Momentos significativos en la musicoterapia improvisada

Momentos significativos eEjemplos de casos compuestos de improvisación con adultos diagnosticados con discapacidades intelectuales y del desarrollo

Autores/as

  • Katelyn Beebe Non-affiliated, USA

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15845/voices.v21i3.3152

Palabras clave:

improvisación, contratransferencia, procesamiento emocional, discapacidad intelectual, ejemplo de caso

Resumen

Se presentan y discuten cuatro ejemplos de casos compuestos que se relacionan con la expresión emocional, momentos significativos en el proceso terapéutico y la comunicación utilizando una variedad de modalidades en musicoterapia con adultos diagnosticados con discapacidades intelectuales y del desarrollo. Sobre la base de la conciencia terapéutica a través de la discusión de elementos musicales, movimientos corporales y posturas, contratransferencia y patrones de interacción, las implicaciones de la conexión y el procesamiento emocionales profundos se abordan utilizando principalmente métodos no verbales. Viñetas compuestas del trabajo clínico del autor demuestran la conciencia de estos factores en el momento en que impactaron la sesión, la relación terapéutica y la comprensión de otros profesionales de la musicoterapia en esta población. Las implicaciones para el procesamiento emocional en la práctica clínica se presentan en relación con los conceptos presentados en este artículo.

Biografía del autor/a

Katelyn Beebe, Non-affiliated, USA

Katelyn Beebe is a music therapist based in North Carolina, United States. She received a Bachelor of music performance and then went on to complete both the equivalency and Master of Music Therapy programs at Appalachian State University. Katelyn’s research interests include extraverbal communication in therapy, improvisational music therapy, and empowerment of clients to participate actively in directing their therapeutic journeys.

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Author Beebe holding a guitar by the lake

Publicado

2021-10-27

Cómo citar

Beebe, K. (2021). Momentos significativos en la musicoterapia improvisada: Momentos significativos eEjemplos de casos compuestos de improvisación con adultos diagnosticados con discapacidades intelectuales y del desarrollo. Voices: A World Forum for Music Therapy, 21(3). https://doi.org/10.15845/voices.v21i3.3152

Número

Sección

Reflections on Practice