top android casinos seneca niagara casino buffet casino club online casino gold river casino online echtgeld casino was ist das beste online casino bonus casino en ligne casino royale book boomtown casino slots social casino kerching casino good casino sites spil casino online types of casino bonuses new mobile phone casinos safe online casino nz secure online casino casino royale 2006 script casino mania slot casinos in ok online casino paysafecard anacortes casino casino games without wifi monte carlo resort and casino las vegas

Our Multidimensional Approach

Our Multidimensional Approach2017-04-01T16:42:06+00:00

The main principles of our multi-dimensional integrative approach

  • Integration: drawing on the best elements from across the multitude of approaches
  • Recognising the common factors between approaches
  • Appreciating and making use of the conflicts and differences between the approaches
  • Integrating all the main branches of the therapeutic field
  • Drawing on a rich diversity of specific approaches
  • Re-visioning all theories and approaches through a bodymind perspective
  • Balancing the mental-verbal bias of the ‘talking therapies’
  • Emphasising non-verbal and otherwise subliminal communication
  • Integrating both spontaneous and reflective processes and capacities
  • Working with all the levels of bodymind experience (body - emotion - imagination - mind - intuition)
  • Emphasising the relational aspects of the therapeutic relationship
  • Recognising different forms of therapeutic relatedness / modalities of therapeutic relationship (Petruska Clarkson)
  • Integrating the modalities into an holistic dynamic embodied whole (the ‘diamond model’ - Soth 2007)
  • Taking into account many dimensions and layers of unconscious processes (including traditional transference and countertransference)
  • Recognising the paradoxical nature of ‘enactment’ (counter-therapeutic versus transformative) as central to the therapeutic endeavour
  • Inclusive stance towards one-person, one-and-a-half person, two-person and many-person psychologies (Martha Stark)
  • Recent developments in
  • Recognising the importance of right-brain to right-brain attunement
  • Re-visioning the relationship between body and mind
  • Application of systems theory and systemic understanding to psychology
  • Multi-dimensional = integral (Wilber)
  • Recognition of parallel processes on each level and between different levels of system
  • Connection between inner world (whole bodymind) as a system and outer world systems (family, social, cultural, global)
  • Recognition of inner and outer ecology of bodymind systems
  • Our own woundedness as the foundation of our therapeutic presence
  • Embracing our own wounded self as the instrument through which we work
  • Transcending the doctor-patient dualism
  • Therapy as an ‘impossible profession’
  • Paradoxical notion of the working alliance and the therapeutic relationship
  • The client’s conflict becomes the therapist’s conflict
  • Enactment as the paradox at the heart of relational therapy
  • Therapy as an ‘impossible profession’
  • Paradoxical notion of the working alliance and the therapeutic relationship
  • The client’s conflict becomes the therapist’s conflict
  • Enactment as the paradox at the heart of relational therapy
  • Self-organisation and the conflict between established structures and emergent processes
  • Extending the traditional meaning of ‘parallel process’ into a new model and organising principle for therapy (fractal self - Soth 2006)
Read more about our therapeutic approach    >>