Article Archive

This is where you will find all my articles from before February 1st 2024

For more recent posts, go to Blog.

Black man & woman arguing

What can I do about the arguments in my marriage?

January 25, 2024

There are two approaches to stopping the arguments: the First Aid approach which is what you do when you know you're about to launch into one; and the long-term healing approach which deals with the underlying cause of the arguments. Ultimately when you get free of the arguments you and your partner will be much closer to each other and you'll be on a path to healing..

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French homework with wrong answers

What’s wrong with being right?

January 15, 2024

It may seem a bit strange but sometimes being right can be counter-productive.

In western culture we put a lot of value on being right. Getting the answer right at school right through to being sure that you’ve got the right idea or the right view in everything from nutrition to politics.

And yet being right isn’t always the best place to be – or rather insisting on being right isn't always so clever.

It helps to have the right information when you’re sitting an exam. But it’s not always so helpful in a relationship.

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January 7th is peak day for post-Christmas break-ups

How can I get my partner to change?

January 8, 2024

Did you know that January 7th is the peak day for post-Christmas break-ups?

I can’t tell you why that is. Maybe it’s that people wait to find out whether things will get better when they go back to work, and then realise that they didn’t.

Or perhaps it’s the time they spent trying to put things right and failing. And then gave up.

But think about it – when something fails to work, we know that it wasn’t the best way to solve the problem. That’s feedback.

I hope you’re not one of those who spent the holiday thinking about breaking up with their partner, but if you are I’d like to offer you something that should help.

The biggest trap we fall into is thinking that it’s not my fault, it’s his (or hers or theirs). And wishing they would change.

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couple in front of a Christmas tree

Some Solstice Magic: Choosing Relationships Over Resolutions

December 21, 2023

Today is the Winter Solstice and this year I want to do something different for the Solstice; shake things up a bit.

Every year, around New Year, I write about how I don’t agree with New Year's resolutions. So this year I want to suggest thinking about a Solstice resolution or a Christmas resolution – or a holiday resolution?

Did you know that every January there are many couples who come out of the holidays having decided that it’s time to separate or divorce?

But how do we go into the holidays? Expecting that we’ll fall out with our mate and even that it’ll end up in divorce? Isn’t that just setting ourselves up for a self-fulfilling prophecy?

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Child looking out of large institutional window

What’s so special about people with boarding school syndrome?

December 10, 2023

Someone I know recently suggested that it’s not fair that people who went to boarding school should be given their own syndrome. After all it’s mostly privileged people who came from wealthy families and have done pretty well for themselves. And such people can afford privately-funded therapy.

Yes it’s true that many of us came from wealthy families (I didn’t), but no it’s not true that it’s a privilege.

Where’s the privilege in being deprived of the love and care of your parents for 40+ weeks of the year? And the feeling that you have been abandoned in this place where no-one knows what love and care even mean?

Where’s the privilege in being held captive in a space where you can’t escape the bullies? Or worse still the abuse.

But still why boarding school syndrome?

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Boarding school survivors

What is Boarding School Syndrome? And how does it affect our relationships?

December 3, 2023

For many of us who went to boarding school, we lived for the end of term and then for the very last day. And the day we left, we put it all behind us. Or so we thought.

But the impact of a difficult time at boarding school can last for decades. It left me with anxiety, depression, an overwhelming fear of abandonment, a need to prove that I’m right and to be in control almost all the time, and a series of broken relationships.

For other people, particularly men, the impact is often a profound emotional shutdown, an inability to express their feelings and real difficulties with intimacy.

This is what has come to be known as boarding school syndrome.

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Kintsugi or The 9 Stages on the Journey from Trauma to Sovereignty

November 26, 2023

If there's anything which winds me up it’s people talking about being broken (or worse still telling other people that they’re broken).

I’m talking about trauma of the psychological kind. There is this notion we have that we can be broken by trauma. But really it’s not true. The body may be broken, but the true self cannot be.

If you’re reading this, you’re not broken. Even if you’re hurting.

I prefer the metaphor of kintsugi, the Japanese art of repairing broken pottery by joining the pieces with lacquer mixed with powdered gold. The philosophy of kintsugi treats breakage and repair as part of the history of the object, rather than something to disguise.

So where is the gold in trauma? As in the practice of kintsugi, the gold is found in the repair process.

