Non
Violent Crisis Intervention
I once did a stint at a residential treatment center for boys between
the ages of 13 and 30. I was a writer then, too, but had
reason to believe I needed a “real” major that
would find me in a “real” job, and therefore (ha)
took up psychology and a job at the center. There, the boys
were of varying ages and faced a range of difficulties—from
low tolerance thresholds to autism to schizophrenia. We
counselors-in-training had weekly training sessions covering the most
mandatory of procedures. One of these included non-violent
crisis intervention.
Non-violent crisis intervention is just as it sounds like it would be:
if a counselor sees that a client is on the upswing of a tantrum, an
outburst, or an incident, he or she is responsible to
intervene—in, of course, a non-violent manner. The
idea or “trick” is to catch the person BEFORE he or
she goes into a rage that will be self- or other-destructive.
So the practice sessions include role-playing. One person
would be the aggressive one, another would be the counselor engaged in
the altercation, and a third would play the one who demonstrated
non-violent crisis intervention. One scenario went like
this: the person started acting out. The counselor
was coaching the upset one. The second counselor would gently
move in—behind the client—put his/her arms about
under and through the arms of the raging one, in a benign full nelson,
and with the hands now at the nape of the client’s neck would
stroke the head of the client, gently bringing the client to a seated
position in the counselors lap/front. (The counselor is now
also seated behind the client, still rubbing his head to calm him.)
The role-playing was fascinating and educational. But the
kinds of non-violent crisis intervention we often needed to practice
were much less staged (obviously), involved much more dangerous
situations than someone just stamping his feet and yelling, and
required much faster and different bodily responses. For
example, I was cooking for the 12 boys one afternoon (which was the
main part of my job then, as therapeutic cook). David, who
was a schizophrenic with tons of energy usually, loved to hang out in
the kitchen with me, sitting at the small table and watching and
engaging me in conversation. He loved my imitations of people
I had known, especially anyone who had a British accent or other
dialect difference. He would do impersonations of my
impersonations over and over.
But David also had an anger threshold problem. One day, he
was in a pissy mood. In the kitchen, he sat at the table
denying all our usual funny jokes and silly banter, discounting all as
crap. He was depressed and hunting with eyes for
excitement. I was boiling water in an industrial-sized
teakettle for Jello™ or something, and I noticed that his
eyes landed on many possibilities but furtively returned in glances at
that teakettle. As he shifted in his chair, I lunged for
teakettle, pouring it down the sink as my body blocked his from the
sink and from reach of the kettle handle. This was far
different form the non-violent crisis intervention role-playing
scenarios, yet was real and urgent nonetheless.
And at least once a week we faced such calls for
intervention. Cliff (who as a five-year-old stowed away under
a bulkhead, watched as some freak murdered both his parents) would
hammer and nail boards on his door and window of the room he stayed in
at the house—from the INSIDE. Rudy (who was left in
a dumpster as an infant), had a broken leg but insisted on going on the
camping expedition which included a two-mile hike in to the site, and
at one water break cut off his cast three weeks early and ran
away. Larry, autistic at birth, would rock himself in a
corner, banging his head until it was bloody, if no one stopped him in
time. And Terry, Mark, and Roger all climbed to the roof of
the Victorian where they resided, where, joined by the usual leader,
Cliff, they hurled items down to hear them crash, responding with
joyful imitations of chimpanzees and other primates.
So the crisis intervention sometimes went further than holding someone
on your lap—especially when the someone was on a roof three
stories up or boarded behind several two-by-fours.
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