Trauma is not an easy concept to understand as one would have seen last weekend when Prevail Arts presented ‘Matchstick Men’ at Kenya Cultural Centre.
Trauma is
defined in one dictionary as simply ‘a deeply distressing experience’, But the consequences
of such experiences are not easily understood. Yet they can shatter
relationships, turn one’s life upside down, and even disable someone’s grasp on
reality.
Martin
Kigondu chose to tackle the topic of trauma sometime after the 2007-2008
post-election violence that rocked the country and traumatized whole families
and communities.
Shem
(Emmanuel Mulili) is one man who’s been deeply traumatized by the violence that
robbed him of his wife as well as of his parents when he was still a
child. But as the play opens, one cannot
see visible scars on his body nor detect a psychological scar when his friend
(Bilal Mwaura) arrives late for their meeting.
There’s a
white medic’s jacket on a chair in their meeting room that suggests this might
be a psychiatric session. But then, who’s the doctor and which one is the
patient? One can’t be sure since both men seem to have issues. What’s more, as
their conversation opens up and they start to address more intimate, personal
topics, those subjects seem to get eluded, intertwined in word games and mental
twists and turns that subtly steer the conversation away from examining the
problems.
Shem seems to be especially good at this sort
of subterfuge and stone-walling, remaining with what the Shrink (who we have
figured out is Mwaura) believes are Shem’s secret demons. Yet just as their
hour-long session is about to end, there seems to be a breakthrough in Shem’s
steel-clad story (that even he doesn’t remember).
That’s when
we see the Shrink step out of the room and tell his nurse he needs a ‘double
session’ with this patient. But he quickly steps back into their interchange to
try to unravel Shem’s traumatic experiences, first with his parents and then with
his wife. As it turns out, both of those events were deeply traumatizing. So
much so that Shem apparently buried them down in the deep recesses of his
psyche. He unconsciously stashed them so far away from his rational
consciousness that they might never hurt him again.
Both traumas
were closely associated with his close encounters with violence and death. They
began in his childhood when he watched his cruel step-father beat up his gentle
mum.
The violence
inflicted on her was so intense one night that Shem at aged 11 was now strong
enough to fight back. He pushed the man down a flight of stairs, at the bottom
of which the stepfather lay dead. Yes, Shem had actually killed his step-dad.
The other
truly disturbing experience happened during post-election-violence in 2008 when
terrorists broke into his house, raped, killed, and chopped off the hand of his
wife.
It goes
without saying that the loss of his wife by those exceedingly cruel and violent
means must have had a profound impact on Shem. In fact, he was transformed from
being a sensitive, loving man into someone numbed by the trauma of witnessing
so much evil. That was why Shem's sister and her friend, the Shrink decided it
was imperative to get to the root of her brother’s problem. Otherwise, the
State could take him away to some mental institution, and his problem would
never be unearthed or treated or fully resolved.
The Shrink
had sought to expose these ugly experiences so that Shem could reconcile
himself to what had actuslly happened in his life that had been so
traumatizing.
Matchstick
Man is a masterful script aimed at unraveling the truth about one man’s
traumatizing experiences and breaking through the mental barriers that had obstructed
his grappling with his demons.
At the end
of the play, we naturally do not find out what Shem will do with all of this
unadulterated information. He looks shocked by these discoveries about what
he’s experienced in his life, and what he can actually do with this
information.
The two
actors have a wonderful chemistry that enabled them to naturally swing from a
sensitive exchange of ideas into a well-choreographed brawl that went on for
several minutes, but it was beautifully achieved.
The play
ended rather inconclusively since Shem was now stuck having to address the
guilt that he must have buried all those years. The Shrink had succeeded, but
poor Shem.
Mulili and
Mwaura both gave sensitive Trauma is not an easy concept to understand as one
would have seen last weekend when Prevail Arts presented ‘Matchstick Men’ at
Kenya Cultural Centre.
Trauma is
defined in one dictionary as simply ‘a deeply distressing experience’, But the
consequences of such experiences are not easily understood. Yet they can
shatter relationships, turn one’s life upside down, and even disable someone’s
grasp on reality.
Martin
Kigondu chose to tackle the topic of trauma sometime after the 2007-2008
post-election violence that rocked the country and traumatized whole families
and communities.
Shem
(Emmanuel Mulili) is one man who’s been deeply traumatized by the violence that
robbed him of his wife; but as the play opens, one cannot see visible scars on
his body nor detect a psychological scar when his friend (Bilal Mwaura) arrives
late for their meeting.
There’s a
white medic’s jacket on a chair in their meeting room that suggests this might
be a psychiatric session. But then, who’s the doctor and which one’s the
patient? One can’t be sure since both men seem to have issues. What’s more, as
their conversation opens up and they start to address more intimate, personal
topics, they seem to get eluded, intertwined in word games and mental twists
and turns. Shem seems to be especially good at this sort of stone-walling,
remaining with what the Shrink (who we have figured out is Mwaura) believes are
Shem’s secret demons. Yet just as their hour-long session is about to end,
there seems to be a breakthrough in Shem’s steel-clad story (that even he
doesn’t remember).
That’s when
we see the Shrink step out of the room and tell his nurse he needs a ‘double
session’ with this patient. But he quickly steps back into their interchange to
try to unravel Shem’s traumatic experiences with his parents and also with his
wife. As it turns out, both of those experiences were deeply traumatizing. So
much so that Shem apparently buried them down in the deep recesses of his
psyche. He unconsciously stashed them so far away from his rational
consciousness that they might never hurt him again.
Both traumas
were closely associated with his close encounters with violence and death. They
began in his childhood when he watched his cruel step-father beat up his gentle
mum.
The violence
inflicted on her was so intense one night that Shem at aged 11 was now strong
enough to fight back. He pushed the man down a flight of stairs, at the bottom
of which the man lay dead. Yes, Shem had actually killed his step-dad.
The other
truly disturbing experience happened during post-election-violence when
terrorists broke into his house, raped, killed, and chopped off the hand of his
wife.
It goes
without saying that the loss of his wife by those exceedingly cruel and violent
means must have had a profound impact on Shem. In fact, he was transformed from
being a sensitive, loving man into someone numbed by the trauma of witnessing
so much evil. That was why Shem's sister and her friend the Shrink decided it
was imperative to get to the root of her brother’s problem. Otherwise, the
State could take him away to some mental institution, and his problem would
never be unearthed or treated and fully resolved..
So, the
Shrink had sought to unearth both of these ugly experiences so that Shem could
reconcile himself to what had happened in his life to have the trauma.
Matchstick
Man is an elusive script aimed at unraveling the truth about one man’s
traumatizing experiences and breaking through the mental barriers that
obstructed his grappling with his demons.
At the end
of the play, we naturally do not find out what Shem will do with all of this
unadulterated information. He looks shocked by these discoveries about what
he’s experienced in his life, and what he can actually do with this
information.
The two
actors have a wonderful chemistry that enabled them to naturally swing from a
sensitive exchange of ideas into a well-choreographed brawl that went on for
several minutes, but it is beautifully achieved.
The play
ended rather inconclusively since Shem was now stuck having to address the
guilt that he must have buried all those years. The Shrink had succeeded, but
poor Shem.
Both Mwaura
and Mulili gave sensitive, often incandescent performances in Matchstick Men
which I think Kigondu wrote to rouse greater public awareness of the problems
associated with mental health.
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