Soul Care and Pastoral Counseling

Soul Care and Pastoral Counseling 4th year Resident Psychoanalyst at Blanton-Peale Institute NYC.

Short term pastoral care: applying empathy and unconditional positive regard, pastoral counseling supports those seeking more insight and self-empowerment. Together we explore strengths, gifts, faith position and values, looking to divine the soul's deepest need, greatest care and ultimate flourishing. Pastoral Care is not a medical paradigm of diagnosis and treatment, but rather offers kind compa

nionship, support and re-connection for the journey. Companion Sessions: for those experiencing spiritual distress, grief, trauma, anxiety, displacement, chronic illness and pain. Each companion session is unique and may include energy work, narrative, song and sound, deep listening, silence, holding, art, astrology, archetypes, therapeutic touch.

When it's hard to know when to go...
08/25/2024

When it's hard to know when to go...

The hardest people to break up with are those who tell us they love us while, simultaneously, not in fact behaving in a loving way towards us. They force us ...

04/16/2023

Always dig deeper when working with behaviors. 🙌

04/16/2023
03/30/2023

One of my favorites by Mary Oliver. ♥️

03/25/2022

“In my opinion the people with the strongest, clearest boundaries, often have had a history of abuse, boundary stripping, and disassociation in early childhood. Because they are in a position to rebirth themselves from zero, how they build back their identities is done with deep respect for other people as well as themselves… this particular kind of person are the kind of people I trust, as they know themselves on a deep foundational level, and are “power with” by nature… the nature of their original highest true Self..”

~ Aaron Maschmeyer

Thank you for sharing dear Sara Hayona Eisenman

03/20/2022

Your head is a living forest, full of song birds

EE Cummings

02/08/2022

Expected Death ~ When someone dies, the first thing to do is nothing. Don't run out and call the nurse. Don't pick up the phone. Take a deep breath and be present to the magnitude of the moment.

There's a grace to being at the bedside of someone you love as they make their transition out of this world. At the moment they take their last breath, there's an incredible sacredness in the space. The veil between the worlds opens.

We're so unprepared and untrained in how to deal with death that sometimes a kind of panic response kicks in. "They're dead!"

We knew they were going to die, so their being dead is not a surprise. It's not a problem to be solved. It's very sad, but it's not cause to panic.

If anything, their death is cause to take a deep breath, to stop, and be really present to what's happening. If you're at home, maybe put on the kettle and make a cup of tea.

Sit at the bedside and just be present to the experience in the room. What's happening for you? What might be happening for them? What other presences are here that might be supporting them on their way? Tune into all the beauty and magic.

Pausing gives your soul a chance to adjust, because no matter how prepared we are, a death is still a shock. If we kick right into "do" mode, and call 911, or call the hospice, we never get a chance to absorb the enormity of the event.

Give yourself five minutes or 10 minutes, or 15 minutes just to be. You'll never get that time back again if you don't take it now.

After that, do the smallest thing you can. Call the one person who needs to be called. Engage whatever systems need to be engaged, but engage them at the very most minimal level. Move really, really, really, slowly, because this is a period where it's easy for body and soul to get separated.

Our bodies can gallop forwards, but sometimes our souls haven't caught up. If you have an opportunity to be quiet and be present, take it. Accept and acclimatize and adjust to what's happening. Then, as the train starts rolling, and all the things that happen after a death kick in, you'll be better prepared.

You won't get a chance to catch your breath later on. You need to do it now.

Being present in the moments after death is an incredible gift to yourself, it's a gift to the people you're with, and it's a gift to the person who's just died. They're just a hair's breath away. They're just starting their new journey in the world without a body. If you keep a calm space around their body, and in the room, they're launched in a more beautiful way. It's a service to both sides of the veil.

___________

Credit for the beautiful words: Sarah Kerr, Ritual Healing Practitioner and Death Doula.
Beautiful art by Columbus Community Deathcare

05/12/2021

Something very beautiful happens to people when their world has fallen apart: a humility, a nobility, a higher intelligence emerges at just the point when our knees hit the floor.

Perhaps, in a way, that's where humanity is now: about to discover we're not as smart as we thought we were, and will be forced by life to surrender our attacks and defences which avail us of nothing, and finally break through into the collective beauty of who we really are.

~ Marianne Williamson

art | Otake Ayana

Address

Wellness Therapies 154 Hempstead Street
New London, CT
06320

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Soul Care and Pastoral Counseling posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Share


Other Alternative & Holistic Health in New London

Show All