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Can trauma be transformed through arts-based interventions? The results are in, and the answer is yes.

In April 2022, after months of collaboration between researchers and both the local community and health care providers, members of the Warwick community gathered to take part in The Big Anxiety festival.

The background

Trauma and suicide聽鈥撀爌articularly prevalent and devastating within the First Nations community聽in Warwick 鈥撀爓ere having a devastating impact on the town in regional Queensland. The high rate of youth suicide meant many people in the community had lost a son or daughter, niece or nephew, and many more had lost friends too.

The local community and healthcare providers were desperate for support to fill the gap in mental health and trauma services available.

鈥淭here is no medication for trauma,鈥 says Prof. Bennett. 鈥淵ou can take medication for some symptoms, but it really needs a cultural and social response rather than just a medical one."聽

They sought help from the Big Anxiety Research Centre (BARC), an Australian Research Council-funded lab based at 国产精品, that seeks to address mental health and wellbeing through community-based interventions. BARC鈥檚 founder director,聽Scientia Professor Jill Bennett, and her team published a paper outlining the resulting collaboration and its outcomes聽this year.

BARC provides social and cultural responses to mental health needs, filling a gap in Australia鈥檚 mental health system noted by the Australian Productivity Commission in , which criticised the health system as being insufficiently people-focused with a 鈥渄isproportionate focus on clinical services 鈥 overlooking [social and cultural] determinants of, and contributors to, mental health鈥.

鈥淭here is no medication for trauma,鈥 says Prof. Bennet. 鈥淵ou can take medication for some symptoms, but it really needs a cultural and social response rather than just a medical one. Trauma is not an 鈥榠llness鈥; it comes from your exposure to events, and to neglect and abuse.鈥

Edge of the Present 鈥 a mixed reality environment designed to cultivate future thinking in place of suicidal ideation 鈥 was presented at the Warwick Art Gallery as part of the festival program.

The Warwick Big Anxiety festival

鈥淒o you find life exhausting and overwhelming?鈥 read the invitations. 鈥淔eel like there is never enough time and there must be more to life than the daily grind? If you鈥檝e experienced trauma, loss or distress 鈥 or are just generally disillusioned by the state of the world and the hardship around us 鈥 The Big Anxiety is for you.鈥

The Warwick Big Anxiety program was initially centred on聽an exhibition at the Warwick Art Gallery named聽Edge of the Present 鈥 a mixed reality environment designed to cultivate future thinking in place of suicidal ideation. ( exploring its impact showed significant increases in positive mood and decrease in hopelessness.) An accompanying two-day workshop program was designed with three integrated parts:

  1. Road Trip, an Indigenous-led audio-visual immersive experience focusing on trauma/anxiety carried in the body
  2. A creative media workshop using augmented reality (AR) and virtual reality (VR) tools and experiences; and
  3. A Theatre of the Oppressed workshop exploring how to bring about systemic change.

Just two weeks before the festival was due to start, a 16-year-old First Nations young man died by suicide after visiting Warwick Hospital seeking help for his mental health. His death had a profound effect on the community, who were left feeling 鈥.

鈥淲e realised that this required a response,鈥 says Prof. Bennett. 鈥淪o we hosted a Long Table, which is an open community discussion, for the evening before Big Anxiety. And that built a lot of trust and allowed for a lot of issues and emotion and anger to be aired.鈥

It was 鈥渁 fantastic opportunity to talk about mental health and suicide,鈥 said one participant. 鈥淪uicide has been happening in this community since I was a child.鈥

鈥淥ut of that,鈥 explains Prof. Bennett, 鈥渃ame a group within the community who were very keen to move forward and use some creative techniques to work with trauma, and intergenerational trauma, and to work collectively in the community to turn things around.鈥

The Big anxiety tablet

"We make tools that enable people to think about what's happening internally," says Prof. Bennett. "The arts are very sensory and can attune people to emotional states, and that can then help change, and regulate emotional states." Image: Steph Vajda.

What can art actually do?

鈥淐reative arts experiences are resources that people can make use of,鈥 says Prof. Bennett. 鈥淲e make tools that enable people to think about what鈥檚 happening internally. It鈥檚 not that people need to do any art, it鈥檚 about using powerful creative means: images, music, stories. The arts are very sensory and can attune people to emotional states, and that can then help change, and regulate emotional states.

