-
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: Lived Experience
How You Are Already Seeding Transformation – Joe Brewer
https://medium.com/@joe_brewer/how-you-are-already-seeding-transformation-d14a516d2850 Click on the above link for this inspiring piece from Joe. Thanks to Justine Corrie on Facebook for showing us this. Here’s an excerpt:- “Imagine the surface of a mountain lake in winter. The air has fallen below freezing … Continue reading →
Posted in actualizing tendency, awakening, communication, community, consciousness, creativity, cultural questions, Disconnection, empowerment, encounter, growth, human condition, interconnection & belonging, Joe Brewer, metaphor & dream, paradigm shift, perception, political, power and powerlessness, presence, transformation
|
Tagged activism, affordable counselling exeter, alienation, anti austerity, Arab Spring, awakening, broken life story, broken social system, capitalism, capitalism and slavery, capitalism as collective insanity, capitalist narratives, causes of depression, causes of suicides, changing states, chaos and uncertainty, chronic guilt, chronic shame, cohesion, common humanity, connecting the dots, connection with others, connection with self, conquest narrative, conscious activism, conscious change, contemporary meaninglessness, control and compliance, control of media, coordinated action, counselling exeter, counsellor Exeter, counsellors Exeter, creating a narrative, creating structure, critical mass and change, crystal of hope, cultural change, cultural disconnect, cultural narratives, cultural stories, debt enslavement, debt narratives, decentralized, disconnection, disharmony, divide and rule, economic inequality, economic narratives, emergence, engaging in life, engaging in process, engaging in relationship, everywhere-all-at-once, existential meaning, exploitation, expressing your truth, facade of democracy, fast change processes, feeling alone, feeling compassion, find your voice, finding connection, healing not warfare, healing process, individualism, inspiring compassion, intention and change, intentional change, interconnection, interdependence, islands of possibility, Joe Brewer, joining the dots, lack of economic opportunities, late stage capitalism, life story, Lived Experience, living your truth, loss of meaning, low cost counselling exeter, mainstream media, making connections, making sense of experience, making structure, malaise, media vested interests, misdirection, modern serfdom, monetary systems of capitalism, moving states, new paradigm, nucleation spots, obstacles to change, Occupy Wall Street, old world ideology, Palace Gate Counselling Service, Palace Gate Counselling Service Exeter, paradigm shift, patriarchy, person centred counselling exeter, phase transition, powerlessness, powers that be, pretence of democracy, privilege and success, privileged demographics, process of social change, psychosocial well being, redirection and distraction, resonance in lived experience, responding to chaos, scarcity and abundance, scarcity mindset, seeding transformation, self blame, self organizing, social norms, social values, speak your truth, speaking truth, standard life story, starter finisher, Story of Conquest, synchronicity, systemic corruption, systemic political corruption, telling your story, tipping points, transformation, transformative change, turbulence and change, turning belief into action, turning emotion into action, turning feeling into action, turning thought into action, unwinnable game, using intention, visioning, waves of transformation, wealth hoarding, what slows change, what speeds change, wired for cooperation, wired for empathy, www.palacegatecounselling.org.uk
|
Leave a comment
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
‘People (often) don’t need help. They need love. Acceptance’ Monica Cassani
https://beyondmeds.com/2017/06/10/people-dont-need-help/ Click on the above link to visit Monica Cassani’s superb resource site: http://www.beyondmeds.com This post describes person-centred in a nutshell, and is what we seek to offer at this service: holding loving space for a person as they explore … Continue reading →
Posted in actualizing tendency, autonomy, client as 'expert', congruence, consciousness, core conditions, cultural questions, empathy, empowerment, encounter, equality, ethics, external locus, growth, healing, love, Monica Cassani, non-directive counselling, Palace Gate Counselling Service, person centred, person centred theory, power and powerlessness, psychiatry, self, self concept, self esteem, therapeutic growth, therapeutic relationship, working with clients
|
