-
Archives
- October 2019
- March 2019
- February 2019
- January 2019
- December 2018
- November 2018
- October 2018
- September 2018
- August 2018
- July 2018
- June 2018
- May 2018
- April 2018
- March 2018
- February 2018
- January 2018
- December 2017
- November 2017
- October 2017
- September 2017
- August 2017
- July 2017
- June 2017
- May 2017
- April 2017
- March 2017
- February 2017
- January 2017
- December 2016
- November 2016
- October 2016
- September 2016
- August 2016
- July 2016
- June 2016
- May 2016
- April 2016
- March 2016
- February 2016
- January 2016
- December 2015
- November 2015
- October 2015
- September 2015
- August 2015
- July 2015
- June 2015
- May 2015
- April 2015
- March 2015
- February 2015
- January 2015
- December 2014
- November 2014
- October 2014
- September 2014
- August 2014
- July 2014
- June 2014
- May 2014
- April 2014
- March 2014
- February 2014
- January 2014
- December 2013
- November 2013
- October 2013
-
Meta
Tag Archives: depression
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
|
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
|
Leave a comment
Mirabai Starr on our unhappiness
“I think that much of our depression, anxiety, and addiction has to do with what John writes about: the soul’s need and longing for transcendence. This need is instinctual and unavoidable.” Mirabai Starr – Dark Night of the Soul Here’s … Continue reading →
Posted in actualizing tendency, awakening, compulsive behaviour, Disconnection, meaning, Mirabai Starr, psychiatry, sadness & pain, spirituality
|
Tagged addiction, addictive behaviour, affordable counselling exeter, alienation, anxiety, counselling exeter, counsellor Exeter, counsellors Exeter, dark night of the soul, depression, disconnection, existential meaning, low cost counselling exeter, Mirabai Starr, Palace Gate Counselling Service, Palace Gate Counselling Service Exeter, person centred counselling exeter, search for meaning, spiritual meaning, spirituality, transcendence, www.palacegatecounselling.org.uk
|
Leave a comment
What Chester Bennington’s death tells us about mental health awareness
https://doctorgoatblog.wordpress.com/2017/07/22/what-chester-benningtons-death-tells-us-about-mental-health-awareness/ Click on the link above for this wise, heartful post by an anonymous blogger who identifies as Dr Goat. This expresses much of how we make sense of human distress at this service. There is (for example) no evidence … Continue reading →
Posted in anti-depressants, anti-psychotics, borderline personality disorder, CBT, childhood abuse, community, cultural questions, cultural taboos, diagnoses of bipolar, Disconnection, DSM, emotions, empowerment, ethics, external locus, healing, hearing voices, interconnection & belonging, medical model, non-directive counselling, Palace Gate Counselling Service, paradigm shift, perception, political, psychiatric abuse, psychiatric drugs, psychiatry, psychosis, relationship, sadness & pain, schizophrenia, self concept, self esteem, shame, shaming, therapeutic growth, therapeutic relationship, trauma, values & principles, violence, vulnerability, working with clients
|
Tagged 1 in 4, accessing support, accumulated distress, ACES, addiction, addressing past trauma, Adverse Childhood Exeperiences, adverse circumstances, adverse events, affordable counselling exeter, anxiety, anxiety and depression, art and trauma, being functional, bereaved by suicide, Big Phama, biomedical intervention, biomedical reductionism, building community, bullying, CBT, CBT as temporary fix, changing behaviour without addressing causes, chemical imbalance theory, Chester Bennington, childhood trauma, cognitive behavioural therapy, collective responsibility to each other, continuing adversity, counselling exeter, counsellor Exeter, counsellors Exeter, coward’s way out, cuts to health and social care, dealing with abuse, dealing with neglect, dealing with violence, death by suicide, depression, depression as brain disorder, depression as disease, depression as illness, do mental health problems go away, DSM5, economic productivity as measure of worth, effect of bereavement, effect of trauma on health, effect of trauma on well being, emotional states, empathy, enhancing community, enhancing mental health, enhancing relationship, enhancing well being, equating medical with valid, expanded diagnostic criteria, expanding diagnostic criteria, expressing grief, expressing sadness, expressing sorrow, feeling ashamed, feeling embarrassed, feeling shame, fight flight freeze, grief process, grieving process, impact of bereavement, impact of trauma, impact of traumatic experience, individual pathology, interbeing, interconnection, interdependence, invalidating distress, judgemental, Linkin Park, loneliness, long term recovery, low cost counselling exeter, manifestations of mental distress, medical pathology, medical validation of distress, medicalisation of distress, medicalisation of emotion, medicalisation of feeling, medicalisation