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Category Archives: non-conforming
Francis Weller on Grief
“Grief is subversive, undermining the quiet agreement to behave and be in control of our emotions. It is an act of protest that declares our refusal to live numb and small. There is something feral about grief, something essentially outside … Continue reading →
Posted in creativity, cultural questions, Disconnection, emotions, empowerment, Francis Weller, gratitude, grief, loss, love, meaning, non-conforming, perception, political, power and powerlessness, presence, rewilding, vulnerability
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Tagged #resist, active principle, affordable counselling exeter, controlling emotions, counselling exeter, counsellor Exeter, counsellors Exeter, cultural attitudes to grieving, cultural numbing, dissent to cultural norms, extinction rebellion, feral grief, Francis Weller, gratitude and grief, gratitude practice, grief and aliveness, grief and gratitude, grief and life energy, grief and love, grief and wildness, grief for the world, grief for world, grieving process, life energy, love and grief, love as political, love as subversion, low cost counselling exeter, non compliance, non conforming, numbing, Palace Gate Counselling Service, Palace Gate Counselling Service Exeter, person centred counselling exeter, refusal to conform, refusing to conform, refusing to live small, soul aliveness, soul emotion, soul vitality, soul wisdom, subversive love, wilding, www.palacegatecounselling.org.uk
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Small Gods – Martin Shaw
http://drmartinshaw.com/essays/ Click on the link above for another powerful piece from Martin. Here’s a taste:- ‘Once upon a time there was a lonely hunter. One evening, returning to his hut over the snow, he saw smoke coming from his chimney. … Continue reading →
Posted in accountability, awakening, beauty, communication, community, consciousness, creativity, cultural questions, Disconnection, ecological issues, embodiment, encounter, grief, healing, immanence, interconnection & belonging, love, Martin Shaw, meaning, metaphor & dream, myth, natural world, non-conforming, paradigm shift, perception, physical being, poetry, political, presence, rewilding, surrender, transformation
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Tagged abundance, accountability, affordable counselling exeter, alienation, aliveness, ambiguity, ancestors, animism, anthropocentric stories, anthropocentrism, awareness of story, base line of anxiety, base line of relationship, beholding, being bereft, being broken, bone woman, bones of the tale, bush soul, capacity to devour, community, connection, consumerism, containing paradox, contemporary numbness, counselling exeter, counsellor Exeter, counsellors Exeter, crafting a story, cultural history, earth dreaming, earth intelligence, earth potency, earth resonances, earth speaking, earth speaking through myth, earth wisdom, edginess of allegory, edginess of myth, edginess of story, ego surrender, embodied intelligence, embodied story, ethic of service, fairy tales, fairy tales and the psyche, feeling better, finding true north, finding your way, folk tales, folk traditions, folk wisdom, giving voice, grieving, Grimms folktales, healing, heartfulness, hero myth, holistic intelligence, humility, individuation, initiation, initiatory experience, inner compass, interaction, interbeing, interconnection, inward compass, la loba, listening, living myth, local embedding, love and morality, low cost counselling exeter, magicians, Martin Shaw, meeting paradox, metaphor and emotional meaning, metaphor and psychology, modernity, mystery, myth and earth wisdom, myth and the psyche, myth as the earth speaking, myth of our times, myth of the wound, narrative for our times, need for wildness, new narrative, new story, numbing, old tales, oral culture, oral repetition, oral storytelling, oral tradition, orienting yourself, Otherworld, Palace Gate Counselling Service, Palace Gate Counselling Service Exeter, person centred counselling exeter, poetic intelligence, presence, privilege, purpose of myth, purpose of story, reconnecting with the earth, relatedness, relationship to the earth, relationship to the land, rewilding humans, rewilding narrative, rewilding story, rites of passage, sacredness, seduction of being broken, seduction of the wound, self initiate, sense of connection, sensual intelligence, shadow, silent retreat, small gods, snare of the wound, social mythology, stilling, stories have us, story for our times, storyteller’s apprenticeship, submission, surrender, true north, turning to myth, use of metaphor, use of myth, use of prophecy, vaster intelligence, vision quest, web of being, web of life, welcoming a story, where do stories come from, where we come from, wholeness, Wild Land Dreaming, wild mythology, wild nature, wilderness fasting, wilderness initiation, wilderness rites of passage, wildness, wisdom of the earth, wisdom of the land, wound as gift, wound as passage, wound as truth, www.palacegatecounselling.org.uk
