According to biologists, each cell in our body receives a constant flow of two opposing messages. One message asks the cell over and over again to “Divide, divide, divide,” while an equal and opposing message asks it repeatedly to “Stay together, stay together, stay together.”
I believe that our psychology is not so different. Within each of us is a force that asks us to be and express our uniqueness. To follow our own impulses and pursue what intrigues and inspires us. We decide for ourselves what we like or dislike. How we dress, eat, and live, where we go and what we do. We may also explore our inner depths by going inside, deeper into ourselves, connecting with our own higher wisdom and alternate states of consciousness reflected in our daily life through deeper levels of personal awareness.
There is an equally compelling and opposing force that urges us to unite, to join and come together in a plethora of relationships. We learn to connect through varying degrees with increasing levels of sensitivity to our family, friends, peer groups, communities, countries, flora, fauna, the environment, the planet and all that is.
By integrating this understanding of our psychology with theories of how energy in the universe moves and theories of how we learn, I have created a new model of psychological growth, Unified Field Psychotherapy. UFP envisions personal evolution as a spiral between these two forces or poles, and believes that deepening in our capacity for selfhood will simultaneously increase our capacity for attachment.
Our capacity for attachment develops ideally through a healthy relationship with our primary care giver in early infancy, however there are many circumstances, such as trauma, which may interfere with the expression and experience of healthy attachment and individuation. I help clients to achieve growth in this direction utilizing a synthesis of Attachment and Trauma therapy to unblock the forces of attachment and individuation.
I rely on principles and techniques from a somatic and transpersonal approach called Hakomi. Hakomi is an experiential approach that can help you to deepen into your experience of selfhood using mindfulness and immersion. These techniques help clients to uncover and reorganize hidden underlying core beliefs while gaining deeper self-awareness and greater self-expression, while simultaneously freeing up blocked energy for deeper attachment in your relationships.
In addition, UFP includes techniques from Jon Eisman’s RCS, or “Recreation of the Self” to assist clients who have succeeded in their process of individuation, to transform their relationship to positive and negative energy. Focusing on fear is contractive and decreases the energy available to our system, while focusing on love is expansive and increases the energy available, allowing us to reach a deeper intimacy with our Self and in all our relationships.
Because UFP is based on an underlying organic flow of universal energy, it is useful in a variety of applications including work with individuals, couples, families and groups. I enjoy working with folks from a wide variety of lifestyles and socio economic backgrounds.
I believe that our psychology is not so different. Within each of us is a force that asks us to be and express our uniqueness. To follow our own impulses and pursue what intrigues and inspires us. We decide for ourselves what we like or dislike. How we dress, eat, and live, where we go and what we do. We may also explore our inner depths by going inside, deeper into ourselves, connecting with our own higher wisdom and alternate states of consciousness reflected in our daily life through deeper levels of personal awareness.
There is an equally compelling and opposing force that urges us to unite, to join and come together in a plethora of relationships. We learn to connect through varying degrees with increasing levels of sensitivity to our family, friends, peer groups, communities, countries, flora, fauna, the environment, the planet and all that is.
By integrating this understanding of our psychology with theories of how energy in the universe moves and theories of how we learn, I have created a new model of psychological growth, Unified Field Psychotherapy. UFP envisions personal evolution as a spiral between these two forces or poles, and believes that deepening in our capacity for selfhood will simultaneously increase our capacity for attachment.
Our capacity for attachment develops ideally through a healthy relationship with our primary care giver in early infancy, however there are many circumstances, such as trauma, which may interfere with the expression and experience of healthy attachment and individuation. I help clients to achieve growth in this direction utilizing a synthesis of Attachment and Trauma therapy to unblock the forces of attachment and individuation.
I rely on principles and techniques from a somatic and transpersonal approach called Hakomi. Hakomi is an experiential approach that can help you to deepen into your experience of selfhood using mindfulness and immersion. These techniques help clients to uncover and reorganize hidden underlying core beliefs while gaining deeper self-awareness and greater self-expression, while simultaneously freeing up blocked energy for deeper attachment in your relationships.
In addition, UFP includes techniques from Jon Eisman’s RCS, or “Recreation of the Self” to assist clients who have succeeded in their process of individuation, to transform their relationship to positive and negative energy. Focusing on fear is contractive and decreases the energy available to our system, while focusing on love is expansive and increases the energy available, allowing us to reach a deeper intimacy with our Self and in all our relationships.
Because UFP is based on an underlying organic flow of universal energy, it is useful in a variety of applications including work with individuals, couples, families and groups. I enjoy working with folks from a wide variety of lifestyles and socio economic backgrounds.