American Circus Educators Magazine Winter 2017 (Issue 3, Volume 11) | Page 22

circus is INTERVIEW #2 We recently reached out to Suzanne Rappaport to learn more about how she infuses occupational therapy with the circus arts through her program, Circus for Survivors. ACE/ wonderful because it's infinitely adaptable Where did this idea to start Circus for Survivors come from? Did it originate with your doctoral thesis research on circus as a feasible therapeutic method or did your interest spur your research? Were there other aspects unrelated to your research that also prompted you to move in this direction? SUZANNE/ A friend of mine who was also one of my recreational trapeze students was diagnosed with breast cancer. Shortly after her diagnosis, she reached out to me and said that she couldn’t do trapeze anymore because she had cancer. I told her that she probably had cancer the week before and just didn’t know about it and was in trapeze class then as well. She continued with classes and I would modify any moves that needed to be switched because they affected her radiation burns from her treatments. She joined a local community cancer support group and brought me in to offer a circus class for survivors, as the usual offerings were more sedentary and we thought having a more lively option would be fun. I had just finished my occupational therapy studies at that time and was well suited to offer this to the group—I understood all the medical complications that come with cancer survivorship as well as having a breadth of knowledge surrounding circus. I had then honed circus groups with many other populations (Traumatic Brain Injury, Adults with Intellectual Disabilities, Deaf & Hard of hearing with other Communication Disorders, acute Photos provided by Suzanne Rappaport psychiatric patients, and children with social-emotional difficulties) but since I had the most experience with my circus groups for cancer survivors, I had chosen to focus on that population for my occupational therapy doctorate. as I maintain a full-time job as an occupational therapist and I pursue various research projects and presentations. Also, from a grant funding standpoint, I have been very lucky to obtain modest monetary amounts for short workshops. ACE/ ACE/ How have you had to adapt to treating such a wide variety of conditions? What are some of the most difficult challenges you've encountered or the most innovative workarounds that you've had to design? S/ Each population had different needs in terms of ensuring a successful circus group experience. The adults with Traumatic Brain Injury were also older adults and for them, I incorporated chairs to help create a human pyramid. One of the more tricky settings I have adapted to was when I worked with acute psychiatric adolescent patients in a psychiatric hospital. There was a unit policy of ‘no touching’ so I couldn’t touch them and they couldn’t touch each other so I incorporated Chinese jump ropes (which are essentially large rubber bands) to work in a connected way while maintaining the unit policy. When I worked with children who were deaf and hard of hearing, it was a group of 65 children and their one-on-one staff. All the children had slightly different diagnoses so I organized the circus event into a ‘circus petting zoo’ where they could move around to different circus stations as they pleased and take time away if they were becoming overstimulated and needed a sensory break. ACE/ How did you settle on doing workshops as the primary format for the program? What advantages have you g ained in doing so? S/ I settled on short sessions or workshops mainly for pragmatic reasons. They work best for me What advantages are there to using circus as OT that other forms of OT don't necessarily produce? S/ Circus is wonderful because it’s infinitely adaptable and it can target many physical and psychological outcomes. Some forms of occupational therapy, like sensory integration therapy, can target the same outcomes, but they don’t hold the meaningfulness that I feel that circus can embody. ACE/ What have you learned through creating and managing the program that could be of benefit to non-therapeutic programs? What are the things we might not suspect need to be considered when teaching people of diverse body conditions? S/ Group cohesiveness can make any circus lesson richer and build a community base—always have an opening activity and a closing one. I have felt it is always easier to adapt to physical needs and more difficult to recognize the psychosocial needs. However, the most important thing to remember is safety should always be first (both physical and emotional). ACE/ What is your vision for the future of Circus for Survivors? S/ I hope to continue to offer circus as therapeutic workshops and to continue to research it so that an evidence base can be formed around its effectiveness. 23