more homogenous
               cohorts; our decision to emphasize and practice a “come as you are” mentality was
               informed by a commitment to increasing access to resources and support, building safe
               space, and destigmatizing the open discussion and continual assessment of
               self-injurious and suicidal ideation and behaviors.</p>
         </sec>
         <!-- sec lvl 3 end -->
         <!-- sec lvl 3 begin -->
         <sec>
            <title>Program Goals</title>
            <p>The purpose of Unique Expressions includes increasing resilience, building adaptive
               coping skills and reducing maladaptive coping strategies, fostering a sense of
               community, and increasing self-esteem. The goals of the youth? “To have fun,” “make
               friends,” and “feel better” were all common themes. The facilitators addressed these
               goals through a community action and empowerment approach, with goals identified and
               defined by the youth and with progress measured and tracked by the youth during the
               10 weeks.</p>
            <p>Youth participants were each provided a journal in which they could work on group
               tasks and take home with them to continue utilizing outside of group. Each youth was
               asked to write down their personal goals for the group in this journal and share as
               much as they were comfortable. During any given week of the group, you might find the
               facilitators reviewing goals with the youth and the participants journaling on new
               goals. Youth were also tasked with creating group goals and were asked to choose and
               plan a culminating project or group effort of some kind. Discussions of the
               culminating project were ongoing, with youth ultimately deciding on a shared vision
               for how to encapsulate and express their group’s journey.</p>
         </sec>
         <!-- sec lvl 3 end -->
         <!-- sec lvl 3 begin -->
         <sec>
            <title>Therapists as Collaborators</title>
            <p>The therapists identified themselves as “therapists as collaborators,” working in
               tandem with the youth to create a constructive and positive space for themselves.
               Rather than prescribing, as self-professed experts, what group would be and how it
               would work, we invited youth to envision and implement their own goals and dreams for
               this community time and space. Subverting traditional psychotherapeutic roles and
               power structures, and thereby queering our program curriculum, allowed room for
               mystery and surprise week-by-week.</p>
            <p>Part of the collaborative process of the group was the continual reassessment of our
               young people’s individual and group goals and keeping ourselves accountable to our
               mission of using the arts for connection, expression, increased resilience, and
               empowered authorship. Rather than beginning group with a fixed curriculum of
               art-based directives and experiences, we planned and implemented one or two
               structured components of group from week to week, responding to the critical issues
               young people had brought to us the week before and the subtle changes we could see in
               group dynamics. We also built in unprogrammed time that could be shaped in-the-moment
               so that as youth’s needs evolved, the group’s scope could grow to meet them. The
               alchemy of building this group together offered youth opportunities to claim
               ownership in the outcomes of the group and the collective experience. Co-creating
               this group with these young people often felt like treading in water that was
               constantly changing its temperature, current, and depth. We collaboratively assessed
               each individuals’ needs within the cohort as well as the challenges they encountered
               outside of group, making resource referrals as needed and offering more structured
               relational support as indicated. This took the form of communicating with parents
               outside of group, checking in with young people after group regarding any concerns on
               their part or on ours, and making ourselves available to youth via Pride
               Center-affiliated phone and emails.</p>
            <p>As part of this model of co-collaborating, we hoped to encourage self-advocacy and
               self-motivation in youth through modeling and engaging in open communication about
               the boundaries/limitations and potentials/opportunities of the group space and the
               mission and group values of our work together. Including the youth in shaping the
               group structure allowed them to identify as stakeholders in their own experience of
               personal and/or identity growth, creative authorship, and increased resiliency and
               coping.</p>
         </sec>
         <!-- sec lvl 3 end -->
         <!-- sec lvl 3 begin -->
         <sec>
            <title>Culminating Project</title>
            <p>Youth participants were encouraged to think about a group project as a final
               culmination of the 10-week program. As creative art therapists, we focused on the
               process and not product of or time with the youth participants, therefore, after the
               first round of our program, it quickly became evident that focusing on an
               externalized goal for the group (i.e., performance for parents/families) may be
               counterproductive to the group process. However, a culminating experience also gave
               an inward voice to the arc and journey that these youth took together, namely their
