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Tag Archives: regulation of psychotherapy
Paul Gordon on unfettered capitalism & coercive conformity
‘The past two decades have witnessed unprecedented changes in the economic and political organisation of the world. We live, we are constantly told, in the era of globalisation, a euphemism for the triumph throughout the world of the so-called free … Continue reading →
Posted in abuse, autonomy, civil rights, conditions of worth, consciousness, cultural questions, Disconnection, ethics, meaning, non-directive counselling, objectification, Palace Gate Counselling Service, Paul Gordon, person centred, political, power and powerlessness, regulation, risk, sustainability, violence, working with clients
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Tagged acquired passivity, affordable counselling exeter, authoritarianism, awareness, being objectified, bourgeois epoch, Castoriadis, coercion and control, coercive conformity, coercive culture, commodifying human beings, Communist Manifesto, consumer culture, consumer society, consumerism, corrosion of character, counselling exeter, counsellor Exeter, counsellors Exeter, cultural insecurity, cultural norms, cultural toxicity, cultural uncertainty, dehumanising, dehumanizing, devaluing of public sector, devaluing skills, disconnection, disturbance of social conditions, doctrinaire social authoritarianism, economic exploitation, emotional harm, enforced conformity, Engels, erosion of certainty, erosion of sense of purpose, ethical beliefs, existential meaning, fallacy of growth economy, feeling invaded, feeling objectified, finding meaning, flexibility in workplace, generalised conformity, generalized conformity, globalisation, globalization, Hope of Therapy, illusion of choice, illusion of freedom, illusion of success, insecurity, invasive behaviour, John Berger, lack of meaning, learned passivity, long term therapeutic work, loss of safe space, loss of sense of purpose, low cost counselling exeter, Marx, neo liberalism, objectification, objectifying, Palace Gate Counselling Service, Palace Gate Counselling Service Exeter, participating in passivity, Paul Gordon, person centred counselling exeter, personal invasion, political fundamentalism, power and control, power over, presence, psychological harm, pursuit of profit, regulating counselling, regulating psychotherapy, regulating therapy, regulation debate, regulation of counselling, regulation of psychotherapy, regulation of therapy, religious fundamentalism, Richard Sennett, risk society, sacred space, sacredness, safe space, search for meaning, sense of meaninglessness, sense of purpose, sense of sacred, social agitation, social authoritarianism, social distress, social exploitation, social inequality, social insecurity, social uncertainty, spectre of uselessness, therapeutic relationship, toxic cultural norms, uncertainty, undermining of certainties, unfettered capitalism, untrammelled consumerism, www.palacegatecounselling.org.uk
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Paul Gordon on art, complexity & ambiguity
This extract is from a recent acquisition to the library here, ‘The Hope of Therapy’ by Paul Gordon. He describes it as “an argument for… therapeutic freedom” as an essential element of creativity. His premise is that therapy cannot meaningfully be reduced to techniques, … Continue reading →
Posted in cognitive, communication, creativity, cultural questions, external locus, human condition, interconnection & belonging, internal locus of evaluation, meaning, non-directive counselling, organismic experiencing, Palace Gate Counselling Service, Paul Gordon, perception, poetry, political, psychiatry, reality, regulation, relationship, surrender
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Tagged affordable counselling exeter, all things counter, ambiguity, binary, complexity, counselling exeter, counselling regulation, counsellor Exeter, counsellors Exeter, creativity, diagnosis and disorder model, drunkenness of things being various, Ernest Hemingway, external locus, fear, Gerard Manley Hopkins, good and evil, Gustave Flaubert, Hills like white elephants, Hope of Therapy, intention, internal locus, interpretation, judging, Louis MacNeice, low cost counselling exeter, Marcel Proust, mental health model, Milan Kundera, non duality, not knowing, novel as a-philosophic, novels as anti-philosophic, organismic, over simplification, over simplifying, Palace Gate Counselling Service, Palace Gate Counselling Service Exeter, Paul Gordon, person centred counselling exeter, phenomenology, plural nature of things, pluralism, plurality, pre-conceived ideas, pre-interpretation, preconceived ideas, psychiatric model, psychotherapy regulation, purpose of story telling, regulating counselling, regulating psychotherapy, regulation of counselling, regulation of psychotherapy, Sigmund Freud, story-telling, therapeutic freedom, threat response, uncertainty, unconscious, unconsciousness, willingness, willingness not to define, willingness not to know, work of the novel, www.palacegatecounselling.org.uk
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The Law Concerning Mermaids – Kei Miller
This is a mesmerizing reading by Kei of his wonderful poem…. The writer had not heard of him before today, then did hear about him, and found this randomly on You Tube. This poem feels oddly pertinent to the ongoing … Continue reading →
Posted in BACP, beauty, creativity, cultural questions, Disconnection, ethics, external locus, grief, Kei Miller, loss, metaphor & dream, poetry, political, wonder
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Tagged affordable counselling exeter, BACP, Brian Thorne, coercion, compliance, conforming, counselling ethics, counselling exeter, counselling regulation, counsellor Exeter, counsellors Exeter, diversity, Farhad Dalal, Kei Miller, Law Concerning Mermaids, Light Song, low cost counselling exeter, non-conforming, Palace Gate Counselling Service, Palace Gate Counselling Service Exeter, person centred counselling exeter, psychotherapy ethics, psychotherapy regulation, regulation of counselling, regulation of psychotherapy, regulation of therapy, rule based ethics, www.palacegatecounselling.org.uk
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