I am a Registered Clinical
Counsellor who works with individual adults. In addition to doing
general counselling, I specialize in the areas of life transitions (especially
sudden, radical life change), grief and loss and disability issues.
My work with groups includes
developing and facilitating grief and loss groups for organizations as
well as facilitating and co-facilitating grief recovery support groups
in the community.
I have also created and run
numerous workshops and seminars for both professional and community groups.
Topics for these have included stress management, wellness, boundaries,
self-esteem, adjusting to life change and recognizing and responding to
grief.
As
a sessional instructor at the Justice Institute of B.C. I created and taught
a course addressing grief and loss arising from disability and co-created
and co-taught a course about person-centered practice.
I'm
a member of both the B.C. Association of Clinical Counsellors and The Canadian
Counselling Association.
In 1982 my life changed suddenly
when rare complications to mononucleosis led to permanent paralysis.
I became quadriplegic and began the journey of coming to terms with that.
My healing process eventually
brought me to the realization that life is the journey and
allowed me to accept the fact that it doesn't always go where you want
it to. With that acceptance I started travelling light. Life
became easier, bigger and brighter.
I enjoy
writing and my work has been published in the print magazines Spirituality
& Health and Grief Digest. My articles, stories, poetry and original
quotes have been in several online ezines and various newsletters.
I'm
a big fan of ocean surfing; I like to grow wildly colourful flower
gardens; I love kites and anything else that twirls and flutters in the
wind and I'm captivated by all cats big and small, wild and domestic.
I seem to always have at least one of the domestic version around to run
my life.
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