of human experience, medicalisation of sadness, medicalization of distress, medicalization of emotion, medicalization of feeling, medicalization of human experience, medicalization of sadness, mental distress, mental health awareness, mental health problems, mental health recovery, mental health stigma, mental health support, natural human reactions, need for recovery time, need for rest, need for time to adjust, normal emotions, not functioning, ongoing adversity, over medicalisation, Palace Gate Counselling Service, Palace Gate Counselling Service Exeter, parity of esteem, past trauma, person centred counselling exeter, person’s context, post traumatic stress, promoting mental health, promoting well being, psychiatric reductionism, public grief, pull yourself together, reactions to suicide, reductionism in biomedical model, relationship breakdown, relationship failure, responding to distress, sexual abuse, shame, social causes of mental distress, social causes of mental health problems, suicide is selfish, suicide narrative, underlying issues, understanding mental health, unresolved distress, vulnerability, whole person, www.palacegatecounselling.org.uk
|
1 Comment
‘Is mental illness real?’ Jay Watts
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2017/apr/12/is-mental-illness-real-google-answer?CMP=share_btn_tw Click on the above link for this interesting and important piece in the Guardian’s ‘Comment is free’ section, showing how these perceptions are gradually making it into the mainstream media…which is encouraging. For the writer, Jay still speaks in … Continue reading →
Posted in anti-depressants, anti-psychotics, autonomy, bullying, civil rights, compassion, cultural questions, diagnoses of bipolar, emotions, empathy, equality, ethics, external locus, family systems, generational trauma, healing, hearing voices, internal locus of evaluation, kindness & compassion, medical model, paradigm shift, perception, political, power, power and powerlessness, psychiatric abuse, psychiatric drugs, psychiatry, psychosis, research evidence, risk, sadness & pain, schizophrenia, shadow, trauma, violence, vulnerability
|
Tagged adverse childhood events, adverse childhood experience, Adverse Childhood Experience studies, adverse social conditions, affordable counselling exeter, alienation, anxiety, biased research outcomes in mental health, biased research outcomes in psychiatry, Big Pharma, biomedical intervention, biomedical model, biomedical reductionism, bipolar affective disorder, bullying, chemical imbalance myth, childhood adversity, childhood adversity and mental health, childhood experience, childhood sexual abuse, childhood trauma, cognitive dissonance, competitive culture, conceptualising distress as an illness, conceptualizing distress as an illness, counselling exeter, counsellor Exeter, counsellors Exeter, CSA, dangers of antipsychotics, denying people’s truth, depression, disease and disorder model, displacement, distress and inflammation, distress and trauma, early separation, embodied response, emotional abuse, emotional neglect, environmental causes of distress, family interventions, family systems, hyper alert, hyper vigilance, inner world, invalidation, Is mental illness real, Jay Watts, just like any other illness narrative, Lived Experience, low cost counselling exeter, making sense of human suffering, making sense of suffering, medical reductionism, medicalisation of distress, medicalisation of emotion, medicalisation of feeling, medicalisation of human experience, medicalisation of sadness, medicalising childhood, medicalising distress, medicalization, medicalization of distress, medicalization of emotion, medicalization of feeling, medicalization of human experience, medicalization of sadness, medicalizing childhood, medicalizing distress, mental health, mental health constructs, mental health policy, mental health stigma, mental illness, mental illness constructs, neurobiological paradigm, over prescription of psychotropic drugs, overprescription of antidepressants, Palace Gate Counselling Service, Palace Gate Counselling Service Exeter, paradigm shift, patriarchal model, patriarchy, person centred counselling exeter, person-centered, person-centred, pharmaceutical industry, physical abuse, politics of oppression, power relationships, privileging the biological, psychiatric model, psychiatric reductionism, psychosocial model, Recovery in the Bin, reductionism, reductionism in biomedical model, reductionism in psychiatry, reductive neurobiological paradigm, reductive paradigm, schizophrenia, scientific reductionism, separation, serotonin imbalance myth, sexual abuse in childhood, social effects of inequality, social effects of poverty, social exclusion, social factors in human distress, social inequalities, social norms, social problems, structural inequalities, structural oppressions, talking about mental health, toxic families, toxic injustice, toxic stress, unconscious bias, unequal power relationships, us and them, vulnerability, working with borderline, working with BPD, working with psychosis, working with schizophrenia, www.palacegatecounselling.org.uk
