THE ICE, THE DARK, AND THE STORIES: THE HEALING POWER OF SHARED NARRATIVES.

Authors

  • Jim Stafford Assistant Professor and Coordinator of Field Instruction, Social Work Department, University of Mississippi, University MS.
  • Hanna Boatright Rehabilitation Social Worker, North Mississippi Medical Center Rehabilitation Services, Tuepelo MS

Abstract

We want to tell you a story. Like any good story, it has been a beginning, a middle, and an end. We began with the point of view of the scholar, objective. Our aim was to do a descriptive research design to measure the impact of the Ice Storm of 1994. The setting was North Mississippi in March of 1994. We began by looking for what went wrong, how things had messed up, assuming much in drawing our conclusions before we had even talked to the population, the “client.” However, we were confused by our findings, faced by something we had not anticipated and forced to look at another set of possibilities – as the myriad colors and sounds, and other voices began to emerge, voices not crying in defeat but singing in relief, in survival, in reflection, in learning.

 

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Published

2014-06-25

How to Cite

Stafford, J., & Boatright, H. (2014). THE ICE, THE DARK, AND THE STORIES: THE HEALING POWER OF SHARED NARRATIVES. Reflections: Narratives of Professional Helping, 3(2), 9–17. Retrieved from https://reflectionsnarrativesofprofessionalhelping.org/index.php/Reflections/article/view/479

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Section

General Submissions