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The foundations of a healthy, loving relationship

November 20, 2023

A loving, healthy relationship is the best place to heal from our trauma. When we feel loved, safe and cherished, we can do the work of facing our biggest fears, and our feelings of anger, guilt and shame. And we can start to change the patterns of behaviour that may have been causing difficulties in our relationships in the past.

The deepest emotional healing work is done within relationships, where two heart-connected people see emotional triggers as clues, rather than judgments or feelings towards each other. A big part of this is the willingness to move from 'you make me so angry when you...' to 'I feel really angry when you...' This is about owning your emotions, rather than blaming them on your other half (or other people).

It is also much easier to be vulnerable, when you feel safe with your partner. That safety and a willingness to be vulnerable creates an opportunity to explore thoughts and feelings we might have buried in the past.

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Self-Care Week 2023 logo

National Self-Care Week 2023: Take Response-Ability for Yourself!

November 12, 2023

This week, November 13th-19th is National Self-Care Week in the UK, and the theme this year is mind and body.

It kind of made me laugh when I saw that, because here we are in 2023 and we are still separating the mind from the body. We can think of them as separate for convenience. But let’s starting behaving as if they’re not separate.

But what does this mean in practice? Well let’s take yoga as an example. I do a 15-25 minute yoga practice most mornings. I know that when I do my yoga, my joints loosen up, my back feels better and my mental health benefits.

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Falling leaves

The Magic Golden Leaf: Or how to transform your mental health & relationships

November 6, 2023

I was on my customary lunchtime walk today, watching the autumn leaves blow down from the trees. It reminded me of a book we had when my girls were small, all about a girl who catches a falling leaf which turns out to have magical properties.

I came across a magic golden leaf back in 2017. It didn’t turn mud-pies into cakes or old curtains into velvet robes, but it totally transformed my life. What I’m talking about is the philosophy or model of the mind known as the 3 Principles.

This particular magic golden leaf has given me leverage to change so much of my own experience:

  • I stopped seeing myself as a victim of my circumstances and got into the driver’s seat of my life

  • I began to view the trauma of my adolescence as the source of many of my strengths

  • I am in a happy and fulfilling relationship because I’ve understood that the only person I can change is myself

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boy hiding his tears

How does boarding school affect our adult relationships?

October 23, 2023

For many of us who went to boarding school, there is a gap in development. While we may have benefited from an excellent academic education, our emotional ‘education’ was neglected.

One of the foundations of a relationship is the expression of our needs and feelings and the ability to respond to the needs of our partner. This is vital to the health of the relationship and intimacy within it. But it’s often an area in which former boarders have great difficulty, since one of the places which is neglected totally within a boarding education is that of emotional literacy.

And because we leave school without even a basic level of emotional literacy, we can’t understand why things go wrong in our relationships.

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girl & little sister

Do you speak harshly to yourself?

October 16, 2023

If so listen to these words from couples therapist, Terry Real.

“There is no redeeming value in harshness. There’s nothing harshness does that loving firmness doesn’t do better.”

If you speak harshly to yourself, I understand. It’s a habit I am still in the process of changing in myself.

I know now that my harsh inner voice – my inner critic if you like – is something I created in response to what I experienced as a child.

I was the eldest child and I’m like many other women I know who were the eldest child. We were the responsible ones, the ones who comforted younger siblings and sometimes our parents, and we often acted as mediators or go-betweens when there was conflict.

This role which is so often adopted by the eldest child, is sometimes known as the Hero Child, and it’s not confined to women.

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girl looking sad

The fears we bring with us from a childhood spent in boarding school

October 9, 2023

What fears or behaviour patterns have you brought with you from childhood?

Like tiny rodents, small things from childhood can create quite a lot of havoc in adulthood.

I’ve been noticing recently that I have a fear of being found out – or perhaps more accurately a fear of being accused of something I didn’t do.

I was talking about it with my supervisor and she asked me “when do you think you first experienced this?”

When I thought about it, it seemed like it started when I was about 11 or 12. It was during the first two to three years at boarding school. It might have happened before then, but it wouldn’t have had such an impact then, because I felt relatively safe.

At school though, we didn’t feel safe.

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Black man & woman in a loving embrace

The foundations of a healthy, loving relationship

October 2, 2023

We can all talk about the things we don’t like in relationships: being shouted at, ignored, taken for granted, talked down to, being bossed about, and that’s just scratching the surface.

But what do we actually want? And how can we create a relationship in which we do get what we want?

How do we create the conditions for love, respect, acceptance, tenderness, intimacy and great sex?