|
Leave a comment
The Election: Of Hate, Grief, and a New Story – Charles Eisenstein
The Election: Of Hate, Grief, and a New Story Click on the link to visit Charles’ website and read this essay. In the writer’s view, Charles is one of the visionaries and big thinkers of our time, because he speaks … Continue reading →
Posted in 'evil', accountability, anger, awakening, blaming, Charles Eisenstein, civil rights, compassion, conflict, congruence, core conditions, creativity, cultural questions, Disconnection, ecological, ecological issues, empathy, empowerment, ethics, fear, grief, healing, interconnection & belonging, kindness & compassion, love, non-conforming, paradigm shift, political, power and powerlessness, sadness & pain, shadow, transformation, trauma, violence
|
Tagged Abhi Ryan, acting out hate, acute trauma, addiction, affordable counselling exeter, age of possibility, alienation, all in this together, alternative, animating force, assigning fault, authenticity, backlash, belittling, bigotry, blame model, blame narrative, blame the racists, blaming, broken society, broken system, brokenness, call of hate, call to action, caricatures of evil, Charles Eisenstein, childhood freedom, civil disobedience, civil disorder, climate change, closing overseas military bases, collapse of containing systems, collapse of dominant institutions, compassion, compassionate inquiry, concentration camps, connection with nature, consciousness shift, constructed reality, containing systems, counselling exeter, counsellor Exeter, counsellors Exeter, creative engagement, criminal punishment, cultural collapse, cultural constructs, cultural deterioration, cultural institutions, cultural self harm, culture defining story, custodians of the story, cynicism, DAPL, dark side, deep community, deep state, dehumanising, dehumanization, dehumanizing, dehumanizing ideology, deplorables, depression, derision, disconnection, disintegration, displaced anger, disputing the blame narrative, dissolution of old order, Donald Trump, Donald Trump’s appeal, dying paradigm, dying story, ecocidal system, ecocide, ecological crisis, ecological deterioration, economic crisis, elite policy consensus, empathy, empowering, empowerment, engagement, entrenched systems, environmental crisis, environmental deterioration, environmental harm, essence of racism, evangelizing compassion, existential meaning, false progress, faux progressive feminism, fragmentation, free trade ideology, global finance capital, good evil demarcation, growth imperative, hate and blame, hate and pain, hate as bodyguard for grief, hate vortex, holistic, human degradation, identifying fault, imperative of growth, imperative of progress, imperial wars, injustice, intensifying disorder, interbeing, intimate connection with nature, Islamophobia, Kelly Brogan, kingdom of childhood, labelling, lashing out, letting go of illusions, LGBTQ rights, liberal media, living in a bubble, lost normality, love and fear, low cost counselling exeter, making meaning, marginal practices, marginal structures, meditation, military confrontation, military industrial complex, mirror image, misogyny, motivating emotions, neocon, neoliberal economics, new paradigm, new story, normality, nuclear weapons expansion, objectifying, old paradigm, old story, one earth, one people, one tribe, oppressive system, othering, Palace Gate Counselling Service, Palace Gate Counselling Service Exeter, Pancho Ramos Stierle, paradigm shift, passivity, person centred counselling exeter, poison pill, political hate, political ideology, political uncertainty, prayers, preconditions for war, prison industrial complex, privilege, privileged classes, programming ideologies, propaganda, racism, regenerative, repudiation of elite, repudiation of establishment, resource extraction, restorative, restorative justice, rewriting political vocabulary, roots of racism, Sarah Fields, self harming, sense of betrayal, sexism, shibboleths, shift in consciousness, social change, social conservatism, social constructs, social harm, solidarity, sourcing from empathy, space between stories, spiritual retreats, surveillance state, sweetening the pill, time of uncertainty, totalitarian, trauma responses, true unknowing, unconditional love, unknowing, us and them, us versus them, victim blaming, water protectors, when normal falls apart, white privilege, world dominating machine, world falling apart, wound of separation, www.palacegatecounselling.org.uk
|
Leave a comment
Seeking Sanctuary in Our Own Sacred Spaces – Parker J. Palmer
http://www.onbeing.org/blog/parker-palmer-seeking-sanctuary-in-our-own-sacred-spaces/8928 Click on the link to visit http://www.onbeing.org for this wonderful piece by Parker J Palmer on the importance of creating sanctuary in our lives, to support our doing what we can to survive in – and challenge – the … Continue reading →
