Friday, 31 May 2013

Checking your Horizon

So what are the ways I could keep training myself to notice where my horizon is? Well, I would love to know how other people do it, but here are some of my mini ways of checking in:
  • Go back to my breathing which helps me connect to the here and now.
  • Feeling anxious to then asking myself, 'Where is your horizon on this?'
  • Asking myself, 'What's really important here?'
  • Feeling negative...'What am I appreciating in this?'

Maybe that's all any of us can do in this tug of war that goes on between our experience and our attention, but I would love to hear your ideas!

Thursday, 23 May 2013

Where is your attention wandering to?

'Your experience of life is not based on your life, but on what you pay attention to.' (Gregg Kretch)

Reading this in a mindfulness book this morning struck a chord. If there is one thing we therapists and coaches know, it's that how we pay attention to an experience and make sense of it, defines what we do with that experience.


All too often I find myself with my eyes fixed metaphorically on a negative horizon which is drawing my energy towards it and creating just the thing I am anxious about.
And if that happens so easily to me, then how must it be for a client who comes in being held hostage to their own thinking/ horizon! 


It seems to me that it's not enough to know about and agree with the concept of choosing where I put my attention, but more importantly, to find ways to train myself to keep checking where my attention has wondered to.

And of course, that's not bad advice for a therapist sitting with a client either...


Thursday, 16 May 2013

The Importance of Repair Tools

'The underlying philosophy is consistent with research, which shows that lasting success in relationships requires a combination of increasing positive regard in relationships, and ability to use repair techniques in conflict.'

This statement really resonated with me when I read it a few weeks ago - its clear focus on increasing positive regard captures something of the challenge of working with two people who are in a relationship but have come to see each other as dangerous on some level. 


Right now I am working with a couple where the love is clear in the room yet through the conflicts and experiences of the past he tells himself that she is toxic to him and she tells herself that he will never change - and so they look longingly and hopelessly across the space at each other.
This couple have had repair techniques in conflict that have clearly not served them well!

Part of the magical, absorbing work I do is introducing them to a new 'repair technique' that does what it says on the box...it repairs after conflict. The conflict that makes them experience each other as dangerous and cuts them off from whatever positive regard they do have can now be worked with by them with gradually increasing confidence.


I LOVE my work!


Of course...they do have to use the repair tool-and there in lies another adventure!

Friday, 10 May 2013

Are you paying attention?!?


Dan Goleman is one of the few people I open up on Linked in as I find his thoughts interesting, clear and to the point! He started his last piece with these thoughts...

"Leaders today are beset by overwhelming demands – scheduled every 15 minutes through the day, with an incoming barrage of messages via phone, email, texts, and knocks on the door. Who has time to pay full attention to the person you’re with?
And yet it is in the moments of total attention that interpersonal chemistry occurs. This is when what we say has the most impact, when we can come up with the most fruitful ideas and collaborations, when negotiations and brainstorms are most productive".
Now I know this on so many levels as a wife, mother, friend and therapist and yet it is one of the hardest things to consistently do! When somebody is expressing their own thoughts and I sense my own thoughts and sensations getting activated, there comes that moment where I have a choice - choose to stay present to them and relax into the here and now....or add my piece onto their thoughts and speed the interaction up. 
More and more I realise that the fast pace of life that seems so ingrained into me, (and most of us, I imagine!), robs me of the richness of truly visiting another and letting their world impact mine opening up new fields of thoughts and knowing.
From the knowing to the doing...therein lies an art!

Thursday, 2 May 2013

Brainspotting


As some of my friends and colleagues know, I became intrigued by a powerful new way of helping clients process issues called Brainspotting.
The development of Brainspotting is being headed by a wonderful man called Dr.David Grand who originally trained as a psychotherapist and added, among many skills, EMDR. It was in the course of exploring his own developments in EMDR, (Natural Flow EMDR), that he began to discover the link between where we look in the visual field and brain processing, opening the door to his discovery of Brainspotting.

This is a rapidly developing field of, I think, great significance as it offers a way for therapists using any number of skills to greatly enhance and speed the healing in a client. Indeed my own experiences of using some of the tools have provided both my clients and myself  with some extraordinary experiences! Indeed, I would love more time to experiment and explore these fascinating new tools. However what I am doing is experimenting with couples on the Bridge and where they are looking with some deeper insights and an even deeper curiosity.

Those interested might note that the Basic 2 day training and Advanced 2 day training take place for the first time in London on the 5-8 June 2013. Details can be found on 
http://www.brainspotting.pro/