RE-BALANCING
THE PSYCHE THROUGH STORYTELLING
Yesterday
I told a Scottish fairy tale at the November gathering of the Peterborough Storytellers. As the story was long, I broke it into three parts and placed
discussion and Jungian theory in between the parts. The story remains with me
this morning. Parts of it come to my mind and begin to reach out to parts of my
past that need re-balancing.
The
boy in the story is abandoned as an infant in the forest. His mother is
powerless to stop her child being taken away. She dies soon after from the
sorrow of loosing her child. As a young girl my own mother died of multiple
sclerosis. She was powerless to prevent this death and I felt abandoned without
her. An old woman who lives alone in the forest finds the infant boy. This old
woman takes the boy to her cottage and cares for him. She loves him like
nothing on earth. When I stopped the story we discussed the difference between
the boy’s first mother, the queen and his second mother the old woman in the
forest. People said that the first mother was powerless to keep the boy but the
second mother- the old woman – was self sufficient in the forest and able to
care for the infant.
Today,
the morning after the telling of the story, these two mothers have a deep
resonance with me. I think about my own mother as powerless to remain alive and
I think about all the second mothers I have known in my life – strong women who
have nurtured me in music, learning and the arts. In the story the boy grows up
well in the care of the second mother and so have I. I feel a rebalancing in
absorbing this element of the story - a reframing of life experience in a
positive light.
Fourteen
people came to storytelling last night. They listened and discussed this story
and other stories told. It is my hope that each person went away with some
insight that could be applied to his or her life. I know I did.
Author: Rita Grimaldi (Rita is the co-founder of Peterborough Storytellers)