For those interested in shifting our consciousness in the direction of being better able to collaborate in meeting our collective needs and stewarding the Earth.
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Discussing course material in conjunction with practicing and teaching Imago Relationship Therapy.
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I am a Imago Relationship therapist and interested in how IPNB interacts with couples and others in healing ruptures and establishing deep connection. How to help create safety in couples and all relationships, through dialoging and other connecting strategies. Intergrating a understanding of the Wellness(relationship triangle)-Mind-Embodied Brain-Relationships
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I am seeking persons who are interested in being in a group to do some merging of ideas and successful interventions. I nursed for 35 years and have been in the field of blindness/visual impairments for 25 years and although I am a few months from 80 I still work and am about the only US COMS (Internationally Certified Orientation and Mobility Specialist) working with institutionalized blind/visually impaired individuals. There is such a need for more information on this population that I am writing a book and sort of stalemated in the process.
I have developed some interventions that have a lot of Dr. Siegel's methodologies and had success despite no spoken communication.
Please join if interested in this type of discussion.
Kenalea Johnson, Ed. D., COMS
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++ Our Purpose is to be open to what will emerge from honoring and linking each member’s hopes for self-awareness and clinical insights: The Science and How of each member’s IPNB-informed practices. One possible focal theme for our Zoom meetings would be to read and discuss Dr. Bonnie Badenoch, in ”The Heart of Trauma: Healing the Embodied Brain in the Context of Relationships,” (Norton, 2018). Bonnie presents Siegel, Porges, and all the trauma-informed neuroscience and multi-disciplinary research that Dan discussed in the nine domains of integration in our healing trauma course. Bonnie’s book developed from her 20 years of IPNB clinical consultation. She explains, ”There are way stations sprinkled throughout these pages, invitations to pause to sink more deeply into the felt sense of what we are talking about. These ”Pause for Reflections” have a two-fold purpose to slow the pace a bit so that the words don’t pull us too far into the left hemisphere; where meaning has a tendency to get lost; and if we chose to share with another, to offer some oases where the deepening may be supported by our reflections to each other. These ”Pauses for Reflection” also invite us to practice the very nonjudgmental presence that we hope to offer our clients and others.