鈥淎nother thing creative arts can do is make people feel creative. I don鈥檛 mean that they will want to go and create a great painting, but that they feel they can be creative about their life, that they come to realise the possibilities.

鈥淲e are informed by a vast knowledge base in psychotherapy, that says if you understand your own internal process and become attuned to yourself, you can recognise what鈥檚 happening and make adjustments. That鈥檚 the goal of therapies. In many ways we are facilitating something similar outside the health framework with lots of powerful audio-visual stimuli to work with. It鈥檚 not just a little creative add-on to 鈥榬eal therapy鈥.

鈥淚mmersive media can drop you into an experience that might take years to even begin to articulate and then you can share that experience and really start to examine it.鈥

Road Trip: an example of an immersive experience

One of the workshops, Road Trip, was created by Marianne Wobcke, an Indigenous midwife and trauma worker. If you stumbled into the immersive audio-visual workshop, it might look like a music festival, with some familiar songs playing as images are projected on large screens. Using a carefully created playlist of music, Wobcke leads participants on a journey through birth/creation taking in the beautiful and the challenging, and then bringing people back to a place of peace and potential.

鈥淢y experiential workshop introduces people through relaxed, mindful awareness, to the unconscious realms of their psyche,鈥 she said. 鈥淔rom birth, our perceptions program us for a life of constant struggle; alternatively with our Songline intact we may create a sense of limitless potential. We can all delight in our unique contribution to our lives, our families and greater community, inspired from a sense of abundance, wholeness, wellness and wellbeing.鈥

For many participants the process opens up new ways of thinking about what has happened in their lives, changing how they think about the future.

Community organiser and festival participant Cynthia

"I feel like there's been maybe 10 years of growth in a short span of time 鈥 that you would maybe not even get in a lifetime," says community organiser and festival participant Cynthia. "I feel it's really great that we've got that support coming into our community." Image: Steph Vajda.

The feedback

Following the festival, participants (through surveys and/or interviews) reported a range of beneficial effects. Strikingly, these were frequently described as significant or life-altering shifts.

鈥淪omething happened in those workshops which allowed me to focus on what I need to do to heal rather than just survive,鈥 shared one participant.

鈥淚 feel like I have gone through a journey of self-growth, but mainly self-acceptance,鈥 offered another.

鈥淗ope 鈥 was rebirthed in me. I feel like I discovered parts of me that were never allowed to flourish. So excited for the future.鈥

鈥淭his heals. It鈥檚 tailored to everyone because it鈥檚 you doing it for yourself. The gap this fills is a very big gap in the market.鈥

鈥淲orking with The Big Anxiety, I feel like there鈥檚 been maybe 10聽years of growth in a short span of time 鈥 that you maybe wouldn鈥檛 even get in a lifetime.鈥

Says Prof. Bennett: 鈥淭rauma often causes us to shut down.聽Feeling able to take in new experiences is often the key to what we might call recovery or growth, and I think doing that in community generates a bit of passion and excitement and enthusiasm within the community.

鈥淚t鈥檚 not us doing it. It鈥檚 a collaborative sort of facilitation and then people discover their own strengths or reconnect with themselves. In fact, that鈥檚 how someone put it, 鈥業t鈥檚 just connected us back to ourselves and that what connects us to country and our community.鈥欌

The future

The BARC research team are continuing to work in Warwick. On October 21-22聽they will return to host a workshop with the new virtual reality experience, Perinatal Dreaming 鈥 and to premier the film Changing Our Ways, which documents the project.

They are also working with a community in Western Australia, and communities in other regional Queensland towns to curate their own Big Anxiety programs.

鈥淭he festivals are always very adaptive and essentially community led,鈥 says Prof. Bennett. 鈥淚t鈥檚 exciting to see how our work has an impact on individuals and communities but more than that how it鈥檚 impacting the way we think about mental health services and pointing to new ways of supporting people in communities. I think that鈥檚 really going to be part of a long-term change.

鈥淧eople deal with trauma and suicide in communities all the time, they don鈥檛 necessarily need a specific bunch of experts, they need some facilitation and resourcing and then they build on their strengths.鈥

If this story has raised issues for you, and you or someone you know needs support, please call:

  • Parent Line NSW 1300 130 052
  • Beyond Blue 1300 224 636
  • NSW Mental Health Line 1800 011 511
  • Lifeline Australia 13 11 14
  • Kids Helpline 1800 551 800.

In an emergency call 000 (triple zero).