               willingness to be vulnerable, grow, and challenge one another. With this in mind, the
               group project became more of a suggestion, thrown out by the facilitators and scooped
               up by the youth to mold and grow on their own.</p>
            <p>For example, within the second cohort, the desire to form a band and create a song
               became the focus of this group project. Rather than a facilitator-led group
               songwriting experience to accomplish this, the group song idea grew out of youth-lead
               ideas and discussions over multiple weeks. Group participants discussed the song’s
               mood, feel, and theme amid other discussions and experiences. Participants imagined
               band names, music video ideas, and costumes to accompany this unwritten song. After
               the group discussion and processing of an art-making experience, participants were
               prompted by the facilitators to journal on their experience of the art-making and how
               they related to their peers’ experiences. Youth identified shared themes within their
               experience, and from this journaling developed budding song lyrics. In the following
               weeks these lyrics were listed out, revisited, and eventually a final theme was
               decided: “Who am I?” In this way, the culminating group project came not from a
               therapist-led prompt, but rather a peer-to-peer creation, collaboration, and
               reformation.</p>
         </sec>
         <!-- sec lvl 3 end -->
      </sec>
      <!-- sec lvl 2 end -->
      <!-- sec lvl 2 begin -->
      <sec>
         <title>Beyond Dichotomies: Challenges <italic>and </italic>Opportunities</title>
         <!-- sec lvl 3 begin -->
         <sec>
            <title>Treatment Group <italic>and </italic>Community Space</title>
            <p>After three cycles with three different cohorts, the distinct needs of the youth and
               considerations of working in a community space rose to the surface. The unique
               features oftentimes presented as challenges, puzzles, or constraints, yet oftentimes,
               these features offered opportunities for innovation—to expand our ways of thinking
               about and story-ing the work we were doing and to learn from the youth. As
               facilitators of this group, we quickly found ourselves navigating a physical and
               metaphorical space that skirted <italic>either/or</italic> binaries and embraced a
                  <italic>both/and</italic> reality instead. Our group straddled inbetween-ness,
               inhabiting a liminal space between a mental health treatment group <italic>and
               </italic>a community space.</p>
            <p>The group offered an experience that targeted <italic>both </italic>clinical and
               non-clinical goals. As the group shaped itself into a format that embraced the murky
               fertility of the <italic>both/and</italic>, it became clear that few of the youth
               would choose to describe the group as a mental health therapy group. Although the
               youth gained mental health benefits from participating in the group, they may not
               choose to articulate the function or structure as such. We often heard youth voice
               gratefulness for the support, validation, and sense of community they found in group.
               In the same way that a goal of “feel better” meant “to stop self-injurious behaviors”
               or “to make friends” meant “to reduce social isolation,” our group functioned to
               promote a profound engagement with self and community in a way that fostered
               connectedness, positive coping, and resilience without needing to overlay a language
               of illness or impairment that might inhibit youth from accessing and partaking in the
               group. We felt strongly that however participants chose to describe the group, the
               importance lay in how the therapeutic space was built, lived out, and experienced.
               Rather than be concerned with the nouns of our work, we considered and celebrated the
               verbs.</p>
            <p>In addition to this<italic> both/and </italic>space, the group, and the Center as a
               whole, functioned differently for each participant. Each group began with a shared
               meal, a check-in about their week, and maybe spending some time picking out clothes
               from the shared closet. Many of the youth came early or stayed late; it became clear
               that youth needed the space for multiple layers of support. Often the space
               functioned as a social outlet, and possibly, the only moment within their week that
               they may interact with other queer youth. As facilitators, we chose to validate and
               embrace this range of needs from the group participants whether it be accessing food,
               a safe space, a social outlet, a sense of belonging, or just accessing
               gender-affirming clothing.</p>
         </sec>
         <!-- sec lvl 3 end -->
         <!-- sec lvl 3 begin -->
         <sec>
            <title>Supporting Young People <italic>and </italic>Supporting Families</title>
            <p>In working with youth ages 10-14, another important element was working with parents
               and caregivers. For participants this young, buy-in and engagement from the
               parent/caregiver was an important element. Family participation in the intake was
               expected, and many youth this age needed support from parent/caregiver/family for
               transportation and access to the space. Because of this, parents/caregivers
               anticipated an active role in discussing their child’s participation and progress.