In The Will to Change: Men, Masculinity, and Love, Bell Hooks speaks to how patriarchy fails men as well as women. She talks about how masculinity is distorted by patriarchy and the hidden injuries suffered by men in a world in which domination is the only game in town.

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Woman working hard

Might you be a certifiable workaholic?

September 18, 2023

Hopefully you're not a workaholic, but if you do work really long hours, read on!

Sometimes work can seem like a welcome escape from home. Or it may just be that we work such long hours because of the perfectionist imp perched on a shoulder telling us that it’s not finished yet, or it’s not good enough yet. 

No-one is born a workaholic; it’s a pattern we learn, or create to keep us safe. What's important is to understand what drives that urge to work really long hours. 
woman angry with her husband

Why do I keep flying off the handle?

September 11, 2023

I remember those days when my children were small and they would knock a drink off the edge of the table, and I had to struggle not to shout at them. Or worse still, I’d yell at them “how many times do I have to tell you?”

It seemed like every day something small happened and I over-reacted. Flying off the handle had become my normal.

The biggest thing was that I was blaming my husband for a lot of the things which weren’t working for me. And if I wasn’t blaming him, I was putting it down to work stress or worries about the family... I never guessed just how much I had put myself into the position of victim… 

Marriage and the Inner Child

September 3, 2023

We all have those days. The days when we seem to lose touch with our own adultness and behave like children.

It might be flying into a rage about something, or it might be bursting into tears. Or anything in between. And of course this kind of behaviour is not constructive when it happens in response to a conflict or problem within a relationship. However it is a kind of survival strategy.

It is completely understandable. For we are all capable of inner child behaviour when we are triggered. We come to our relationships with the same patterns we created as children when we felt unsafe. Those behaviours come to form a sort of survival kit, and we can all change our survival kit to make it more appropriate to adult life.

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bluetits in conversation

The Art of Successful and Happy Negotiation in a Relationship

August 28, 2023

 In a relationship the important things can be negotiated. Some of them are the little things such as which restaurant to go to on a night out. And some of them are big things like whether to move to a different part of the country – or a different country altogether. Either way, negotiation can be a process which strengthens your relationship as you engage in the joint project of honing your negotiating skills.

It’s based on emotional self-regulation. When we learn how to manage our ego and our emotional response to stress, we can communicate more effectively – and secure a better outcome. And that means a better outcome for both parties.

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Dr Jekyll & Mr Hyde

Why Does My Husband Behave Like Jekyll & Hyde?

August 21, 2023

Many of the women I have worked with report that their husband or partner bears more than a passing resemblance to Dr Jekyll & Mr Hyde. These men swing between love, kindness and compassion to irritability, anger, hostility and vengefulness.

If you live with a Jekyll & Hyde character you may find that you can’t be sure when his mood will change, or what will trigger another outburst. Of course this only makes it harder to manage the delicate business of keeping the peace.

Over time the mood swings may worsen so that he spends a lot more time in Mr Hyde than he does in Dr Jekyll. And it seems like the man you are living with has transformed from a sweet loving person into a monster.

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Right & wrong arrows

How to negotiate with a controlling partner

August 14, 2023

 
I spent five years studying for a PhD in the US during my 20s. I had chosen to go there in order to be with a man I had met two years before. Let’s call him Luke. 

Years later I reconnected with Luke's sister on a trip to New York and she reminded me of how she and her partner would take me out to gigs and the theatre, while Luke stayed home to study. Needless to say Luke got his PhD and I didn’t complete mine.

In the end I ran out of money and came home. It was then that I began to realise how very controlling Luke had been. It wasn’t that he made me do anything. Rather he would question my decisions and I had to justify anything I did if he considered it to be a bad idea. 
 
I now know that part of the reason that Luke attempted to control me so much was that I did not know about boundaries. Neither did he apparently.

Of course not everyone will respect your boundaries, but you really can’t expect them to if you don’t know where they are yourself! 
Man shouting at his wife

How do you deal with a spouse who constantly puts you down?

August 7, 2023

If you’re a woman who has been in more than one heterosexual relationship, you might have come to the conclusion that it is normal for men to put their wives and girlfriends down.

The sad truth is that you are probably right. It is normal, in that men and women exist in a world which is organised along very dualistic lines, where men are seen as (and see themselves as) superior to women. We call this psychological patriarchy, and it is the personal side of political patriarchy. 

