Psychodrama
Techniques
Psychodrama techniques are practical action methods for exploring feelings, relationships, memories, roles, and choices.
They help a person see a situation differently, speak what has been difficult to say, and try out new responses within a held therapeutic space.
Core techniques
Four action methods used in psychodrama
Role reversal
The protagonist steps into another role or position. This can deepen empathy, reveal missing information, and shift a fixed view of a relationship or conflict.
Doubling
A double stands alongside the protagonist and gives possible words to feelings that may be present but not yet fully spoken, owned, or embodied.
Mirroring
The protagonist steps back and witnesses a scene, posture, tone, or pattern from the outside, allowing new awareness to emerge.
Surplus reality
Psychodrama can create symbolic scenes that never happened, can never happen, or still need expression, repair, farewell, or completion.
How it is held
Technique is not performance
In therapeutic psychodrama, the techniques serve the person, the group, and the safety of the process. They are used with care, timing, consent, and clinical judgement.
The director protects the frame
The facilitator helps the protagonist stay connected to the work without being overwhelmed, and keeps the group oriented to the purpose of the scene.
The group supports the work
Auxiliaries, doubles, and witnesses are not acting for effect. Their task is to serve the exploration with respect, attention, and emotional accuracy.
Sharing brings the work back
After action, the group de-roles and shares from personal resonance. This helps the work settle without advice-giving or interpretation.
Wider vocabulary
Terms that help explain the method
Sociometry
Sociometry explores the visible and hidden structures in a group, including connection, distance, attraction, exclusion, and choice.
Sociodrama
Sociodrama focuses on group issues, social roles, and collective themes rather than one protagonist’s personal story alone.
Tele
Tele describes a reciprocal relational attunement between people, different from sympathy, empathy, transference, or projection.
Why techniques matter
Action gives feeling somewhere to move
The techniques are not tricks. They help make inner experience visible enough to meet, question, change, mourn, practise, or integrate.
They reveal what words hide
Movement, role, and scene can show patterns that may stay abstract or inaccessible in ordinary conversation.
They deepen perspective
Role-taking and witnessing can open a new view of conflict, grief, intimacy, creativity, and self-perception.
They support change
By making experience active rather than abstract, psychodrama can support new responses and emotional integration.
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Ready to ask how the method might fit you?
You do not need to know the techniques before making contact. A first enquiry can simply begin with what you are wondering about.