               However, the way we interfaced with families is different than other clinical
               settings. Supporting a parent or guardian’s understanding of the therapeutic process
               and their child’s role in it was important; however, we also worked to respect
               confidentiality and boundaries set by the youth participants. This included, at
               times, not sharing specific artwork or processing to parents/caregivers without youth
               permission and explaining to parents the importance of artwork as a therapeutic
               process that may be vulnerable for the youth to share with their parent/guardian.</p>
            <p>At times, negotiating the sometimes-disparate needs of parents and youth meant
               choosing not to disclose specific creative processes or experiences shared within the
               group, while at other times it required nuanced discussions with the youth in
               question to empower them in disclosing or initiating conversations with
               parent/caregiver themselves, sometimes with the facilitator present for support. We
               also worked to set clear boundaries with both youth and parents/guardians regarding
               the limits of this confidentiality in regard to potential harm and abuse.</p>
            <p>This age range developmentally incorporates the beginning manifestations of
               individuating, with youth wanting to separate themselves from their parents/guardians
               at times more than their caregiver may be prepared for and sometimes in ways that may
               not always benefit the young person when they need their parent as an advocate or
               resource (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="KW2008">see Kruse &amp; Walper, 2008</xref>).
               Within families, relationship dynamics may be shifting at this time to reflect more
               symmetry with regard to influence, control, and autonomy between caregivers and their
               young adolescent. Their young person may be investing in their expanding peer
               networks and the nuances of these relationships as they explore their identities and
               experiment with taking on new social roles and asserting themselves (<xref
                  ref-type="bibr" rid="GC1986">Grotevant &amp; Cooper, 1986</xref>). This dissonance
               and the “growing pains” of exploring one’s selfhood apart from one’s parent(s) or
               family system can cause much discomfort or breakdowns in functional
               communication.</p>
            <p>An additional way we facilitated conversations between youth participants and their
               parent/guardian came through a fact sheet we devised as part of a packet provided to
               families, helping caregivers feel more connected to the structure and purpose of our
               programming. This document incorporated information about the creative arts
               therapies, the education and training of the facilitators, and how to contact us with
               questions and concerns that arose over the course of the group. We also included
               prompts and guidelines on how they could most effectively discuss group with their
               child. This provided examples of open-ended questions regarding the process of
               creating art and music and what these experiences may bring up for them. It also
               articulated to parents/guardians that youth may not want to share their efforts with
               their family. In this way, the fact sheet offered guidance for parents on how to
               navigate the “process” vs. the “products” of the group, while also respecting their
               child’s privacy and developmentally appropriate means of individuating.</p>
         </sec>
         <!-- sec lvl 3 end -->
         <!-- sec lvl 3 begin -->
         <sec>
            <title>Making Space for Self <italic>and </italic>Making Space for Others</title>
            <p>While all participants identified as non-cisgender, the ways that each young person
               lives out that experience could be vastly different. For some of the young people,
               this might be the first time they were encountering trans, non-binary, and gender
               creative identities in their peers, and these could be embodied and conceptualized
               very differently than their own experience. This idea relates to the concepts of
               “queering” and breaking down binaries, particularly when two participants’
               conceptualization and experience of the same or a similar identity presented so
               differently.</p>
            <p>Interfacing with others’ narratives of self, which were different than their own
               experiences and/or preconceptions surrounding gender identity and expression,
               encouraged conversations which could not happen in the scope and depth that they did
               had they occurred within the context of a group with cisgender peers. Some of the
               evolving conversations youth initiated included exploring trans identity and
