by Emma Palmer (previously known as Kamalamani) | Apr 22, 2020 | Alone together, Blog, Culture declares emergency, ecopsychology, grief, Letters to the earth
There’s this quiet whisper in my heart, ‘be well, be happy’. I only hear it late at night, breathing out in this new-found familiar strangeness. Or I hear it as I end a Skype or a Zoom or a Facetime, with a stab of missing the person I’ve only just seen and heard, not...
by Emma Palmer (previously known as Kamalamani) | Apr 8, 2020 | Blog, ecopsychology, rewilding
This quiet. It’s neither inside nor out, although I burrow to the centre to listen, to catch one of its delicate tendrils. Quiet is heard, felt, not happened upon. It’s not an easy win, because winning and losing are nonsense. If it were a place it would be beyond...
by Stephen Tame-Admin Account | Oct 26, 2019 | Blog, Group Facilitation, personal, psychotherapy, Uncategorized
I woke early this morning – with some thoughts emerging about arriving in a new situation, how we get connected… Our connection tasks include: -Contact with ourselves – to what extent are we inhabiting our own body in this situation, feel relaxed and aware of our...
by Allison Priestman | Jul 29, 2019 | ecopsychology, grief, personal, psychotherapy, Wild Therapy
Ecological Emergency. Our Children’s Future? It’s Saturday night the 27th of July 2019, late. I made the mistake of looking at my mobile phone before I went to bed, fatal; for any chance of sleeping tonight. I caught an article in the Independent, titled...