Dear Blog Reader
Please visit my revised and, hopefully, improved website for further information about my counselling and psychotherapy service for individuals and couples based in the Leith area of Edinburgh.
New features include:
Sidebar links to relevant articles and external information sources
http://www.harfordtherapy.com
Hyperlinks relating to page content within the body of each page
http://www.harfordtherapy.com/transactionalanalysis.htm
An improved online payments system
http://www.harfordtherapy.com/apps/webstore/
A dedicated page for couple counselling
http://www.harfordtherapy.com/couplescounselling.htm
A dedicated page for telephone and Skype counselling
http://www.harfordtherapy.com/phoneskypecounselling.htm
An improved page of useful links
http://www.harfordtherapy.com/apps/links/
Please feel free to contact me if you wish to leave comments, or suggestions.
Thank you for looking.
David Harford www.harfordtherapy.com
Observations and musings of a transactional analysis counselling and psychotherapy practitioner based in the Leith area of Edinburgh
Wednesday, 14 December 2011
Monday, 12 December 2011
The Only Certainty Is Change
Changes are afoot. Whether I happen to be gazing through a personal, professional, or Scottish Transactional Analysis Association (STAA) lens, this is an exciting period of transition at all levels of attention.
Following in the wake of a highly successful STAA Conference and long-anticipated affiliation with EATA, there are various changes within the composition of the STAA Committee; new faces to take in and new relationships to build, while casting a grateful glance back towards those whose involvement is receding into recent history. Our external relationships are in flux, too; the parameters of our interaction with national and international bodies being re-negotiated and reconfigured with the aim of mutual enrichment of the TA community.
On a personal level, having gone through the factious and secretive machinations of TUPE legislation and eventual redundancy- an unenviable experience common to many thousands of people in the UK just now- I am about to embark on the next phase of my career as a full-time, self-employed TA practitioner, which will require careful adjustments in both my private and professional life to ensure a smooth and harmonious transition to a condition of total freedom and, with it, total responsibility.
Looking wider again, there are also a whole raft of social and political shifts on the immediate horizon. Like it or not, we may be witnessing the dying throes of the Euro and, with it, the ambitions of those looking for greater fiscal and political integration. Is the exchange of promissory capital- the dominant duplex transaction in our society- about to implode, or is it just postcolonial hand-wringing in response to the cold hard fact that China and India are playing an increasingly effective 'NIGYSOB' these days, while we slide inexorably into decadent 'Kick Me' and passive 'Poor Us'? (Berne, 1964)
And, looking through the TA glass again, there are still ideological battles to be fought, research to be conducted and recognition to be won in the aftermath of the recent failed attempt to introduce statutory regulation of our profession and the ongoing checks and imbalances of the 'Increasing Access to Psychological Therapies (IAPT)' programme.
So, what's it going to be, then, eh?....How do we position ourselves within this massive palimpsest of turmoil?....The TA familiar at my side replies, “With our selves firmly grounded in the only dimension we can effect and negotiate change- the present, marshalling all the skills and emotional resources afforded by a robust Adult.
David Harford www.harfordtherapy.com
Following in the wake of a highly successful STAA Conference and long-anticipated affiliation with EATA, there are various changes within the composition of the STAA Committee; new faces to take in and new relationships to build, while casting a grateful glance back towards those whose involvement is receding into recent history. Our external relationships are in flux, too; the parameters of our interaction with national and international bodies being re-negotiated and reconfigured with the aim of mutual enrichment of the TA community.
On a personal level, having gone through the factious and secretive machinations of TUPE legislation and eventual redundancy- an unenviable experience common to many thousands of people in the UK just now- I am about to embark on the next phase of my career as a full-time, self-employed TA practitioner, which will require careful adjustments in both my private and professional life to ensure a smooth and harmonious transition to a condition of total freedom and, with it, total responsibility.
Looking wider again, there are also a whole raft of social and political shifts on the immediate horizon. Like it or not, we may be witnessing the dying throes of the Euro and, with it, the ambitions of those looking for greater fiscal and political integration. Is the exchange of promissory capital- the dominant duplex transaction in our society- about to implode, or is it just postcolonial hand-wringing in response to the cold hard fact that China and India are playing an increasingly effective 'NIGYSOB' these days, while we slide inexorably into decadent 'Kick Me' and passive 'Poor Us'? (Berne, 1964)
And, looking through the TA glass again, there are still ideological battles to be fought, research to be conducted and recognition to be won in the aftermath of the recent failed attempt to introduce statutory regulation of our profession and the ongoing checks and imbalances of the 'Increasing Access to Psychological Therapies (IAPT)' programme.
So, what's it going to be, then, eh?....How do we position ourselves within this massive palimpsest of turmoil?....The TA familiar at my side replies, “With our selves firmly grounded in the only dimension we can effect and negotiate change- the present, marshalling all the skills and emotional resources afforded by a robust Adult.
David Harford www.harfordtherapy.com
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)