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Growing in the garden and in counselling

Counselling and horticulture inform each other

Horticulture has a lot to say about how plants grow and change, and therapy has a lot to say about how people grow and change. My experience is that these two worlds inform each other, which we might expect since both plants and people are organic in nature. For me, counselling or therapy is an organic process.

Physis – that tendency within each living thing to change and grow.

New article in Counselling Directory

I’ve written some of my ideas about how our understanding or contact with plants might inform our approach to counselling and this article was published in Counselling Directory. Here’s the link;

https://www.counselling-directory.org.uk/memberarticles/horticultural-therapy-growing-in-the-garden-and-in-counselling

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Making Pilgrimage an Inner Journey

Pilgrimage as an inner journey

Over the centuries many people have made a journey to a destination which is sacred, or personally meaningful, to them.

And this outward journey into the world has also become, for many, an inward journey – an inner meeting of themselves in a way which is impactful or perhaps even transformational.

A Thin Place
Our pilgrimage also might become an ‘inner journey’

New article in Counselling Directory

I’ve written some of my ideas about how we might invite our pilgrimage to become an inner journey and this article was published in Counselling Directory. Here’s the link;

https://www.counselling-directory.org.uk/memberarticles/can-a-pilgrimage-also-be-an-inner-journey

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Our first counselling session

If you’ve worked with a counsellor or psychotherapist in the past you may have clear ideas about what to expect from your first session. If not, here’s a brief description of what to expect the first time we meet.

When we meet for the first time I’ll welcome you and introduce myself. Then, we’ll need to get to know each other a little. We may have spoken on the ‘phone or exchanged emails, but I’ll be interested to find out more about;

  • What’s hurting so much now?
  • If this is an enduring difficulty, why begin to address it at this time?
  • Is this something that I can honestly say I can help with? Or is there someone locally who may be able to help you more effectively?

You may well have similar questions. Like;

  • From a ‘thought-through’ place – Is counselling the right tool to get this fixed?
  • From a more ‘instinctive’ place – Does this process feel like it might help?
  • Is Richard the right person to see about this?

And answers to these questions may become clearer during our first meeting. If we decide not to proceed I’ll certainly do my best to signpost you to someone locally who may be able to help. If we agree that we’re going to work together;

  • I’ll say clearly how I believe I can help.
  • There will be time for you to ask anything you need.
  • I’ll explain how I like to work – and give you a written description of my approach to confidentiality, keeping in touch, payment of fees & cancellations etc. You’ll see that this falls within the BACP Ethical Framework.
  • We’ll agree a fee and book dates for future sessions.

BACP have written a short guide about what to expect from a first session which I know that others have found useful. It can be downloaded here.