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The biggest issue we face: #WorldMentalHealthDay – Monica Cassani
The biggest issue we face: #WorldMentalHealthDay Click on the above link to visit Monica’s site http://www.beyondmeds.com for this piece she published last week on ‘World Mental Health Day’. Her perspective and ours at this service have lots in common. Both … Continue reading →
Posted in actualizing tendency, anti-depressants, anti-psychotics, autonomy, consent, cultural questions, cultural taboos, Disconnection, empowerment, ethics, growth, healing, iatrogenic illness, internal locus of evaluation, Monica Cassani, non-conforming, objectification, paradigm shift, perception, power and powerlessness, psychiatric abuse, psychiatric drugs, psychiatry, shadow, transformation, trauma, violence
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Tagged affordable counselling exeter, alternative mental health care, alternative psychiatric care, attending to the body, authoritarianism as violence, authority as violence, authority over others is violence, autonomy, breaking down, breaking through, can madness save us, care for psychosis, Chris Cole, coercion in medicine, coercive mental health treatment, coercive paradigms, coercive psychiatry, collective caring, coming off psychiatric drugs, community mental health, counselling exeter, counsellor Exeter, counsellors Exeter, drug free recovery, emotional pain, everything matters, faith, finding a safe space, finding support, forced psychiatric treatment, forced treatment, having well being, healing journey, health and well-being, helping professions, holistic health, iatrogenic injury, improving well being, Jiddu Krishnamurti, learning to live well, loving the body, loving your body, low cost counselling exeter, medical adherence, medical compliance, medical model, medically induced injury, meditation, mental distress, mental health and eating, mental health system, mental health treatment, mental illness system, mental pain, mentally ill, Monica Cassani, needing a safe space, no measure of health, non compliance, non conformity, Open Dialogue, Palace Gate Counselling Service, Palace Gate Counselling Service Exeter, paying attention, peer support, person centred counselling exeter, personal agency, personal sovereignty, presence, pro choice in psychiatry, professional retraumatisation, professional retraumatization, providing sanctuary, psychiatric drug withdrawal, psychiatric harm, psychiatric labels, recovering and thriving, resistance to treatment as sign of health, retaining agency, Robert Whitaker, self care, self empowering, sick culture, sick society, state of mental health care, support in growth, support in healing, supporting others, supporting vulnerable people, systemic oppression, trauma, trusting your own process, using practice, vulnerability, well adjusted, wellness, withdrawal syndrome, www.beyondmeds.com, www.palacegatecounselling.org.uk
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Lessons in breast feeding & non-racism – Laeaurra Flamehawk
Lessons in breast feeding and a lack of racism go together in my memory. It might seem an odd pairing in an era where wet nurses are rare. But it was once a common sight in the South to see … Continue reading →
Posted in acceptance, beauty, child development, civil rights, community, cultural questions, diversity, education, encounter, equality, ethics, feminine, growing up, interconnection & belonging, love, non-conforming, parenting, perception, relationship, spirituality, wonder
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Tagged affordable counselling exeter, breast feeding, children of mixed marriages, community, counselling exeter, counsellor Exeter, counsellors Exeter, cultural diversity, diversity, encounter, growing up without racism, in it together, interconnection, interdependence, Laeaurra Flamehawk, low cost counselling exeter, Madonna and Child, Palace Gate Counselling Service, Palace Gate Counselling Service Exeter, person centred counselling exeter, racism, sacred feminine, sacred mother, shared humanity, sisters under the skin, universal mother, www.palacegatecounselling.org.uk
