Abstract
This article argues that witnessing is a stance of ‘being there’ as a lived, mindful presence that defines one’s human capacity to create a bond of mutual concern with an ‘other’. It is a vital constituent in the process of therapy and beyond. Witnessing is a commitment to acknowledge ‘real reality’ as well as one’s subjectivity; it is an essential part of mutual recognition, since it involves one’s responsibility to tell the truth and a readiness to face it; as such, witnessing is inherently moral. This article emphasizes the idea that witnessing is a matter of personal choice. The decision to speak out and ‘tell it’ in the group arena has a redeeming quality; it can break up the deadening silence of isolation, loneliness and suffering caused by wounding relationships.
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Clinical Psychology,Social Psychology
Reference28 articles.
1. Bearing Witness: Group Analysis as Witness Training in Action
2. Beckett S. (1973) Waiting for Godot. London: Faber and Faber.
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