               dysphoria, considering the possibility that some of their trans peers may not
               experience dysphoria or may experience dysphoria in completely different contexts,
               and the relationship between caring for one’s physical needs and their emotional
               health (e.g. ignoring basic needs such as eating and sleeping, overeating or
               oversleeping, or binding one’s body for dangerous time frames). We found that many of
               the youth wanted to push past their patterns of concrete thinking; the group became a
               place to challenge themselves, their assumptions, and their expectations. Part of
               queering is to complicate, to <italic>find </italic>problems rather than
               problem-solve, to ask questions, and to acknowledge layers and filters of experience
               over absolutes and fixity. Youth actively practiced ways of queering their thought
               processes and the dominant narratives of queer and/or trans identity they have
               encountered.</p>
            <p>Many of the participants had been relying on online spaces and platforms as a place
               to find information, support, and validation. While accessing affirming communities
               online can certainly increase positive coping and resilience, one pitfall of this
               avenue of support is that youth in this age group often encountered information that
               was quite didactic and curated. These online communities potentially acted as an echo
               chamber of homogenous attitudes and perspectives. As the group developed, youth were
               better able to initiate, direct, and moderate these very vulnerable and important
               conversations for themselves. The real-time feedback of a person in front of them, in
               the context and stakes of a world-relationship, added depth and care to these
               interactions that youth were not finding in the digital realm.</p>
         </sec>
         <!-- sec lvl 3 end -->
         <!-- sec lvl 3 begin -->
         <sec>
            <title>The Personal <italic>and </italic>The Political</title>
            <p>Participants brought a range of identities and experiences beyond their gender
               identity to the group space, including race, class, religion, social skills, and
               access to resources. As part of exploring the subtleties and intricacies of each
               youth’s experience of gender and sexuality, the youth often incorporated politics,
               social issues, and activism into our conversations.</p>
            <p>Boggan, Bain, Grzanka (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="BGB2017">2017</xref>) discussed
               the concept of anti-oppressive approaches as a political act in their article on
               radically inclusive practice. They emphasized that when working with individuals with
               stigmatized identities, the personal is political, and that “LGBTQ+ visibility and
               living authentically are inherently political acts” (p. 396). They discussed the
               therapeutic relationship within a queer therapy approach, noting how self-disclosure
               and situating oneself within societal structures contribute to dismantling power
               dynamics and facilitating empowerment within the therapy setting. By embracing the
               concept of <italic>both/and</italic>, we supported the youth in our program by
               engaging in social and political conversations rather than shying away from them. We
               wanted youth to be free to explore all realms of their lives and experiences within
               the therapeutic space. We strove to make sure youth felt heard and supported when
               these conversations unfolded as we processed together and honored the emotions that
               would arise.</p>
            <p>As facilitators, these moments represented further opportunities for
                  <italic>both/and</italic> thinking. By witnessing these conversations and
               co-creating the dialogue, we attempted to validate for youth that their personal
               experiences have political implications and that politics and culture have direct
               impact on all of our own personal worlds. When it came to discussing topics of social
               justice and oppressive systems, we hoped our therapeutic space could contain these
               conversations with psychological and emotional safety. One of our group cultural
               norms (which the group developed by consensus and reviewed each week) included the
               assertion that <italic>we can speak up for our own needs</italic>, further specifying
               that youth could choose to speak up to the group in-the-moment or could choose to
               address unmet needs with a facilitator one-on-one at any point. We attempted to
               purposefully <italic>not </italic>shut out or suppress any of their concerns, ideas,
               and questions. We found making space for youth to encounter and explore their own and
               others’ perspectives in regards to gender and sexuality made it possible for youth to