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The Touch of Madness – David Dobbs
https://psmag.com/magazine/the-touch-of-madness-mental-health-schizophrenia Click on the link above for this wonderful (lengthy – and well worth the time investment) piece. Nev’s perspective aligns with how we see ‘madness’ at this service. Thank you, David – and Nev. Also thanks to Jason Hine, … Continue reading →
Posted in anti-psychotics, civil rights, community, consciousness, cultural questions, cultural taboos, diagnoses of bipolar, Disconnection, diversity, empathy, empowerment, equality, ethics, external locus, friendship, healing, hearing voices, identity, interconnection & belonging, internal locus of evaluation, loneliness, loss, medical model, meditation, neuroscience, Nev Jones, non-conforming, organismic experiencing, perception, political, power and powerlessness, presence, psychiatric abuse, psychiatric drugs, psychiatry, psychosis, reality, sacred illness, schizophrenia, self, self concept, transformation, trauma, trust, violence, vulnerability
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Tagged . hopelessness and despair, abjection, affirmation and support, affordable counselling exeter, agitation, alienating, alienation, altered perception, altered reality, American Madness: The Rise and Fall of Dementia Praecox, antipsychotics, anxiety and depression, Art Munin, articulating experience, assimilating, auditory hallucination, auditory thoughts, Avery Goldman, Azadeh Erfani, base currency of cultural exchange, Batman shooter, batshit crazy, being an outcast, being forsaken, belittling, biocentric psychiatry, biocultural anthropology, biological approach to psychosis, biological approach to schizophrenia, biological psychiatry, biomedical model, biomedical model of madness, biomedical model of mental illness, biomedical psychiatry, bipolar disorder, bonds of friendship, borderless, broken brain, Camus, casting people away, changing our response to the mad, changing the culture, changing the world, changing thinking, changing thinking about mental health, chemical imbalance, chemical restraints, Cherise Rosen, circle of friends, circular model of culture, circular schema of cultural influence, clearing the mind, cognitive blips, cognitive dissonance, comparative psychiatry, Compendium der Psychiatrie, confusion, connection, consciousness, consensual reality, contradictory states, counselling exeter, counsellor Exeter, counsellors Exeter, Cracked, Crazy Like Us: The Globalization of the American Psyche, creating culture, critical psychiatry studies, cuckoo, cultural beliefs, cultural constructs, cultural constructs of madness, cultural constructs of responsibility, cultural constructs of sanity, cultural differences in schizophrenia, cultural framings, cultural interpretations, cultural invisibility, cultural microcosm, cultural patriarchy, cultural psychiatry, cultural stories, cultural symbols, cultural values, cultural war, culture and diversity, culture shapes madness, culture shapes the experience, culture's effect on schizophrenia, Daniel Lende, Daniel Paul Schreber, David Dobbs, demented, dementia praecox, depictions of madness, depictions of the mad, depression, depth perception, descent into madness, detachment from reality, deviation from norms, diagnosis of schizophrenia, diagnostic categories, diagnostic uncertainty, disappearance of self, disordered thinking, distortions in reality's fabric, divided between reality and delusion, dominant concepts, dominant ideas, dominant social structures, dominant values, Donald Winnicott, double bookkeeping, double registration, downward spiral, early intervention programs in schizophrenia, educational support for schizophrenia, Edward Sapir, EIP, Ekun zenni, Emil Kraepelin, emptiness, endangering self, engaging with the world, equating psychosis with violence, Erving Goffman, Ethan Watters, Eugen Bleuler, excluding language, exclusion, exclusion by definition, experiences of exile, experiences of madness, experiences of rejection, expression and culture, external locus, extreme experience, fabric of reality, familial subculture, family madness, Felicity Callard, felt sense, first care in schizophrenia, first episode psychosis response, forced hospitalisation, forced hospitalization, formlessness, going mad, hallucinations, harm reduction in schizophrenia, hearing voices, Hegel, Hesse, how madness develops, how we think of madness, how we treat the