This is of course the kids’ specialty! They love running around, chasing each other and sometimes even do biting matches to
see who lets go first. I’ve always made sure to check whether there was any violence involved by reading their energy very carefully. The two boys can
potentially start getting competitive, but it’s all been fun and play so far
and I’m sure it will stay that way – also both Ringo and Timo are gelded now, which helps.
Noa was born here and she’s literally
landed in paradise; two big brothers to play with, a secure and confident
mother and me who gives her everything she needs and scratches whenever she
asks. She is so incredibly playful and watching her run around just always puts
a big smile on my face.
She represents the playful inner little
girl in all of us and in the sessions we often work on allowing her to come out
and play. This process has been so healing for so many of my clients.
It’s interesting to notice how Mora lacks
this disengaged free play spirit. She has not had the freedom to explore who
she truly is through play in her early life and so she literally doesn’t know
how to let go and play. She was undoubtedly traumatised in her past and this
has put a hold on her freedom of expression.
This is also the lesson that both she and
so many of my clients need to learn: let go and play.
In order for that to be possible there
needs to be a very solid base of trust and seeing the kids express themselves
so freely means that both Mora and I did a great job in making them feel safe.
Mora finds it hard to let go, probably
because she’s never been able to or was allowed to.
She’s very obedient and polite in many
ways. She won’t be aggressive towards me when I’m touching her, but I am aware
that she doesn’t really like it. When I continue anyway (sometimes I just want
to get some stuff out her manes and untangle her hair and check for ticks) and
she will at some point lash out to some of her kids.
She’s been trained to not act out towards
humans, but it has also taken away a lot of her spontaneity and ability to
express her happiness - and she also just doesn't really know how to experience fun.
It was most probably beaten out of her and
every time I do see her do a little dance of joy when let back out into the
field again for example, my heart jumps along with her.
It’s great to be strong and serious, but
letting go and playing is just as important.
Now that I’m writing this I see how her
inability to let go and have fun was mine as well, especially during my anxiety
disorder. I was SO serious and there was no space for any form of spontaneity.
It would mean completely giving up control and therefore losing it, which was
the scariest thing there was to me back then.
I’ve had experiences of extreme rage from
my dad’s end and my mum being uncomfortable with my way of loudly and wildly
expressing myself on stage, or with physical affection or by simply being very
enthusiastic and so I’ve had to tone it down on many occasions.
In the first case, to avoid a bomb from exploding because I would possibly be disturbing my dad’s peace and, in the second case, because I’d feel disapproved of on my mum’s end when letting go of control and
fully being myself for a change.
Mora has come out of a shell over the past
two years she’s been with me and by giving her this safe environment. She’s gone
from being very closed off and aloof to open, warm and trusting with me and other
people.
Who knows, maybe me healing this
childhood wound even more myself, it will also allow Mora to open up, let go and
play more.
I hadn’t thought of that until I started
writing all of this down. Wow. Good stuff.
How is letting go and playing for you?
What allows you to express yourself freely?
What (inner) critic do you hear when you
let go and play?
How can you take your inner little girl by
the hand and show her that it’s safe to let go, play and be her expressive
self?
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