               build the emotional regulation and active listening skills needed to have more
               nuanced conversations surrounding each young person’s ideology and understanding of
               concepts such as bodily autonomy, reproductive rights, representation in government,
               public accountability, “call out culture,” and spirituality. Because none of our
               LGBTQ+ identities exist within a vacuum, we welcomed our young people’s efforts to
               build and develop their own skills for witnessing and respecting others’ identities,
               opinions, and stories. We believed in the youth’s readiness for and applauded their
               interest in tackling these subjects which often presented as uncomfortable and
               unsettling.</p>
         </sec>
         <!-- sec lvl 3 end -->
      </sec>
      <!-- sec lvl 2 end -->
      <!-- sec lvl 2 begin -->
      <sec>
         <title>Conclusion</title>
         <p>Developing the Unique Expression program at the Utah Pride Center blossomed from a
            desire to provide support and access to a youth population that is underserved and in
            great need of inclusive and identity-affirming services. Implementing the program became
            a journey of ‘queering’ traditional concepts of how to assess and address mental health
            needs. We focused not on pathologizing but empowering youth to build upon their
            strengths and explore new intra- and interpersonal skills and coping strategies. By
            working to break down hierarchies within the therapeutic space, we watched youth gain
            confidence in expressing and enacting their own autonomy, gain a sense of mastery within
            their own expressive and creative efforts, and embrace intersectional identities and
            experiences.</p>
         <p>We recognize that our role as clinicians is influenced and impacted by our personal and
            political realities. Queering our approach to the psychotherapeutic creative arts is our
            form of direct action in an effort to dismantle systems that have fallen short for
            ourselves and our community. When co-constructing the group with the youth, we did not
            obscure or minimize our own identities and journeys. We sought an intergenerational
            honesty and transparency to build trust and community growth. We shared the ways we
            continue to navigate the same hierarchies and systems of oppression they do; as adults,
            we don’t have it all figured out, and we haven’t mysteriously and spontaneously
            “arrived” somehow. As we continue to build upon the Unique Expressions program, we feel
            strongly that if we want to change the ways mental health and social services have
            failed queer and gender-diverse people, we have to change it from within by offering
            care to our own community, basing it within a framework that is anti-oppressive and
            intersectional in regards to race, ethnicity, class, ability, and so on. We aspire to
            live out and model for the youth the principal value that our community is important,
            whole, and vibrant and that we can carve out and hold healing space for ourselves.</p>
         <!-- sec lvl 3 begin -->
         <sec>
            <title>About the authors</title>
            <p>Juniper Monypenny, MAAT LCAT ATR-BC. Juniper attended the Rhode Island School of Design, where she studied painting and
               creative writing. She went on to complete her art therapy training at the School of
               the Art Institute of Chicago. Juniper’s research and clinical practice has
               incorporated her interests in traumatic loss, crisis intervention, disabilities
               justice, and queer studies. She has worked with children and adults in diverse
               settings including residential treatment centers, correctional facilities, schools,
               and grassroots non-profit organizations. She currently works as a medical art
               therapist at Primary Children’s Hospital in Salt Lake City, UT. Her studio practice
               incorporates performance &amp; sculpture with image-making &amp; the written word.
               She seeks to create immersive visual experiences that foster intimate connections
               between artist and audience.</p>
            <p>Spencer Hardy, MA, MT-BC. Spencer currently works at Primary Children’s Hospital, where he joined the
               Expressive Therapies team in 2015 and was hired on as Expressive Therapies
               Coordinator in 2018. Spencer also serves as Internship Director for the Music Therapy
               Internship program and is currently serving as co-chair for the Intermountain LGBTQ+
               Caregiver Resource Group. Spencer also works part-time for the Utah Pride Center
               co-leading a music and art therapy group for LGBTQ+ youth, Unique Expressions,
               developed in 2018.</p>
         </sec>
         <!-- sec lvl 3 end -->
      </sec>
      <!-- sec lvl 2 end -->
   </body>
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