In this article I talk about the five losing strategies and six things you can do about a partner who puts you down.
seaweed

Trauma and the seaweed solution

July 30, 2023

What could seaweed possibly have to do with healing from trauma?

No, I wasn’t going to suggest taking it as a food or a supplement (though it is supposed to be very good for you). It’s a metaphor I’m rather fond of. And it is directly related to healing trauma. 

... when a plant has a deficiency you can take two routes. You can either identify the deficiency and then remedy it specifically (by applying a product containing phosphorous for instance or one with nitrogen), or you can give it a seaweed feed. Seaweed is a sort of multi-mineral for plants.

When I am working with clients who have a history of trauma, I have a powerful “seaweed solution.” It doesn’t matter what the trauma was, or what the client is experiencing now. Because seaweed doesn’t need to know.

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Woman looking sad thinking about her marriage

How do you rekindle a fading relationship?

July 16, 2023

 I see you sitting at the kitchen table, nursing a mug of tea, with big circles under your eyes. Then you hear the key in the lock and for a moment you feel that little spark. And then it fades.

Your husband walks in and asks “what’s for dinner love?”

And you know that you still don’t know and that he won’t be happy when you tell him that.

 It’s not that you’re constantly fighting. You seem to just about rub along and there’s no spark any more. You seem to have lost all your get-up-and-go.

There are lots of tips for reviving a relationship which has lost its spark.

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Women's PowerTypes cards: Queen, Mother, Lover, Warrioress, Sorceress

How do I stop being driven by guilt?

July 10, 2023

In the 16 years that I’ve been working with people who suffer from chronic fatigue syndrome (ME), I’ve been struck by how many of them (particularly the women) feel guilt about all the things they can no longer do for their families.

So what can we do about this guilt? Well, it starts with building the parts of us which don't do guilt and recognise the importance of self-care and self-love.

During my training to become a One of many women’s coach, I started using the Women’s PowerTypes™ Profile with the clients I was working with who had ME/CFS or long covid. And the results were pretty consistent: low Queen and low Lover.

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graphic: two people healing in relationship

Can two people heal in a relationship?

June 28, 2023

The short answer is "yes." 

When 2020 started, I was half-way through advanced clarity coach training with my mentor, Jamie Smart, and I had had some major insights which had already moved me forward on my healing journey. During the months that followed when I had a lot of time to reflect, I had more insights.

But the thing which really made the difference was the love Mark and I shared. It was like a catalyst for all sorts of healing processes, including being able to sit with difficult feelings, welcoming my wounded child and addressing some of the survival patterns I had created as a child and adolescent.

man looking angry & toxic

Why are anger & resentment so toxic?

June 21, 2023

In this week's blog I'm talking about why anger & resentment are so toxic, and I am offering you a free place at the online workshop I'm running next Wednesday, The Common Misconceptions Which Trip Us Up in Relationships. The offer expires at 10am on Thursday so make sure you don't miss out! (And if you can't make it, you'll get access to the recording).
 
...looking back I can see that my mother harboured a lot of resentment towards my father, so maybe she was getting triggered more easily than she might have.

We tend to see resentment as being a low-level anger which persists over a long period of time. 

The truth is our feelings don’t last more than about 90 seconds, unless we feed them.

Of course that’s what most of us do. 
stone bridge over river

The Bridge of Small Changes

June 13, 2023

In relationships it can seem like your other half will never change.

The truth is that there is only one person we can change and that is ourself. But it is so tempting to try and change the other person’s behaviour or to try to get them to change their mind.

The good news is that when I change, I bring others along with me. 
 
Of course it’s a nonsense to suggest that people never change. Change is a normal part of everyday life.

We all change repeatedly just in the course of a day. 

Woman floating in water

Quantum reality, floating & intention in relationships

June 05, 2023

Walking home from town at the weekend, Mark, my partner and I were talking about quantum physics and cranial osteopathy.

One of the greats of British cranial osteopathy, Nicholas Handoll, wrote about this in his book Anatomy of Potency. The book introduces the idea that quantum physics might explain how cranial osteopathy works.

But that isn’t why I’m writing this blog post. In the conversation we went on to talk about the power of intention. And something I call floating openness

 Intention can be a powerful force, whether it is used in osteopathy, in personal growth or in our relationships.

Read more...
couple arguing

The Struggle with Last Word-Itis

May 23, 2023

 I struggle with last word-itis.

Does anyone else struggle with this dis-ease, or is it just me?

