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Tag Archives: patriarchal attitudes
‘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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The Longing for Belonging – Charles Eisenstein
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/charles-eisenstein/indigeneity-and-belonging_b_8011302.html Originally written for our local Schumacher College, in the context of a course Charles was leading. Charles features regularly on this blog – the writer believes him to be one of the important thinkers and writers of our time. … Continue reading →
Posted in awakening, Charles Eisenstein, communication, compassion, consciousness, core conditions, cultural questions, dependence, Disconnection, ecological, education, empathy, empowerment, encounter, equality, ethics, external locus, flow, good, gratitude, growth, guilt, human condition, identity, immanence, interconnection & belonging, internal locus of evaluation, kindness & compassion, loneliness, love, meaning, medical model, natural world, non-conforming, objectification, organismic experiencing, paradigm shift, perception, physical being, political, power and powerlessness, presence, reality, relationship, rewilding, self, self concept, spirituality, sustainability, touch, transformation, values & principles
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Tagged abundance, achievement, affordable counselling exeter, agency, alienating systems, alienation, aliveness, ancestors, awakening, Becoming Indigenous, belonging, belonging to a place, belongingness, Big Pharma, body as a thing, body as an object, boundaries, capitalism, ceremony, challenge, challenging harm, change, Charles Eisenstein, collective being, coming home, commodity economy, community, competition, competitive, conforming, conformity, connection, consciousness, consumerism, control, controlling, counselling exeter, counsellor Exeter, counsellors Exeter, dependency, dependency on experts, disease model, disembodiment, disorder model, dominating civilization, domination, eco sexual, ecosexual, embedded, embodied experience, embodiment, external locus, feeling of belonging, Finding Our Way Home, flexible boundaries, flow, fluid boundaries, fluidity, generosity, gift culture, gift interactions, giving, globalisation, globalization, gratitude, group energy, group field, guilt, home, home in the world, homecoming, identity, ideology of reductionism, indigeneity, indigenous, indigenous people, indigenous spirituality, industrial food system, initiation, inseparable, intelligence, interbeing, interconnectedness, interconnection, interdependence, internal locus, intimacy, intimate relationship to nature, intuition, kindness, kinship, lost connections, love, low cost counselling exeter, materialism, medical model, modern medicine, money economy, mythology of separation, native spirituality, nature of reality, non sexual touch, non-separation, normalcy, normalisation, normalization, objectification, objectifying, oneness, oppression, organismic experience, Palace Gate Counselling Service, Palace Gate Counselling Service Exeter, participation, patriarchal attitudes, patriarchy, person centred counselling exeter, purpose, reality, receiving, reclaiming a sense of belonging, reductionism, relationship, ritual, Schumacher College, Self, sense of belonging, separate self, separation, sexual touch, sexuality, social relationships, spirituality, standardisation, standardization, story, Story of Separation, strangers, theory of change, Touch, tribe, uniqueness, victim, virtual experience, web of life, www.palacegatecounselling.org.uk
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