Posted in acceptance, consciousness, core conditions, creativity, cultural questions, emotions, empowerment, encounter, fear, growth, healing, interconnection & belonging, internal locus of evaluation, loneliness, meaning, meditation, mindfulness, natural world, organismic experiencing, Parker J Palmer, power and powerlessness, presence, resilience, sadness & pain, spirituality, surrender, sustainability, vulnerability
|
Tagged activism, activism and overwork, affordable counselling exeter, becoming desensitised, becoming desensitized, being controlled, Bloody Sunday, Brown Chapel, bunker mentality, burn out, Carrie Newcomer, church attendance, civil rights movements, compulsory church attendance, Congressional Civil Rights Pilgrimage, consumerism, counselling exeter, counsellor Exeter, counsellors Exeter, cultural violence, culture of violence, dealing with threat, depression, desensitisation, desensitization, disciplines of nonviolence, disregarding our needs, distracting, Edmund Pettus Bridge, escapism, excessive working, feeling controlled, finding safe space, fragile mental state, healing relationship, healing wounds, homophobia, human needs, idealism, inner wisdom, John Lewis, learning to pray, living non violently, low cost counselling exeter, making the world a better place, moral witness, mosh pit, natural world as sacred, non violence, normalising, normalizing, nurturing relationship, On Being, over committing, over extending, overriding our needs, Palace Gate Counselling Service, Palace Gate Counselling Service Exeter, paranoia, Parker J Palmer, Parker Palmer, person centred counselling exeter, power of friendship, practice of non violence, practice of solitude, prayer, praying, racism, reclaiming your soul, retreat from the world, returning to the world, root of inner wisdom, sacred space, sacred to the soul, sacredness, sacredness of nature, safe space, sanctuary, seeking sanctuary, self awareness, self care, self isolation, self love, self nurture, sensitivity, shared silence, shelter from the storm, siege mentality, solitude, spiritual survival, The Beautiful Not Yet, Thomas Merton, threat response, tribalism, violence of activism and overwork, violent culture, what is depression, William Wordsworth, wounded healer, www.palacegatecounselling.org.uk
|
Leave a comment
Diane Ackerman on the Great Mystery
‘It began in mystery, and it will end in mystery. However many of life’s large, captivating principles and small, captivating details we may explore, unpuzzle, and learn by heart, there will still be vast unknown realms to lure us. If … Continue reading →
Posted in beauty, consciousness, creativity, Diane Ackerman, human condition, meaning, perception, presence, risk
|
Tagged affordable counselling exeter, aliveness, being in love with life, binary thinking, counselling exeter, counsellor Exeter, counsellors Exeter, depression, Diane Ackerman, emotional flatness, emotional risks, engaging in life, existential meaning, flatness, Great Mystery, linear thinking, loving life, low cost counselling exeter, mystery of life, not knowing, Palace Gate Counselling Service, Palace Gate Counselling Service Exeter, person centred counselling exeter, risks of being alive, Robert Louis Stevenson, taking risks, uncertainty, www.palacegatecounselling.org.uk, zest for life
|
Leave a comment
Toko-pa – The Sacred Descent
The Sacred Descent Click on the link to visit Toko-pa’s site for this brief reflection on allowing ourselves to drop down into our own darkness from a place of intention (rather than powerlessness):- ‘There in the underworld of grief, loss … Continue reading →
Posted in acceptance, awakening, compassion, conditions of worth, consciousness, core conditions, creativity, cultural questions, cultural taboos, encounter, grief, loss, love, meaning, metaphor & dream, power and powerlessness, presence, risk, sadness & pain, self, self concept, shadow, spirituality, surrender, Toko-pa, transformation, trust, vulnerability, working with clients
|
Tagged acknowledging darkness, acknowledging shadow, affordable counselling exeter, aliveness, awakening, being stuck, consciousness, counselling exeter, counsellor Exeter, counsellors Exeter, counter intuitive, courting the mystery, creativity, darkness, depression, dream interpretation, dreaming, dreams, dreamwork, Enkel Dika, existential meaning, exploring your darkness, feeling stuck, going within, grief, grief and loss, grief process, honoring darkness, honoring shadow, honouring darkness, honouring shadow, importance of grieving, initiation, inner darkness, inner journey, intuition, inward journey, isolation, journey to the lower world, journey to the underworld, letting go, loneliness, looking within, low cost counselling exeter, meeting yourself, mystery, Palace Gate Counselling Service, Palace Gate Counselling Service Exeter, person centred counselling exeter, redemption, reflective process, sacred descent, sacredness, self awareness, self love, self reflection, sensitivity, shadow, shadow work, stuckness, suffering and redemption, surrender, tenderness, Toko-pa, transformation, wisdom, www.palacegatecounselling.org.uk, yin