I suspect that I’ve had it more or less all my life. Not only do I have to be right about everything, but I also have to have the last word! 

It was only recently that I got the diagnosis.

Luckily it came with love. “I love you, Sorrel, but you do have to have the last word on everything, don’t you?”

And to be honest I hadn’t realised it until my long-suffering partner pointed it out to me. And then I noticed that he was right.

I can’t help wondering why. 

The label is on the outside of the jar

Anxiety: Who's Driving Who?

May 16, 2023

Do you let anxiety run your life?

This week is Mental Health Awareness Week, and the focus is on anxiety, so it seems like a good time to talk about it. 
 
It may seem like anxiety is always a bad thing, but anxiety can be a gift.

For instance, if I am walking home late at night, I am a little anxious. It keeps me alert so that I don’t walk into a dangerous situation.

Similarly early humans would have benefited from anxiety about bears, wolves and warlike neighbours. 

The problem is that anxiety very often gets hijacked.

... when you stand outside of yourself and observe what your mind is doing, you can also notice the patterns that you play out. As someone said to me recently, "you can’t see the label on the jar when you are inside it."  
Sorrel & Mark dancing

Disagreements are inevitable; Arguments are entirely optional

May 10, 2023

 
When I was growing up, my parents argued a lot. Mum told me that this was normal and that it helped to have a good blow out every so often.

Except it wasn't every so often; it felt like it was almost daily. I remember Mum shouting and Dad going very quiet with his heels well dug-in.

The truth was I knew they loved each other, even though an outsider may have thought otherwise. But I hated the constant rows and sometimes I tried to intervene. But that didn't seem to help either.

Because I saw arguments as being a normal part of a relationship I carried the pattern over into my own relationships. They were all a power struggle in one way or another.

But in the end it had to change. After my marriage had ended (following a long period of constant conflict and arguments), I decided that if I were to meet another man, I would NOT ARGUE WITH HIM. 
couple dancing close together

Relationship Renewal, Part 3. Finding Connection, Asking and Receiving

May 4, 2023

In this post I talk about deepening your connection, asking for what you want and receiving it.

Curiosity, and 'deep' listening are the WD40 of connection. You can replace judgement with curiosity, and listen to your partner without thinking about what you want to achieve from the conversation or about who is right and who is wrong. 

The secret here is to prioritise your relationship above being right. For me this was a game-changer. I no longer have that overwhelming need to be right (which I am sure goes all the way back to my childhood). I can put my own understanding of the world on hold and just listen.

When you do this, the connection between you and your partner starts to deepen, because your partner feels heard.

Read more...
couple having a connected conversation

Relationship Renewal Part 2: The Two Magic Ingredients, Curiosity and Compassion

April 27, 2023

In part 1 of this blog I talked about the importance of self-love for successful (ie loving & connected) relationships.

There are two things which make self-love easier, and they also make it easier to love your partner deeply and unconditionally. So finding out about both of them is a no-brainer, right?

The first of these two magic ingredients is curiosity.

When we get curious, things really start to shift. Curiosity is an excellent antidote to being judgemental. And it’s useful for understanding what’s happening for you, and for understanding what’s happening for your partner.

If you find yourself constantly caught up in arguments with your partner, it is really helpful to get curious about what’s going on for both of you.

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Relationship Renewal, Part 1. Love Yourself Unconditionally!

Apr 20, 2023

Do any of these statements resonate with you?
 
… You have a hard time finding or sustaining loving relationships
… You have serial relationships, drifting from one to the next
… You’re in an unfulfilling, or even abusive relationship
… You isolate yourself from your friends or family
… You feel lonely most of the time, whether you’re alone or around others
… You often feel like you don’t belong

In this first part of a 3-part blog, I’m going to look at the role of self-love in relationships.

It might seem a bit counter-intuitive, but one of the reasons many of us struggle to form lasting, loving, meaningful relationships is that we don’t actually love ourselves.

Read more...
unhappy child

How to heal your survival personality

Apr 08, 2023

‘I began to wonder how such a “survival personality” gets constructed and how it endures for so long... One day one of my clients really hit the nail on the head, saying: “I became a strategic person, always on the look out for danger and how to turn every situation to my best advantage. I still do it. It’s exhausting.”’ (Nick Duffell, 2000)

We all develop survival programmes as children, designed to keep us safe in frightening circumstances. Some children will keep quiet in order not to trigger anger in a parent who is on a short fuse. Others learn to get what they need by shouting or whining. Many children will only need to activate these survival programmes occasionally, but for some it becomes a way of life.

