Feeling down? Struggling with life’s challenges? Forget therapy, massages or medication – turns out a bibliotherapy may just be the answer
Words by Kerry Parnell
As we celebrate National Storytelling Week (from Feb 1st-8th), reading a good novel might give you a welcome escape from real life, but it’s also doing wonders for your mental health, and will, quite literally stop you losing the plot.
Bibliotherapy, or using literature to improve your mental health, has proven so effective, books are even being prescribed on the NHS.
It works on everyone from children to adults and the most effective genre is not self-help, as you might assume, but rather literature and poetry.
Reading poetry considerably reduced the symptoms of people with PTSD, according to a recent report in the Journal of Poetry Therapy, and researchers from the University of Alabama found depressives given bibliotherapy had less chance of relapsing than those prescribed medication.
It works by three stages – identification, catharsis and insight. You identify with the main characters, experience their emotions and struggles from a distance, then gain insight into your own life from their story.
Plus, the wider you read the better. According to a study by the Liverpool Health Inequalities Research Institute, reading classics like Charles Dickens’ Great Expectations, allows people suffering from depression to discover new emotions and experiences and rediscover forgotten ones.
And while many of us subconsciously self-medicate with books – reaching for old favourites when we feel the need to escape or find calm, there are additional benefits if you partake in a group discussion afterwards.
In England, you can get a book prescription from your GP, to use at the library, or attend a local Reading Well group, run by the Reading Agency. It follows similar successful services in Scotland and Wales.
The Reader charity also runs therapeutic reading groups across the nation, as well as in psychiatric hospitals, prisons, care homes and sheltered accommodation.
Universities including the University of Liverpool and Cambridge University have been launching courses in bibliotherapy and charity ReLit ran one with the University of Warwick, which is on YouTube. It includes interviews with supporters including Sir Ian McKellen, Stephen Fry, Ben Okri and Rachel Kelly.
It has also spawned a new industry of bibliotherapists who offer personalised sessions and prescriptions. One such is Bijal Shah, 37, a former investment banker turned therapist, who has a practise in London, as well as hosting literary afternoon teas in Soho’s Ham Yard Hotel. She has clients from all over the world, but says women in their twenties to forties are her biggest customers.
‘I offer 45-minute sessions which examine a client’s reading life, goals, interests and personal needs,’ says Shah. ‘I then prepare a personalised book prescription and offer relevant therapy or coaching.’
‘Fiction allows us to use our imagination and access aspects of our unconscious that we would never be able to tap into otherwise. It can sometimes be more powerful than any psychotherapy conducted by a psychoanalyst.’
Shah runs sessions in her clinic and virtually, plus has free reading lists on her website booktherapy.io. She also offers couples bibliotherapy, enthusing that ‘it is an amazing way to connect with your other half’.
Here are few of Shah’s top book prescriptions:
Feeling stressed: Try Deborah Alma’s The Emergency Poet
‘When stressed, I would suggest poetry,’ Shah advises. ‘It is the perfect way to calm the mind, bring you into the here and now and slow you down so you can pause, re-energise and re-boot.’
Feeling depressed: Try Sylvia Plath’s The Bell Jar
Although reading Plath for depression might not seem the obvious choice, Shah says it works by providing, ‘extraordinary access to the mind of someone who is depressed, validating the feelings of anyone experiencing depression. Raw, insightful and even rational, it really empathises with depressed reader, often providing cathartic relief.’
Getting over a break-up: Try Anne Tyler’s The Accidental Tourist
This Pulitzer-nominated novel follows a travel writer recovering from losing his son and his wife leaving him. ‘Unsure of how to proceed, he uses his writing to chronicle the challenges and the emotional processing we are forced to embrace as life goes on,’ says Shah. ‘It’s a beautiful story that teach us life-affirming lessons.’
The post Why books can stop you losing the plot appeared first on Marie Claire.
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