mad, impact of social exchange, inarticulable, inclusion, indigenous views of madness, indigenous views of mental illness, individual interactions and culture, influencing the culture around us, inhabitation of spirits, inner torments, institutionalised racism, institutionalized racism, intensity, internal locus, internalized culture, Irene Hurford, is schizophrenia curable, is schizophrenia permanent, is schizophrenia progressive, isolation, Jared Loughner, Kant, Kimwana, kinesthetics, koan, labeling people, labelling people, Lehrbuch der Psychiatrie, Lende's circular schema, Lived Experience, Lizzie Borden, Lola Dupré, loopy, loss of self, lost self, lostness, low cost counselling exeter, mad as a hatter, madness and slang, madness as transient, madness studies, magnificently intense, mansplaining, marginalisation, marginalising, marginalization, marginalizing, McCarthyism, medical model, medicalising madness, medicalizing madness, medicine branding, meditation, Memoirs of My Nervous Illness, memory blips, mental distress, mental fortifications, mental health activism, mental health advocacy, mental health care, Michel Foucault, mindfulness, models of behaviour, modernised culture, modernized culture, Mona Shattell, monoculture, Namita Goswami, nature of madness, nature of mental illness, neuroscience, Nev Jones, Nietzsche, normalising madness, normalising schizophrenia, normalizing madness, normalizing schizophrenia, Norman Bates, not knowing, not knowing what’s real, nutso, off one's box, Ophelia, order and chaos, ordering the disorderly, organisational racism, organizational racism, othering, othering language, our social world, outcasting the mad, outcome of madness, outsider, Pacific Standard, Palace Gate Counselling Service, Palace Gate Counselling Service Exeter, paranoia, patriarchal culture, Paul Eugen Bleuler, people with psychosis, perceptual anomalies, person centred counselling exeter, personal sphere of influence, personal subculture, phenomenology, philosophy and madness, physical restraints, pits of despair, Plato, precocious madness, predominant cultural ideas, psychiatric anthropology, psychiatric diagnosis, psychiatric hospitalisation, psychiatric hospitalization, psychiatric trauma, psycho, Psychosis, psychosis as passing phenomena, psychosis emerging, psychosis response, psychosis to wellness, psychotic episode, psychotic states, quieting the mind, Rasputin, reality perception, reforming mental health, reforming psychiatry, remoteness, resistance, resistance to solution, return of self, return to self, Richard Noll, Rick Lee, Roberta Payne, Ruminations on Madness, sacred illness, sanity and responsibility, Sartre, schizo, schizoaffective disorder, schizophrenia, schizophrenia and functionality, schizophrenia and neural decline, schizophrenia and psychosis, schizophrenia and trauma, schizophrenia intensity, schizophrenia is a brain illness, schizophrenia outcomes, schizophrenia prognosis, schizophrenia symptoms, schizotypal personality disorder, seeing psychosis and schizophrenia in a new way, self harm, self identifying as mentally ill, self observation, self perception, self stigma, self-consciousness, sense of exposure, sense of falling, sense of identity, separation, shamanic interpretation of schizophrenia, ShekharSaxena, shunning, sick culture, sitting in meditation, social exclusion, social inclusion, social isolation and schizophrenia, social norms and non conforming, social support for schizophrenia, socio economic context for depression, socio economic context for mental illness, socio economic factors in depression, socio economic factors in mental illness, spatiality, Speaking to My Madness, split mind, squashing diversity, standard response to first episodes of psychosis, Steven Kazmierczak, Stigma: Notes on the Management of Spoiled Identity, stranger to human nature, subjectivity, support networks and schizophrenia, synthesis, synthesizing intelligence, Tanya Luhrmann, temporality, terminal cancer of mental health, Tina Chanter, Touch of Madness, transcultural psychiatry, transformation, transforming first response to psychosis, trauma of hospitalisation, trauma of hospitalization, true locus of culture, U.S. mental health care, unhelpful help, unhinged, unmoored, unreachable, untouchables, Vaughan Bell, violent culture, violent fantasies, Virginia Woolf, visceral experience, voiceless, voicelessness, web of life, western culture, Western misperceptions about schizophrenia, Western views of schizophrenia, what is culture, what it means to be insane, what madness looks like, where culture disintegrates, witch hunt, Wolfgang Jilek, Wolfgang Pfeiffer, www.palacegatecounselling.org.uk, zenni