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to do list

What is it you actually want?

Jan 9, 2023

The week after Christmas, I was inundated with emails telling me how I could make 2023 a better year and achieve my goals. I was taking time out to recuperate and I wasn’t too keen to open any of them. So I promised myself I would not write about the fail-safe solution to a better 2023.

However it occurred to me that you might be interested in a secret I learned a while back. It’s simply that if you actually want something, you are likely to get it. I suspect that there have been many things in my life that I thought I wanted, when I didn’t really (like that trip to Peru to visit Machu Picchu, which I never did make). 

It's important to distinguish between really wanting something, as in wanting it really hard - with lots of effort - and actually wanting something.

Read more...
Sorrel Pindar

Christmas – it’s for the children isn’t it?

Dec 19, 2022

This weekend I’ve been wondering how I could bring a little inner child work into this week’s blog, given that it’s the Christmas edition. So my question is:  If Christmas is most magical when we are little, what happens when we let our inner child out to play in the holidays? 

Do you remember that feeling? The feeling of coming downstairs on Christmas morning, or emptying out the contents of your stocking ...  If you let your inner child out to play during the holidays, what reality would you most like to experience? 
reflection & art

Your happiness is your responsibility

Dec 12, 2022

These words were spoken by yoga teacher, Adriene Mishler during a session she called Curate (as in museums not churches). And it was about curating the experience of yoga on the mat. But it applies equally to our mental and emotional experience.

It is important to remember that all of our experience is created actively in and by our own minds. No person, animal, thing or circumstance can make us feel, believe, think, say or do anything. If I am the sole arbiter and creator of my own experience, which includes happiness, and also sadness, anger, fear and guilt, then I am also the curator of my experience. And I get to choose how these experiences appear in the art gallery of my mind each day.

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Getting back to my roots

Oct 25, 2022

I was inspired to write this post today after some things which happened in the last few days. It started at the weekend with a rather visceral response I had to some inner conflict. My body is an excellent compass and it always tells me if I am over-doing it or I'm getting caught up in dodgy thinking. This time it was dodgy thinking and some anxiety - about money if you must know!

Then I picked up Gabor Maté's book on ADHD, Scattered Minds. In the part concerned with parenting the ADHD child he talks about how we, as parents, so often allow our emotions to be affected by our children's behaviour. We get angry when our children drag their feet getting ready for school, or we feel hurt when they are rude to us. But to parent effectively we have to be able to let these things wash over us.

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Suzy’s story: Perfect self/messy self

Feb 6, 2022

Suzy came to me midway through 2020. She was completely flattened by long covid and was unable to work, care for her children or even cook. 

Before she got ill, Suzy had been a busy Mum, with a full-time job, husband, two children and an active life that had her training, running and playing netball competitively. She was the kind of person who many of us aspire to be, without ever quite making it.

And yet one little virus had brought her down to rock bottom. You see when I hear about someone like Suzy who works full-out and plays full-out, I wonder what it is she is trying to escape from.

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blossom

What can grief teach me?

Dec 9, 2021

The 13th century poet Rumi wrote "Grief can be the garden of compassion. If you keep your heart open through everything, your pain can become your greatest ally in your life's search for love and wisdom.”

Grief can be a great teacher. We start perhaps by understanding what we loved so much about the person we have lost. But we also learn about ourselves. We learn what we are capable of feeling, we learn that we dislike feeling out of control, that we afraid to fall asleep or maybe afraid of waking in the morning to that reminder of what we had forgotten in sleep. Most difficult of all we become afraid of our own feelings.

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mask

Authenticity and acceptance - the mask & the true self

Oct 28, 2021

I had two conversations this morning about authenticity and self-acceptance. Authenticity is simply about being true to oneself. But being authentic takes a degree of courage, because it may seem as if we will offend or anger someone else.
It starts in childhood wanting to please our parents - to keep their love and ensure that we don't make them angry. So we create a protective layer or mask which allows us to survive in the face of disapproval and anger. This may be perpetuated in an abusive relationship or in a job which isn't congruent with our values.

Read more....
traumatised woman

Does trauma really exist if it's all in my head?

Oct 7, 2021

A colleague's client asked this question of her recently: "does trauma really exist if it's all in my mind?"

