Do you want to restore more of your:
Do you also struggle with?
If you have said yes to some or many of these questions, welcome! This class is a fit for you.
This course is your key to unlocking that creative emergent, life generating power within you. Embark on a transformative journey with me, where you'll learn the secrets of self-authorship via your creative emergent nature.
Reclaim your creative power by embracing your inner creator, strengthen your personal boundaries, and find confidence in your sensual, rhythmic nature.
This class is designed to build community. It is offered to women and those that identify as female.
In this class, we will explore complex, dialectical concepts such as truth / transference, play / serious business, love / hate, feminine / masculine. Through group discussions we will playfully wrestle with such matters as:
1. When to trust oneself and when to not
2. Activism as escapism and when it is pure transformative power
3. Loving as people pleasing and when it is pure power that moves mountains
4. True beauty vs. false beauty, true sexuality vs. false sexuality
Ingrid has worked as a psychodynamic therapist for 14 years. She has incorporated medicine based, somatic work for the past two years. Ingrid has always been drawn to working with people with dissociative disorders and with severe trauma histories, which for her requires creativity, spontaneity, and self-trust.
Through her research on healing sexual trauma through kink and safe, caring BDSM explorations, she has discovered significant overlaps between that world and the therapy world.
With her assistance, we will be applying the concepts and principles of the taboo world of BDMS and kink to better understand how creative emergence works.
Paula is a consultant for the mental health industry. She will be discussing the limitations of the therapeutic industry, and the ways creative emergence can be unintentionally thwarted within the client-therapist interaction.
In addition, she will explore the deep bone level attachment imprints therapists make on client's nervous systems, that can leave clients feeling vulnerable and dependent without also tending to client's capacity for self-authorship and creative emergence.