Hans Skott Myhre
Location:
Port Colborne Ontario
Biography
I have been working with young people since 1972 when I
volunteered at Fircrest School, a state-run home for individuals with
profound developmental disabilities. I went on from there to work in a
community health center as a community volunteer and then clinical
staff. I entered the work with a B.A. in comparative literature and then
picked up an M.Ed. in community mental health counseling. I went
from there to California where I studied brief therapy with John
Weakland and was licensed as a Marriage, Family and Child Counselor. I
worked inpatient psychiatric and foster care as well as a private
practice. In the mid eighties I moved to Richmond Virginia where I
directed a runaway and homeless youth program with a shelter and a
transitional living program. From there I moved to New Mexico where I
worked in medium security prison and then directed another multi-service
runaway and homeless youth program both in Santa Fe and on the 8
Northern Pueblos. In the 90’s I moved to Minneapolis and was clinical
director at the Bridge for Runaway Youth until 1999. In 1999 I retired
into academia picking up a couple of PhD’s at the University of
Minnesota and taking a position as a professor of child and youth
studies at Brock University and an adjunct position at the University of
Victoria.
How I came to be in this field
I had completed my B.A. in literature
vowing never to return to academia. Instead I joined a troupe of street
poets in Seattle called the Dogtown Poetry Theater. I worked blue collar
jobs and ended up working the canneries and fishing boats in Alaska.
When I returned to the lower 48 I had some money and decided to do some
volunteer work. Up the street there was this mental health clinic . . .
A favorite saying
Any real change implies the breakup of the world as one has
already known it. The loss of all that gave one identity,
the end of safety.
— James Baldwin
A few thoughts about child and youth care
- Good child and youth workers have a quality I have never experienced with anyone else – they are amazing
- This is a potentially revolutionary time for the field
- My wife is also a youth worker and whenever we see a young person who is visibly deviant we turn to each other and say, “one of ours”
- Celebrate Deviance and Transgression
- Fight all forms of Fascism and social control
Last thing I read, watched, heard, which I would recommend to
others
Poi Dog Pondering Simple Song. (I love the way the video shifts
the vocals to people on the street)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=twdA2XOhkHM
Tupac Ghetto Gospel (Speaks for itself)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IxR4AweLeXE
In My Language (A video I have written on—the power of alternate
language and perception)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JnylM1hI2jc
Bigger than Hip hop (This is a political hip hop video with serious
chops—written a bit on this one as well)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4jNyr6BJZuI
The chapter in Deleuze and Guattari’s Thousand Plateaus: Capitalism and
Schizophrenia “1730: Becoming-Intense,
Becoming-Animal, Becoming-Imperceptible...” I am working this one over
and over—so rich!
A favorite Child and Youth Care experience
I was working with a young man who terrified the staff with
wild shouting and biblically laced word salad. No one could seem to get
anywhere with him. We had a visiting consultant who we asked to work
with him. Much to our astonishment within five minutes of meeting our
young man they were having a polite and conventional conversation. I
watched very carefully and the next day in group when our young man went
off, I did exactly what the consultant had done. The young man paused
briefly in his tirade looked me directly in the face and said “you are
not him” and continued on. That young man taught me right then one of
the most important lessons I ever learned about Child and Youth Care work.
A few thoughts for those starting out
- Realize that the illusion of being in charge is in your way
- Watch the best workers, mimic them until your responses are automatic and then improvise
- There is only one person whose behavior you can change and that’s you
- Become a traitor to your race, your class, your sexuality and any other form of privilege granted you by your birth
- Keep becoming without a goal
- Make child and youth work a celebration of the force of life and creativity
- Be joyful without abandoning or avoiding the sorrow and pain of the work
- Give up your adulthood
A recommended child and youth care reading link
http://cyc-net.org/cyc-online/CYC-Online-july2010-garfatsitu2.html
My Favourite CYC-relevant reading
Forthcoming Book: Alan Pence and Jennifer White (Eds) Critical
Perspectives in Child and Youth Care: Working the Borders of Pedagogy,
Practice and Policy. Keep an eye out for this one. Truly a
groundbreaking collection of writings from a radical and postmodern
perspective on CYC.
A Writing of my own
Youth Subculture as Creative Force: Creating Spaces for Radical
Youth Work. U of Toronto Press.
Influences on my work:
My relationship with my kids and Kathleen; My Dad who said and lived
“First you take care of the people, then everything else”; Taoism,
Spinoza, Being a deviant youth, Jerry Rubin, Frank Zappa, Karl Marx,
John Coltrane, Gille Deleuze and a rich and complicated life
Anything else
Don’t try to make anything too simple or comprehensible too quickly,
when you do it ceases to be a miracle