I suppose they must have been comparing psychological trauma with physical trauma, such as the injuries from a car crash. But the fact that it's in the mind doesn't make it any less real. In fact the trauma from the car crash is also in the mind. Yes there may be broken bones or torn ligaments, but the pain we feel is entirely a construct of the brain. And maybe the biggest component of a physical trauma is the thinking we have about it.

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child looking at their reflection

Who am I and how can I feel better about myself?

Aug 18, 2021

We can get really caught up in our thinking about our identity. A friend tells me that his wife is suffering because her identity is wrapped up in her career as a dancer, but she can't really dance any more. Someone else is dealing with a shift in their gender identity. And Reni Eddo-Lodge asks in her book Why I'm No Longer Talking to White People About Race, "Why don't white people think they have a racial identity?"

But what exactly is identity? And why do we struggle with the idea that we are not just (or even) our identity?

It seems to me that we actively (if unconsciously) form our identity as we go through life. I see it as part of the created self.

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alert rabbit

How do you respond in a crisis?

Aug 7, 2021

There are many ways to respond when your world seems to be falling apart.

  1. Freeze: Some people are caught like a rabbit in the headlights, uncertain what to do and afraid to act. 
  2. Some run backwards and forwards (metaphorically or literally), again not knowing what's best to do.
  3. Others retreat, putting their plans on hold and hiding themselves away. 
  4. And then there are those who trust their intuition and take action, knowing that they can change direction if they need to.
man scaling rock face

Are You Futurising? Fear of the future? Or doing the 7Ps?

Jul 28, 2021

Today my morning yoga practice (Yoga with Adriene) was focused on transitions. Near the end she had us complete the statement “I choose...” Without a moment’s hesitation I knew what I wanted to say, “I choose to embrace the future, whatever it may bring.”

It’s just over a year now since a coaching session I had with Chip Chipman where he pointed out that I was “futurising.” This was his way of saying I was over-thinking about the future and getting myself into a bit of a state about it. I still catch myself futurising now and then, but it’s not so loaded with anxiety.

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anxious woman

How Can I Calm Generalised Anxiety Disorder?

May 6, 2021

Generalised anxiety disorder, or GAD, is a condition where the person is anxious most of the time. A person with GAD may feel like they worry all the time. It isn’t so much that they have a particular problem that they worry about; rather they keep finding lots of things to worry about. But the biggest problem is that they have the problem of worrying. Generalized anxiety disorder is worrying about worrying. Or being anxious about being anxious.

People with GAD end up fighting with their own thoughts. They take their worries very seriously, and fret about them. For instance, you might have the worry “what if I lose my job?” Then you spend a lot of time wondering what your boss thinks about you; how to find out if you’re going to be fired; how your spouse will react if you are fired; where you could look for another job...

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compass

Respect yourself!

Mar 30, 2021

If you’re looking to others to respect you, then start again by looking inside. How many of us really respect ourselves? And how many of us listen to our inner guidance system?

Do you pay attention to your own needs? Do you get an early night if you’re tired? Do you drink enough water? Or do you keep yourself pumped up on endless cups of coffee? And do you beat yourself up when you don't live up to your expectations of yourself?

 The link with perfectionism is clear. The perfectionist so often fails to notice the needs of their body, and also doesn’t recognise that it’s ok for them to be only just good enough. And to make mistakes, and that they won’t always be top of the class, and that’s ok too.

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woman practising self-care & self-love

Self-love: The only way to love and care for others

Feb 16, 2021

“Love your neighbour as yourself” is interesting: if you don’t love yourself, you’re not really offering much to your neighbour...

.. many people are their own harshest critics. They are far stricter on themselves, far more unkind and demanding than they would ever be with anyone else.

If you care for others, perhaps your children or elderly parents, you may not realise the importance of actually caring for yourself, or even loving yourself. But what does it mean to you to love yourself? How does loving yourself actually translate into practice? 

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weir with torrents of water

Stillness in the torrent of thoughts

Feb 9, 2021

I was out walking with my daughter on Saturday. We walked along the river, noticing where it had come up over the banks, and sploshing through huge puddles on the footpath. Eventually we came to the widest of the weirs in the town centre and we stood on the bridge over the weir and watched the river in full spate. The noise was tremendous which made it difficult to talk and be understood. But it was an amazing sight. 

My daughter and I started to debate which way to go next. She wanted to cross the town bridge and return on the other side of the river, but I didn't fancy the traffic noise on the road. Then I thought "just go with the flow. You can't think with this noise anyway." So I agreed to take the town bridge. 

