A Psychodrama technique used to make emotional, relational, or role processes visible and transform them through lived experience.
Step-by-step guide
- Clarify why Monodrama fits the current clinical marker.
- Create a safe experiential frame and obtain consent.
- Guide the client through the task slowly enough for emotion and meaning to emerge.
- Track body, emotion, language, and relational response.
- Integrate the new learning into one concrete next step.
When to use
- When the client can stay within the tolerance window
- When an experiential intervention fits the live process marker
- When verbal insight alone is not producing change
Key phrases
Let us stay with this and see what monodrama makes possible right now.
Follow-up questions
What do you notice in your body as this unfolds?
What changed when you spoke or acted from this place?
Alternative phrasings
There is no need to perform this correctly; we are looking for what becomes alive.
Let us slow it down and listen for the emotion or role underneath.
Warnings
- ⚠️ Do not intensify emotion faster than the client can integrate
- ⚠️ Avoid turning experiential work into performance or technique display
- ⚠️ Ground and integrate before closing the task
Source: Moreno, J.L. Moreno, Z. Blatner, A. Kellermann, P.F. Psychodrama and sociometry literature
Materials are informational and educational and summarize publicly available scientific sources. They are not medical or psychological advice, are not intended for self-diagnosis or self-treatment, and do not replace consultation with a qualified professional.