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Howard Thurman on the sound of the genuine within
“There is something in every one of you that waits and listens for the sound of the genuine in yourself. It is the only true guide you will ever have. And if you cannot hear it, you will all of … Continue reading →
Posted in autonomy, conditions of worth, congruence, consciousness, Disconnection, empowerment, external locus, identity, internal locus of evaluation, non-conforming, organismic experiencing, power and powerlessness, presence, self, self concept, trust
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Tagged affordable counselling exeter, authenticity, autonomy, being your own person, congruence, counselling exeter, counsellor Exeter, counsellors Exeter, empowerment, existential meaning, experiential truth, external authority, external locus, hearing yourself, Howard Thurman, identity, inner locus, internal locus, introjections, inward locus, listening to yourself, living your truth, low cost counselling exeter, non conforming, organismic, Palace Gate Counselling Service, Palace Gate Counselling Service Exeter, person centred counselling exeter, powerlessness, presence, self construct, self empathy, self empowering, self listening, self trust, self-structure, sound of the genuine, true to self, true to yourself, walking your own path, www.palacegatecounselling.org.uk
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John O’Donohue on The Call To Live Everything
John O’Donohue on diving into our wild depths of aliveness, and not settling. Here’s the text for those who have difficulty seeing Facebook links:- ‘THE CALL TO LIVE EVERYTHING One of the sad things today is that so many people … Continue reading →
Posted in actualizing tendency, awakening, consciousness, creativity, cultural questions, Disconnection, dying, embodiment, empowerment, fear, flow, identity, immanence, internal locus of evaluation, meaning, mindfulness, natural world, non-conforming, organismic experiencing, perception, physical being, presence, rewilding, risk, self, self concept, vulnerability, wonder
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Tagged actualising, actualizing, affordable counselling exeter, aliveness, awakening, awakening your mind, being present, call to live, call to live everything, compromising, conscious living, counselling exeter, counsellor Exeter, counsellors Exeter, death is waiting, engaging with life, existential meaning, feeling alive, heart open, human being fully alive, human person fully alive, identity, John O'Donohue, living before we die, living before you die, living energy, living fully, low cost counselling exeter, meaning of life, mindfulness, mortality, not living, opening up, Palace Gate Counselling Service, Palace Gate Counselling Service Exeter, passion, perception, person centred counselling exeter, personal development, personal growth, possibility, repression, reverence, sacredness, seeing differently, seeking safety, self concept, self-structure, settling, spirituality, story-telling, suppression, transience, unlived life, Walking on the Pastures of Wonder, wanting safety, wanting to be safe, what is sin, wild energy, wild self, wild soul, wildness, www.JohnODonohue.com, www.palacegatecounselling.org.uk
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Ahmad Joudeh on being a Syrian dancer
Inspiring, sad and lovely. Palace Gate Counselling Service, Exeter Counselling in Exeter since 1994
Posted in civil rights, conflict, creativity, cultural questions, cultural taboos, Dance, embodiment, empowerment, flow, Gender & culture, gender identity, identity, internal locus of evaluation, masculine, movement meditation, non-conforming, physical being, political, resilience, risk, self, trauma, violence
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Tagged affordable counselling exeter, Ahmad Joudeh, coercion, counselling exeter, counsellor Exeter, counsellors Exeter, dance as freedom, dance as political, embodiment, external locus, follow your bliss, follow your dream, follow your passion, following your dream, gender and culture, gender identity, internal locus, low cost counselling exeter, Movement Medicine, non conforming, oppression, Palace Gate Counselling Service, Palace Gate Counselling Service Exeter, person centred counselling exeter, post traumatic stress, PTS, trauma response, www.palacegatecounselling.org.uk
