The digital home of Welsh culture.

Tocynnau/Tickets: How To Be Well In A World That Is Sick? | Sut i Fod Yn Iach Mewn Byd Sydd Yn Sâl?

Theatre

How To Be Well In A World That Is Sick?
Devised, Written and Performed by Bethan Dear
Music composed by Gwilym Morus-Baird
Projected image by Heledd Wyn

Thursday 28th April @ 2:30pm

TICKETS AVAILABLE NOW: HERE


TRIGGER WARNING:

Some of the content of this show may be distressing, uncomfortable and or triggering. Please be aware there is reference to sexual and domestic violence, depression, flash backs, suicide, PTSD, trauma, and other mental health struggles. If you want more specific information, please get in touch and ask us.

If you need further support in relation to any of these issues, there is help and supportive information available at the following places: –


www.newpathways.org.uk
by phone on 01685 379 310
Live Fear Free Helpline 0808 8010 800 (for sufferers of domestic and sexual abuse in Wales)

www.samaritans.org
by phone on 08457 90 90 90

www.mentalhealth.org.uk

Western Society. A patriarchal, image obsessed, capitalist, consumer-machine.
Gender based sexual violence. A global sickness. A worldwide epidemic.

How can we be well, when the over-culture conditioning has seeped into our very skin?

How can we recover and heal, when our social norms go against what we all truly need?

Where is the space to take our pain, our grief, our trauma, our rage?
Where can we speak, wail, shout, cry, be heard, held and validated?

Stark, beautiful, visceral, hopeful and bold; Bethan shares her story.
Drawing on her own lived experiences of trying to heal deep trauma.

She combines film projection, movement, clown and spoken word.
Exploring the long term impacts of sexual and domestic violence.

A story of falling down, deep into the darkness.
Of getting lost, stuck and trapped, in the past.

A story of getting back up again, and finding the light.
Of beginning again. And again. Many. Times. Over.

AGE GUIDANCE: 18+ due to full frontal nudity, explicit language content and references to violence and mental health struggle

RUNNING TIME: 1hour 45 minutes – no interval

SHARE