Tagged acceptance, acceptance in relationship, acceptance in therapy, actualising, actualizing, affordable counselling exeter, autonomy in counselling, autonomy in therapy, being broken, brokenness, client as expert, client as whole, core conditions, counselling ethics, counselling exeter, counsellor Exeter, counsellors Exeter, diminishing relationship, discovering who you are, disempowering, disempowerment in counselling, disempowerment in therapy, egalitarianism, empowering, encounter, equality in therapy, ethic of service, external locus, feeling broken, fixing and helping, healing power of acceptance, helping and fixing, holding space, holistic approach, holistic approach to mental illness, holistic well being, in it together, inner journey, inner landscape, inner work, interior landscape, labeling, labelling, Lived Experience, low cost counselling exeter, mental health labels, mental health model, Monica Cassani, need for acceptance, non hierarchical relationship, non-directive counselling, Palace Gate Counselling Service, Palace Gate Counselling Service Exeter, perpetrating counsellor, perpetrating healer, perpetrating therapist, person centred counselling exeter, person-centered, person-centred, personhood, politics of oppression, providing support, Rachel Naomi Remen, reductive relationship, safe space, self concept, self esteem, self-structure, sense of wholeness, space holding, unconditional positive regard, UPR, www.beyondmeds.com, www.palacegatecounselling.org.uk
|
Leave a 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
Gil Bailie on the Crucifixion & Blame
“The surest way to miss the link between the cure (the crucifixion and its aftereffects) and the disease (the structures of scapegoating violence upon which all human social arrangements have depended) is to read the passion story with an eye … Continue reading →
Posted in 'evil', accountability, awakening, blaming, bullying, civil rights, community, compassion, conditions of worth, conflict, congruence, core conditions, criminal justice model, cultural questions, Disconnection, empathy, ethics, external locus, fear, guilt, human condition, identity, interconnection & belonging, kindness & compassion, love, meaning, objectification, perception, person centred, person centred theory, political, power and powerlessness, presence, sadness & pain, scapegoating, self, self concept, self esteem, shadow, shame, shaming, spirituality, trauma, trust, violence
|
Tagged affordable counselling exeter, aggression of blame, blame, blame and responsibility, blaming, collective responsibility, collective scapegoating, collective shadow, commitment to self, compassion, conditional love, conditions of worth, connection, contempt of others, core beliefs, core conditions, core wounding, core wounds, counselling exeter, counsellor Exeter, counsellors Exeter, cultural projection, cultural violence, empathic connection, empathic failure, empathy, encounter, expanding awareness, failure of empathy, finger pointing, Gil Bailie, hopelessness, human limitations, human needs, invalidation, inward enquiry, inwards enquiry, kindness, lack of validation, Lived Experience, loving kindness, low cost counselling exeter, low self esteem, meaning of evil, meaning of the crucifixion, need to be received, need to be seen, need to be witnessed, not good enough, open heart, own being, Palace Gate Counselling Service, Palace Gate Counselling Service Exeter, person centred counselling exeter, person-centered, person-centred, personal development, personal responsibility, personal shadow, phenomenological approach, presence, projecting, projecting shadow, projection, relationship, religious violence, sacred violence, scapegoating, self awareness, self blame, self care, self compassion, self concept, self contempt, self enquiry, self esteem, self expression, self judgement, self judgment, self perception, self worth, self-responsibility, self-structure, separation, shame, shaming, spirituality, suppressing need, suppressing self expression, trust, unlived life, unmet need, validation, validation of needs, Violence Unveiled, wholeness, withdrawal, witnessing, worth as a person, www.palacegatecounselling.org.uk
|
Leave a comment
Maria Popova – Review of The Farmer and the Clown by Marla Frazee
http://www.brainpickings.org/2014/12/11/the-farmer-and-the-clown-marla-frazee/ Click on the link to read this unusual review of a lovely and unusual child’s book – which also speaks profoundly to adults, as the best books intended for children do….It’s beautifully realized and illustrated by Marla Frazee. Maria … Continue reading →
Posted in acceptance, beauty, communication, core conditions, creativity, empathy, friendship, good, growing up, interconnection & belonging, kindness & compassion, love, Maria Popova, relationship, trust, vulnerability
|
Tagged acceptance, affordable counselling exeter, beauty, belonging, children's books, communication, compassion, core conditions, counselling exeter, counsellor Exeter, counsellors Exeter, creativity, elders, empathy, good, growing up, inter generational friendship, interconnectedness, interconnection, kindness, Lived Experience, love, low cost counselling exeter, Marla Frazee, Palace Gate Counselling Service, Palace Gate Counselling Service Exeter, person centred counselling exeter, relationship, The Farmer and the Clown, trust, vulnerability, www.palacegatecounselling.org.uk
|
Leave a comment