'That Depression,' Not 'Your Depression'
In 1980s Adelaide, Australian family therapist Michael White (1948–2008) began trying an awkward phrasing: 'that depression' instead of 'your depression,' 'that anxiety' instead of 'your anxiety.' Exchanging letters with David Epston in Auckland, New Zealand, he refined the language. In 1990 they published Narrative Means to Therapeutic Ends (W.W. Norton). One sentence reshaped a generation of therapists: 'The person is not the problem; the problem is the problem.'
Until then, psychiatry and psychology bound people in diagnostic categories — 'a depressive,' 'a borderline,' 'an ADHD child.' White and Epston saw the binding itself shrinking the person. The first move of narrative therapy: linguistically separate person from problem (externalization).
A Post-Structural Family Therapy
Three intellectual roots fed it.
First, Michel Foucault's power/discourse analysis. White said he re-read Foucault nearly every year of his life. How the medical gaze creates 'patients' from people — this critique is the philosophical backbone of externalization.
Second, Jerome Bruner's narrative psychology. Humans understand themselves through stories, not statistics. Acts of Meaning (1990) appeared the same year, mutually legitimizing.
Third, social constructionism and Derrida's deconstruction. How dominant stories — 'the successful professional,' 'the good mother' — colonize individual reality. Narrative therapy deconstructs them and turns 'thin description' into 'thick description' (borrowing Clifford Geertz).
Adelaide's Dulwich Centre, co-founded by White in 1983, became the hub, still leading training, publishing, and Aboriginal family support.
Externalization — Change the Language, Change the Relationship
Externalization isn't a phrasing trick. The therapist invites the client to name the problem — 'the grey fog,' 'the lead weight,' 'the rushing voice.' White called this letting the problem name itself.
Questions then shift:
- 'Why are you always tired?' → 'The grey fog — when did it start following you?'
- 'Why can't you control your anger?' → 'The flare — in what situations does it have the most power over you?'
- 'Why do you binge?' → 'The bingeing — what does it make you do, and what does it promise?'
Two effects follow. ① The client sees themselves not as 'the problem' but as 'someone in relation to the problem.' ② Family and friends become 'us, fighting that thing together,' not 'them, the troubled one.' Externalization dismantles shame.
Five Core Practices
| Practice | Purpose | Example question | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| Externalization | Separate person from problem | 'If we named the anxiety, what would it be called?' | Less shame, less self-blame |
| Mapping the influence of the problem | Map how problem occupies life domains | 'What has the anxiety done to your sleep, relationships, work?' | Problem scope made visible |
| Mapping the influence of the person | Find acts of resistance | 'Was there ever a moment the anxiety lost some power?' | Unique outcomes (sparkling moments) harvested |
| Unique outcomes | Collect exceptions to dominant story | 'How did you do that, that day?' | Raw material for alternative story |
| Re-authoring | Compose alternative story | 'What do these moments say about who you are?' | Thick description, identity restoration |
A depressed client of six months, looked at closely, has 'seven minutes laughing on a friend's call last Tuesday afternoon.' Dominant story ('I'm always depressed') buries it as exception. Narrative therapy plants those seven minutes as seed: 'In those seven minutes, what part of you was alive? What would we call that?'
Therapeutic Letters and Outside Witnesses
Epston's signature is between-session therapeutic letters, summarizing externalization and sparkling moments. Epston said 'one well-crafted letter equals 4–5 sessions' — because it documents the re-authored self.
White introduced outsider witnessing groups and definitional ceremonies: people with similar experiences share what most touched them from the client's account. White called this re-membering — re-gathering the 'members' of one's identity.
An Honest Place in Evidence
Where CBT carries hundreds of RCT meta-analyses, narrative therapy's RCT base is markedly smaller. Vromans & Schweitzer's 2011 Psychotherapy Research paper reviewed small RCTs on narrative therapy for depression and trauma and reported preliminary support. Beaudoin 2005 summarized child applications.
Less evidence ≠ no effect. Narrative therapy is strong in two zones:
First, family and couple therapy. Externalizing 'the problem child' reconfigures the whole system.
Second, Indigenous/migrant/minority mental health. Dulwich Centre has worked with Aboriginal Australian communities for 30 years; externalizing colonial and intergenerational trauma stories is more ethically appropriate than pathologizing.
Crossing into Korea
Korean narrative therapy starts with Prof. Ko Mi-young's 2004 Understanding and Applying Narrative Therapy. The Korean Association of Family Therapy and Ministry of Gender Equality and Family family-counseling programs absorbed it; it spread into school and youth counseling.
For multicultural and migrant families in particular, Lee Jae-rim (2012) and others reported that deconstructing dominant Korean stories — 'the good daughter-in-law,' 'the dedicated worker' — gives Vietnamese and Filipina marriage migrants recovery resources. Between tradition and modernization, generation and gender transition, Korea's need to 'rewrite my own story' resonates with narrative therapy's grain.
A caution: many self-described 'narrative therapists' in Korea lack proper credentials. Seek clinicians supervised by the Korean Association of Family Therapy or Korean Counseling Association. For moderate-or-worse depression, trauma, and psychosis, pair with first-line evidence treatments (medication, CBT, EMDR).
Closing — Your Story Isn't One Line
Narrative therapy doesn't promise instant problem elimination. It promises thickening a thinned self-description. When 'I'm a depressed person' thickens into 'a mother of two and library volunteer who, after twelve years with depression, still laughed on a friend's call Tuesday afternoon,' that thickness is the recovery resource.
Try one line today. Instead of 'I'm lazy,' ask: 'The procrastination — what did it make me do today?'