Rhizome Practice Blog.
Help! My Brain is Torturing Me: Six Steps to Tackle Unwanted Intrusive Thoughts.
In this blog post I explore the nature of unwanted intrusive thoughts, what they are, why they cause us so much trouble and what we can do about them.
5 Fast Ways to Anchor the Body When Stressed.
In this blog post I explore the best ways to stop ourselves from spiralling when events or people trigger a trauma-based stress response. The Five Anchors come from Resmaa Menakem’s (highly recommended) book “My Grandmother’s Hands: Racialised Trauma and the Pathway to Mending Our Hearts and Bodies" and are themselves based on the work of Dr David Schnarch.
Is Body Terrorism Making You Anxious?
Content Warning – this blog contains references to racism, ableism, suicide, rape, misogyny, queer, fat and transphobia.
In this blog post I’ll explore Sonya Renee Taylor’s wonderful book “The Body Is Not An Apology” along with the ways that body terrorism shows up, and how we can resist it using radical self-love.
Happy New Year, We’re All Going To Die: Death Anxiety and What To Do About It.
In this blog post I discuss death anxiety, what it is, and how therapy can help us to process the fact of death itself.
Trigger warning: contains discussions about death but no details of death as a process.
What is Minority Stress and Could It Be Affecting You?
In this blog post I explore what Minority Stress is, why it’s important to be aware of it and how it might be impacting on your mental health.
This Is Your Brain On Therapy.
In this blog article we delve into some of the ways the brain and nervous system are changed for the better via psychotherapy. We also explore what’s going on for us in the room when we work with a psychotherapist.
Five Surprising Ways Trauma Impacts On Your Life.
Trauma is a word that’s bandied around a lot in pop-culture and social justice circles. Usually, trauma is used to describe a disturbing, deeply distressing experience of overwhelm. In this blog I explore what trauma is, some of the unusual ways it can show up for us and how psychological therapies can help.
Estrangement: Why Some of Us Cut Ties With Our Family of Origin.
About 12% of older adults are estranged from their adult children so we are talking about a sizeable number of people – the same number of people who are left-handed – and there are many reasons why we might decide to separate from our family. In this blog article I am going to explore the theme of estrangement and how therapy can help us to heal from the experience of difficult family backgrounds.
Decoding Anger.
Everyone gets angry including your therapist: “if you’re not pissed off you’re not paying attention” as the direct action news-sheet Schnews used to put it back in the day. And let’s face it, there’s a lot to be angry about, whether that’s on a global scale or just in the day-to-day annoyances of keeping the wheels on the trolley of life. In this blog article I’ll explore what anger is, what it might be telling you, and how to harness the power of anger so it becomes a friend not a foe.
Busting Some Myths About Cognitive Behavioural Therapy - Part 2
“CBT is only a sticking plaster, it doesn’t go deep and doesn’t create long-lasting change. CBT is delivered by emotionless barely adult robots. CBT blames me as the client when I don’t feel any better. CBT feels mechanical and superficial, it doesn’t see me in all my complexity. CBT doesn’t do emotions or warmth. CBT isn’t interested in relationships it’s all tools and technique….”
In the second part of this two-part blog post, I’ll bust some of the common myths about CBT and explore where they might have come from and why.
Busting Some Myths About Cognitive Behavioural Therapy.
“CBT is only a sticking plaster, it doesn’t go deep and doesn’t create long-lasting change. CBT is delivered by emotionless barely adult robots. CBT blames me as the client when I don’t feel any better. CBT feels mechanical and superficial, it doesn’t see me in all my complexity. CBT doesn’t do emotions or warmth. CBT isn’t interested in relationships it’s all tools and technique….”
These are some of the many myths that you’ll hear about Cognitive Behavioural Therapy if you do a quick Google on the subject. My favourites are the expletive littered Mumsnet ones. In this two-part blog post I’ll bust some of the common myths about CBT and explore where they might have come from and why.
Why You Keep Going Over The Same Thoughts Again And Again.
“If only I’d done X instead of Y. My life was so much better back then, how did I end up like this? What’s wrong with me? Why is this happening to me? It’s my fault that I am in this mess, I’m a terrible person and everyone hates me, I should have known better, I’ve messed up my life, things will never change…” Does this sound like you? You may be ruminating and it will be taking a serious toll on your physical and mental health.
In this blog post I offer some ways out of the rumination trap and explore how therapy can help with rumination when it shows up in your life.
10 Surprising Ways We Block Self-Compassion.
It’s really hard to be kind to ourselves. We are brought up in a competitive culture that tells us to strive harder, do better and to sacrifice our physical and emotional wellbeing in order to achieve (outward) success. Burnout, busy-ness and overload are almost badges of pride. Tearing each other down to get ahead, whether that’s in the workplace, neighbourhood, politics, academia or via a social media pile-on is simply seen as the “way things are.”
It’s no wonder that self-compassion is seen as somehow soft or self-indulgent; if we’re too busy wafting around being kinder to ourselves then someone else is going to grab that job/gadget/partner/piece of the pie and leave us in the dust. In this blog post I explore some of the common obstacles to self-compassion and how in fact, being kinder to ourselves sets us up to function much more healthily in the toxic systems we live within.
How Anxiety is Trying to Be Your Best Friend.
Anxiety feels terrible. It can range from jittery skittishness all the way through to a full-on panic attack that makes us think we’re going to die, suffocate, do something outlandish/wrong or have a heart attack/stroke. We can also get stuck in loops of self-criticism as we tell ourselves we should be able to control our anxiety, then find ourselves getting anxious about being anxious and spiralling from there in an endless, fretful, hall of mirrors. In this blog post I’ll explain the purpose of anxiety, why it’s actually trying to protect us, and why we need to learn to make friends with it and play with anxiety, rather than let it rob us of the life we want to lead.