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‘Giving up alcohol opened my eyes to the infuriating truth about why women drink’ Kristi Coulter
Giving up alcohol opened my eyes to the infuriating truth about why women drink Click on the above link to visit Quartz Media’s site, for Kristi’s great piece about women, alcohol and our culture. This is from a U.S. perspective … Continue reading →
Posted in abuse, acceptance, advertising, anger, autonomy, awakening, boundaries, compulsive behaviour, conditions of worth, consciousness, cultural questions, dependence, Disconnection, embodiment, equality, external locus, feminine, Gender & culture, gender identity, guilt, identity, interconnection & belonging, internal locus of evaluation, mindfulness, non-conforming, objectification, organismic experiencing, perception, physical being, political, power and powerlessness, presence, reality, sadness & pain, self, self concept, self esteem, shadow, shame, shaming, trust
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Tagged acceptance, accepting the unacceptable, addiction, addictive behaviour, affordable counselling exeter, altering natural responses, anger as energy, avoiding change, beer yoga, being a woman, being everything, being ignored, being interrupted, being shamed, being underestimated, being undermined, being who you are, belonging, body consciousness, body image, camouflage, compulsion, compulsive behaviour, conditioning, conditions of worth, conforming, conformity, conscious living, consciousness, controlling women’s bodies, counselling exeter, counsellor Exeter, counsellors Exeter, cultural conditioning, cultural disembodiment, cultural pathology, cultural sickness, cultural trauma, dealing with bigotry, dealing with discrimination, dealing with prejudice, disconnecting, disconnecting from emotion, disconnecting from experiencing, disconnecting from feelings, disconnection, disembodied, displacement behaviour, dissociating, doing everything, drink as signifier, drivers, enjoying, enjoyment, equality, escaping reality, experiencing bigotry, experiencing discrimination, experiencing prejudice, facing reality, fairness, faking it, feminine conditioning, feminine role models, feminism, finding enjoyment, finding well being, First World Problems, First World woman, free time, gender oppression, gender privilege, generating well being, intolerable reality, invisibility, it’s not fair, Jiddu Krishnamurti, judginess, judging others, lack of equality, low cost counselling exeter, mansplaining, maternity leave, Matrix, micro aggressions, mindful savoring, mindful savouring, mindfulness, minimising, minimizing, misogyny, need for a drink, needing a drink, no acceptable way to be a woman, no easy way to be a woman, non conforming, non conformity, not knowing, numbing, numbing natural responses, objectification, objectifying, oppression, organismic, overriding yourself, Palace Gate Counselling Service, Palace Gate Counselling Service Exeter, paradigm shift, patriarchal attitudes, patriarchal oppression, patriarchy, peer pressure, perfection driver, perfectionism, person centred counselling exeter, person-centered, person-centred, Planned Parenthood, purpose of anger, sacred feminine, scarcity of role models, self acceptance, self care, self hatred, self love, self medicating, self rejection, self soothing, self trust, self-loathing, shame, shaming, shaming women, shrinking from reality, sick culture, sick society, sobriety, softening reality, softening the edges, supporting mothers, supporting women, systemic depletion, systemic exhaustion, telling women to smile, toughness, trusting natural responses, trusting who you are, trusting yourself, trying driver, using anger, Vinyasa & Vino, well-being, wetiko, Wetiko Capitalism, wetiko psychosis, Wetikonomy, women drinking, www.palacegatecounselling.org.uk
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Do Psychiatrists Harm their Patients out of Stupidity? Michael Cornwall
https://www.madinamerica.com/2017/06/do-psychiatrists-harm-patients-out-of-stupidity/ Click on the above link to visit http://www.madinamerica.com for this accurate, perceptive piece by Michael about the ‘disease model’ of psychiatry, which lacks both an evidence base and humanity, and challenges basic common sense. Michael is writing in the … Continue reading →