|
Leave a comment
‘The Death Mother’ Toko-pa
The Death Mother Click on the link for this interesting and profound book review from Toko-pa – containing several useful links – on the archetype and meanings of the Death Mother:- ‘If you were the child of a mother crippled by her own … Continue reading →
Posted in body psychotherapy, child development, childhood abuse, compulsive behaviour, conditions of worth, consciousness, creativity, cultural questions, Disconnection, dying, Eating, embodiment, emotions, fear, growth, healing, identity, loneliness, metaphor & dream, perception, physical being, power and powerlessness, self, self concept, self esteem, shadow, sleep, suicide, Toko-pa, trauma, vulnerability
|
Tagged abandoning ourselves, abandoning yourself, abandonment, aliveness, ambiguity, archetype, assertion, authentic experience, authentic feelings, authenticity, auto-immune diseases, awareness, beauty, being unseen, belittling of the feminine, belonging, Bud Harris, child development, chronic fatigue, chronic pain, collapse, confusion, consciousness, cultural collective, cultural shadow, cultural wound, cultural wounding, Daniela Sieff, death, Death Mother, denigration, depression, devaluation, devaluation of feminine, disapproval, disconnection, disconnection from body, disembodied, disembodiment, dreaming, dreams, dreams and metaphor, dreamwork, earth mother, eating disorders, emotional heritage, emotional paralysis, emotional trauma, engaging with our dreams, expression, fear and overwhelm, fear of abandonment, fear of masculine, fear of men, feminine fear, feminine mistrust, feminine values, feminine wound, finding your voice, grief, grief process, grieving process, growth, healing trauma, inertia, inner valuation, internalised belief, Into the Heart of the Feminine, invalidation, Jungian analysis, longing for death, longing for oblivion, low self esteem, Marion Woodman, Massimilla Harris, Medusa myth, motherhood, mothering, myth, myth and symbol, needing support, order from chaos, out of awareness, overwhelm, overwhelming, paradox, paralysing energy, paralysis, personal shadow, physical expressions of loss of inner valuation, psyche, rejection, repulsion, sacred feminine, Self, self care, self concept, self harm, self neglect, self-abdication, self-structure, shadow, something is wrong with me, suicide, symbolic life, symbolism, Toko-pa, transformation, triggers, trusting yourself, Understanding and Healing Emotional Trauma, unwanted aspects of self, unworthiness, women, wounded psyche, yin
|
Leave a comment
Antidepressants can raise the risk of suicide – Sarah Knapton for the Telegraph
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/health/news/12126146/Antidepressants-can-raise-the-risk-of-suicide-biggest-ever-review-finds.html?utm_content=buffer3d1d3&utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter.com&utm_campaign=buffer We are deeply concerned at this service by the extent of public misinformation and baseless assumptions about the justification for, efficacy/side effects of and withdrawal consequences attached to these drugs – in children and adults. Many GPs appear ill informed and/or disingenuous … Continue reading →
Posted in anti-depressants, CBT, communication, consent, cultural questions, empowerment, ethics, iatrogenic illness, perception, political, psychiatric drugs, psychiatry, research evidence, risk, suicide, working with clients
|
Tagged affordable counselling exeter, aggressive behaviour, AntiDepAware, antidepressant withdrawal, antidepressants, antidepressants for children, antidepressants for teenagers, Big Pharma, Campaigns for YoungMinds, citalopram, clinical trial information on antidepressants, companies anti depressants, coping with stress, counselling, counselling exeter, counsellor Exeter, counsellors Exeter, depression, Dr Paul Ramchandani, drug trial bias, drug trial misreporting, duloxetine, Eli Lilly, emotional instability, fluoxetine, iatrogenic, iatrogenic illness, Joanna Moncrieff, Linda Foreman, low cost counselling exeter, Lucie Russell, Margaret Tisdale, Marjorie Wallace, new-generation anti-depressants, NHS guidelines, NICE guidelines, Nordic Cochrane Centre, Palace Gate Counselling Service, Palace Gate Counselling Service Exeter, paroxetine, Paul Keedwell, person centred counselling exeter, Peter Gotzsche, pharmaceutical industry, prozac, psych drug withdrawal, psychotherapy, risk of suicide, SANE, Sarah Knapton, Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, serotonin-norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors, sertraline, SNRIs, SSRIs, SSRIs and suicide risk, Stephen Fry, suicidal thoughts, suicide attempts, suicide risk, talking therapy, Tarang Sharma, venlafaxine, www.palacegatecounselling.org.uk
|
Leave a comment