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Is your Inner Critic pushing you too hard?

Feb 2, 2021

Do you find yourself to be a harsh critic – of yourself? Feeling like you never do anything as well as you could or should have? This voice in your head is something that many of us share and it is often known as the Inner Critic.

Over the years of working with hundreds of people with M.E. and fibromyalgia, I’ve become rather familiar with the Inner Critic. In fact I’m surprised how often this harsh character pops up. If you have felt that sense of never managing to do as well as you should, then you may know who I’m talking about: a bit like a strict parent or teacher who sits on your shoulder and makes comments like “Well you may think you did that well, but you could have done it even better.”

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Woman with mental health problems

The Body Keeps the Score

Jan 26, 2021

Recently I’ve been reading Bessel van der Kolk’s The Body Keeps the Score. It’s not an easy read, being an account of how child abuse and neglect lead to poorer life chances in adulthood. And the failure of the American Psychiatric Association to address the relationship between childhood abuse and mental health problems.

However the book brings a message of hope: “Our great challenge is to apply the lessons of neuroplasticity, the flexibility of brain circuits, to rewire the brains and reorganize the minds of people who have been programmed by life itself to experience others as threats and themselves as helpless.”

I’ve seen my fair share of people damaged by child abuse – mostly presenting to me with chronic fatigue syndrome, but I know for many the damage presents as addictions or repeated relationship breakdown. What I now realise though is that there is hope of renewal because we are none of us ever broken, and we all contain the seeds of change – the neuroplasticity that van der Kolk talks about.

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Is Perfectionism Making You Ill?

Jan 13, 2021

Unless you are Superman or Wonder Woman, perfectionism is not a good place to be. Because of course nobody is perfect, and when we strive for perfection in our work or relationships, we set ourselves up to fail. And the sad thing is that in my work with ME (chronic fatigue syndrome), I have met many perfectionists who had driven themselves close to the point of self-destruction.

In fact perfectionism is linked to poor self-esteem, anxiety, depression, eating disorders, relationship breakdown, poor physical health and even early death. Perfectionism can play an important role in OCD (obsessive compulsive disorder). Research suggests that perfectionistic thinking and behavior in OCD stem from the effort to avoid the discomfort that results from a sense of uncertainty, danger, judgment from others, or imprecision.

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woman with feet up & a hot drink

Why I don’t believe in New Year’s Resolutions

Jan 7, 2021

I don’t believe in New Year’s Resolutions. Just like Santa Claus they defy the laws of the universe. When we write a list of New Year’s Resolutions, we are often as not drawing up a list of things that won’t happen. This is nothing to do with will-power or lack of it. Nor is it because those resolutions are poorly chosen. It has entirely to do with day length and climate (so this post probably does not apply in Australia or New Zealand). 

Human beings are not designed to get up earlier, work harder or eat less on some of the shortest, darkest days of the year when it is more likely to rain than not, and the winds routinely approach 30 or 40mph. As a gardener I know this is the time to be planning what I’ll be doing with my garden when the days are longer and the weather kinder.
 
So my advice would always be to make a hot drink, snuggle up in your favourite blanket and make a list (if you must) of things you would like to undertake, starting on March 21st (which of course is the Spring Equinox). Or better still do some day-dreaming.

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lost teddy bear

On Loss and Grief

Dec 29, 2020

We all suffer multiple losses in the course of a lifetime – it seems ridiculous to state this as it is so obvious. And yet we act as if loss is something to be feared.  I guess it starts with the loss of a favourite teddy or toy or that blankie that just had to be put in the wash. For some children the losses are much greater – a parent or sibling. Or a much-loved grandparent or uncle. 

In England we don’t talk much about death, and so we are unprepared for it when it comes. Nick, an old friend (actually a Friend, a Quaker), ran a death cafe in Bedford for several years, where people could come together and talk about the experience and the actualities of death.

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Young couple

Separate Realities or How to Achieve Love & Understanding

Dec 23, 2020

Sometimes our disagreements with others are largely due to the fact that we live in "separate realities." If we start from the assumption that our experience is all created from the inside-out – then we have to arrive at the concept of separate realities.

This is a natural consequence of the inside-out nature of our experience – the fact that the mind actively creates our experience moment-to-moment. Experience is not formed passively by what is going on outside of us, but by an active process in the mind which takes information and uses it to construct a model of the world. 
   
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