Wednesday 14 September 2011

A new employee

Good news!  An artist who I was head-hunting has agreed to take on a new post with MPM as arts therapist to complement Betty Acen, our existing Music Counsellor!  This is bringing much refreshment and a new sense of direction to MPM.  To be continued...!

Sunday 11 September 2011

Newsletter number 32 September 2011

Newsletter No. 32! (from Gulu)
September 2011

I have just returned from Gulu to deposit a Spanish volunteer Music Therapist.  I was very impressed with Ana Navarro, a recent graduate of Music Therapy, from the moment she climbed gratefully out of the taxi from the airport after a three-hour detour around Kampala (having been delivered to the wrong place!) until the moment I left her cycling around Gulu as if she had been born to be there.  She took everything in her stride, at least it seemed from the outside even if she was hiding her fear!  Betty was also very impressed and was looking forward to working with Ana and learning from her too.
Betty is also looking forward to an addition to her family: her third-born.  In true African style, the subject of her pregnancy came about completely accidentally as we were discussing family-planning.  “Do people do family planning in Gulu?” asked my pastor, Alphonse.  “Yes,” replied Betty.  “I can tell,” I added, “you only have two children Betty.”  “Well I would like to add one” said Betty quietly.  “Oh, that’s nice.”  I said matter-of-factly.  “I may even surprise you in December.” She replied, seeming relieved to have got it off her chest!  “Wow!”  I breathed.  “That would make you… five months pregnant?!”  “We African women don’t need too much time when a baby is born, we just carry on with our work!”  Betty laughed, as if reading my mind!  Ha ha!  Well, this week in Gulu was going to be a week of re-thinking strategies anyway, but now there was a huge impetus to do so.  Let me start from the beginning.
The Beginning:
Music for Peaceful Minds was started to serve the counseling needs of children affected by the traumatic effects of a civil war that had lasted over twenty years.  MPM started after a reccy visit with Jenni Ramos and the input of an initial Music Therapist volunteer Nicky Haire in SOS Children’s Villages, Gulu.  I was quickly joined by Dutch Music Therapist, Jantina Bijpost, and was rapidly invited to work in other schools and orphanages around Gulu. 
Then there was Betty:
After eight months, Jantina Bijpost trained a Ugandan teacher, Betty Acen, in how to use music as therapy.  Betty continued the therapy work, being joined by other volunteers over the course of the following three years: Chia-Ling Ho, Neysa Navarro-Fernandez and now Ana Navarro.
The Development of the Work:
We started working with orphans and therefore people who were not only suffering from war-trauma but also living with the trauma of not having been able to make good attachments with parents.  We then began working with children who had been abducted or abused by rebel soldiers, most presenting with PTSD.  We then started working with children with disabilities in a special-needs unit of a mainstream school.  Another orphanage followed and a unit for deaf children.  Some training in Kitgum in 2010 for teachers at a special-needs unit led me to thinking that work with disabled children might be a good way to move forward considering that the war ended in 2006.  It is true that war-trauma can last for long, even to the next generation, so this will always be an underlying aim of MPM, but I believe that there are a few other NGOs working with the traumatised population but not enough working to help the creativity and expansion of resources for children with disabilities.
Changing Tack:
With these thoughts in mind, I met with the various head-teachers of the schools that MPM currently works in and talked through a new referral strategy that we agreed to implement.  Instead of children referring themselves for music therapy with Betty, teachers will be consulted more vigorously to ensure that the children who need the most emotional support benefit from what music therapy has to offer.  The groups had become a bit haphazard and seemed to lack a purpose other than for the more general aims of enjoyment and socializing.  In discussion with the head-teachers, the agreement was made that each small music therapy group would consist of children with similar needs or problems so that Betty can really focus on the aim in hand and that the children can gain support from knowing that they are not the only ones coping with a particular problem.  It is in my mind, too, to lengthen the group-work from a short 10 weeks to at least 6 months so that Betty really has time to work with the children and help them to deal with their challenges in depth.  In order to do this we must wait firstly until the next school year (they go Jan to Dec here) and secondly until Betty comes back from maternity leave with her baby (due late Dec).
I have been thinking for a long time about getting a second Music Counsellor to work alongside Betty, because it can be a very lonely job and with no one to bounce ideas or difficult situations off, the job can be too hard.  I have not done so before because the right person has not presented him/herself to me and I have not been in a position to search and conduct interviews so Betty has had to cope on her own.
The Future:
So with the new referral system and a potential second Music Counsellor in place, MPM is set to take a slightly different direction.  The dream person I have in mind to take the job of second Music Counsellor is an art therapist and could bring a new dimension to the music therapy, bringing art therapy and a variety of other skills to the table.  It is well-known that art and music go well together and I am excited about the potential of MPM being able to offer another medium of communication for children both in mainstream and special needs schools.  Even if my dream-person who I have in mind cannot take the position, I will be looking for someone special to join Betty in the new year, when she returns from maternity leave.
In view of this potential exciting change to MPM, I need to find more funding and new supporters as the cost of another therapist is around £100 per month.  If you are willing to contribute a one-off donation or become a monthly supporter, please get in touch with me to find out how (musicforpeacefulminds@yahoo.co.uk.  Thank you to everyone who has contributed, and especially to the current monthly supporters for your support, and please continue to stand with me at this time of exciting change.

Newsletter Number 31 August 2011

Newsletter No. 31! (from Western Uganda)

August 2011

I am currently in my house in Kasese, Western Uganda, preparing a program for MPM’s volunteer from Spain who will be working with Betty in Gulu from September until December.  You may remember from the last newsletter that her name is Ana.  I will be picking her up from Kampala and taking her to Gulu, along with our pastor in Kasese who wants to visit MPM to get an idea of how music therapy can work in the west.   I will stay with Ana for a week to help her settle into a house where I have rented a room for her (to be house-mates with a British girl).  I will introduce her to Betty and then after my week there Betty will take Ana under her wing and they will begin their program of working together.  Betty will provide Ana with experience of working in Uganda while Ana will teach Betty all she knows about Music Therapy!

The Work
I had a wonderful impromptu letter from Addra School (the one that has the unit for deaf children).  It is letters like this that make the work all worthwhile even if it seems as though we are only a drop in the enormous ocean.  When I am there in September I will also be doing some evaluation of Betty’s work and meeting the children to hear their experiences of MPM.

Betty
Betty has now finished her final exams or her masters and is awaiting her results.  Her masters in Guidance and Counseling will no doubt have helped her enormously with her work, but on the music side she is sometimes weak.  When Ana comes she is hoping to teach Betty to play a little on the guitar (and leave one for her) in order that Betty can have more musical experience and use that in her work.  It can be easy for Betty to use games and stories more than music and while that is still beneficial for the children, I don’t want the power that music has to offer being left out of the group-work.  I hope that Ana will reinvigorate Betty in her musical endeavors.

So, now it is time for me to get back to the chickens, Chui (‘leopard’ in Swahili) and Tangawizi (‘Ginger’ in Swahili), and our little Baluku (‘first born son’ in local Lukongho language!) and prepare the shamba (garden) for our new addition, a goat that will be called Mchomo (‘Kebab’ in Swahili!)

If you would like to donate please reply to this email and I will be more than happy to tell you MPM’s bank details.  Thank you for your continued support both moral and financial.  I will get photos and anecdotes from Gulu when I visit to put in the next newsletter.