Posted in abuse, accountability, anti-depressants, anti-psychotics, borderline personality disorder, civil rights, client as 'expert', clients' perspective, cognitive, communication, compulsive behaviour, conditions of worth, consent, cultural questions, cultural taboos, dependence, diagnoses of bipolar, Disconnection, DSM, emotions, empathy, ethics, external locus, healing, hearing voices, Mad in America, medical model, non-conforming, objectification, Palace Gate Counselling Service, perception, political, power and powerlessness, psychiatric abuse, psychiatric drugs, psychiatry, psychosis, RD Laing, reality, sadness & pain, scapegoating, schizophrenia, self concept, suicide, trauma, violence, vulnerability, working with clients
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Tagged Abraham Maslow, abuse of power in psychiatry, affordable counselling exeter, alienation, An Alternative Understanding of The Nature of Madness, archetypal, Are Some Psychiatrists Addicted to Deference, arrogance, Big Pharma and psychiatry, blindly embracing stupidity, broadening perspective, Carl Jung, challenging authority, challenging dissent, challenging ideas, challenging psychiatry, clinical detachment, clinically detached, closed system thinking, cognitive dissonance theory, constraints of the disease model theory, counselling exeter, counsellor Exeter, counsellors Exeter, creating distorted reality, creating self serving narratives, cultic echo chamber of convention, cultural alienation, cultural pressure to conform, cultural trauma, cultural traumatisation, cultural traumatization, culturally accepted range of emotional experiences and expression, culturally permissible range of emotional experiences and expression, curious specimens, Daniel Fisher, death rate of psychiatric patients, demystification, demystifying, Diabasis House, diagnostic labeling, diagnostic labelling, diagnostic labels, disease model of mental illness, disease model theory, disempowering psychiatry, dissident psychiatrists, distorting reality, DSM based funding, ECT, emotional distancing, emotional distress, emotional experience, emotional expression, emotional suffering, emotionally distance, Emperor’s New Clothes, extreme emotional states, extreme experiences, extreme psychological states, extreme states, failed disease model of mental illness, failed theory and practice of psychiatry, first do no harm, forced conformity, forced psychiatric treatment, forced treatment legislation, fundamentalist belief systems, gods have become diseases, harmful psychiatric interventions, heart centered approach, hegemony, hegemony of psychiatric belief system, hegemony of psychiatric power structure, helping people in extreme states, Hippocratic Oath, honoring the sacred, honouring the sacred, hubris of psychiatrists, human rights abuses in psychiatry, humane approaches to helping people, humanistic approach, identity degradation, If Madness isn’t what Psychiatry says, including spiritual experience, injured by psychiatry, invisibility of person in psychiatry, John Weir Perry, lack of compassion, lack of empathy, lack of psychiatric evidence base, legitimising, legitimizing, lifelong psychiatric conditions, logical fallacies, logical fallacy, Loren Mosher, low cost counselling exeter, low tolerance of challenge, marginalising dissent, marginalizing dissent, medicating children, medicating teens, medicating vulnerable seniors, mental health and life expectancy, Michael Cornwall, modern industrial society and alienation, modern industrial society and trauma, mystical, mythic dimensions, non pathologising approach, non pathologizing approach, oppression in psychiatry, ostracising dissent, ostracizing dissent, Palace Gate Counselling Service, Palace Gate Counselling Service Exeter, perceiving challenge as impertinence, perceiving challenge as threat, person centred counselling exeter, Peter Breggin, politics of oppression, power imbalance, protest against psychiatry, psychiatric belief system, psychiatric collective, psychiatric conditioning, psychiatric dehumanisation, psychiatric disease model, psychiatric human rights abuses, psychiatric indoctrination, psychiatric labeling, psychiatric labelling, psychiatric labels, psychiatric objectification, psychiatry as logical fallacy, psychiatry killing hope, psychic, psychosurgery, questioning authority, range of emotional experiences and expression, reductive psychiatry, relieving emotional discomfort, sacred experience, sacred manifestations, sacredness, schizophrenia, seeking deference, seeking power, self concept, self serving legitimacy, self-structure, shamanic, so called mental illness, Soteria House, soul, toxic economic factors, toxic social factors, Transpersonal, trauma responses, unquestioning conformity, what is madness, www.madinamerica.com, www.palacegatecounselling.org.uk
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