When Silence Speaks: A Reflection on Engaging in Expressive Arts Activities and Thoughts of Suicide
Abstract
:1. Introduction
… between on the one hand, the need to tell it like it is, and on the other hand, an effort to globalise the use of language, to make [my] message intelligible … to sanitise the reality that [I] wish to convey, to hide the dirty linen. [For] when the foreign gaze wins over, as it often does, complexity, nuance and meaning … can be lost.
The Power Words Wield
A mental health professional assesses risk by asking a suicidal service user if they intend to ‘do something silly’. Whilst attempting to soften their language, the professional in turn dismisses the client’s pain and struggle of a very real intent to die—diminishing their experience and potential willingness to name their own, now expunged, suicidality.
… the EILP metaphor excludes those who haven’t acquired the language. English, therefore, has become a gatekeeper to social and economic progress and to access to many professional domains; it regulates the international flow of people and influences global relations.
2. The Expressive Arts Activities
… absurd to only rely on what we hear to make sense of the world, but there is the need to rely on feeling, observation, understanding, knowledge, empathy, and other non-verbal clues such as eye contacts, gestures, movement, tone, posture, and artefacts.
2.1. Neurographic Art
2.2. Bilateral Drawing with Music
2.3. Soles of Feet Meditation
2.4. Body Mapping
3. Discussion
3.1. How Silence Speaks
Art becomes the transition site between the ‘felt’ and the ‘told’, the body and the world, where the subconscious becomes conscious, and the subjective becomes objective—both visible and audible. Art becomes the culturally mediated ‘voice’ of change, both literally and figuratively.
3.2. Resisting and Decolonising
… this silence is a response to the stigmatization they feel from the hearing world, which tends to regard their speech as deficient in some way—that is, less than fully human, or less than equally intelligent … Some, like those who oppose cochlear implants in favor of remaining deaf, use their silence to protest the hegemony of spoken language over signed.
… the duration of silence not only altered the meaning of the silence, from acquiescence to resistance, but also gained strength through its very length. The silence waited, hovering, gathering power like a storm brewing, and was no less moving while it lasted than when it finally broke.
How did we arrive at this acceptance of ‘the fatalistic logic of the unassailable position of English in our literature’, in our culture and in our politics? What was the route from the Berlin of 1884 … to what is still the prevailing and dominant logic a hundred years later? How did we, as African writers, come to be so feeble towards the claims of our languages on us and so aggressive in our claims on other languages, particularly the languages of our colonization?
… the tendency to push some groups to reclaim their voices is not necessarily liberating to them or an indication of ‘good’ ethics on the part of those who take this initiative. Developing the capacity to ‘hear’ the meanings of different silences is fundamental.
… demonstrated in the liberating practice of service users re-identifying as survivors, forming movements of protest, holding services and trusts accountable, demanding changes in practice, and co-development of research.
4. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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Gitau, L. When Silence Speaks: A Reflection on Engaging in Expressive Arts Activities and Thoughts of Suicide. Soc. Sci. 2025, 14, 296. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci14050296
Gitau L. When Silence Speaks: A Reflection on Engaging in Expressive Arts Activities and Thoughts of Suicide. Social Sciences. 2025; 14(5):296. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci14050296
Chicago/Turabian StyleGitau, Lydia. 2025. "When Silence Speaks: A Reflection on Engaging in Expressive Arts Activities and Thoughts of Suicide" Social Sciences 14, no. 5: 296. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci14050296
APA StyleGitau, L. (2025). When Silence Speaks: A Reflection on Engaging in Expressive Arts Activities and Thoughts of Suicide. Social Sciences, 14(5), 296. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci14050296