Dramatherapy's mechanisms of change are poorly understood, which undermines its recognition as a legitimate therapy. This paper offers an enactivism-congruent, affordance-based account of dramatherapy, arguing that the mind is not brain-centered but situated within a dynamic system of body, environment, and interaction. The author suggests that disabled or differently abled clients may benefit more from such psychotherapies because they adopt a holistic outlook rather than a brain-centered approach.
Pleasure from eating a Kinder Bueno can redirect attention away from discontent by using the candy's nonconceptual sensory content to generate conscious perceptual experiences. Drawing on Anglo-Saxon and continental phenomenology, the analysis shows how affordances and impoverished sensory content influence sub-doxastic processes, shifting focus from negative feelings toward the enjoyment of tasting and consuming the chocolate bar.