Since moving to the
North East of England in 2016, I find myself fielding the same FAQs.
"Canadian or American?" "What part?" "Are
you just visiting?" "How long are you here for?"
"Do you miss the States?" "Which do you like better?"
The more inquisitive
ask: "What brought you here?" "Where's that
(surname) from?" and "So what do you think of
Trump?"
It is to be expected
outside the cosmopolitan capital but when I inform them that I have lived in
England for more than a generation, I sometimes hear: "You still
have a twang." or "Your accent hasn't changed!" or the
'compliment' "You still have the accent but it has softened".
Really? A lot of assumptions there, eh!
For the record, I was
raised in a beautiful seaside borough in Monmouth County, New Jersey. I
lived in southern Sweden for one summer in 1979 and I am an alumnus of the
University of Minnesota Duluth where I double-majored in geography and urban
studies. I hold dual citizenship in the US and UK and I have been legally
American-British since 2006.
I have been living in
dear old Blighty since the mid-1990s. When I was a geographic analyst for
a Silicon Valley digital mapping company, I was seconded to London to work on a
sat-nav prototype for the consumer market. My career and personal life
took a new direction and I undertook an onerous immigration campaign that
lasted almost twelve years from start to finish. My surname is Italian
but I haven't any Italian heritage and that is a private family matter.
Of course, I miss the States just as I would miss Britain if I were to
leave. And finally, I am seldom drawn on that loaded question about my
President.
My community values
are positively informed by my hometown and my worldview has been enhanced by a
trans-Atlantic perspective and my lived experiences - both good and bad.
I have made a number
of career changes over my working life out of sheer necessity. Prior to
being a counsellor/psychotherapist, I was the project manager of an
individualized health and wellbeing programme for an interactive healthcare
company. I then retrained at the Metanoia Institute in London in 2012.
After I qualified in
2016, I relocated with my partner to the family farm at the Northumberland
coast where I launched my private counselling and psychotherapy practice.
I was more than ready to escape the congestion, stress and toxicity of
metropolitan London. I draw nourishment from the space, nature and
seashore on my doorstep. It is far from pristine but we are doing our bit
to leave the environment in better shape than we found it.
As so many businesses
are embracing sustainability, I invested a year's research into how I could
adopt sustainable practices in my own counselling/psychotherapy service.
Late last year I began transitioning to ecotherapy with an aim to dedicating
the therapeutic work I do with my clients to a healthier planet and communion
of living things.
I live just outside Whitley Bay in a cottage on a traditional Northumbrian farmstead at the coast. I have a warm and inviting counselling room and abundant outdoor space for semi-private and semi-public ecotherapy sessions.
What on earth is ecotherapy? The intersection of psychology and environment that is the natural evolution of psychotherapy and counselling. Drawing on the "bioneering" work of others before me, I embrace this burgeoning form of psychotherapy that unites mind and nature in evidence based practice. A collection of posts that summarizes, elucidates and supports my foray into ecotherapy and entreats you to join me.
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This captures the essence of ecopsychology....
Essays Copied from the Center for Humans and Nature weekly e-newsletter 13.Sep 2022. Returning the Gift, 2021 By Robin Wall Kimmerer...

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Since moving to the North East of England in 2016, I find myself fielding the same FAQs. "Canadian or American?" "What part...
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Essays Copied from the Center for Humans and Nature weekly e-newsletter 13.Sep 2022. Returning the Gift, 2021 By Robin Wall Kimmerer...
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The healing effects of nature are supported by three theories that locate them within a scientific evidence base. Citing Jordan (2014): ...