How I work

This page outlines my mindfulness-based approach to psychotherapy and the thinking that underpins it. It also describes the short-term and open-ended therapy I offer, including when online therapy may be helpful.

A mindfulness-based approach

My psychotherapy training is in a mindfulness-based approach called Core Process Psychotherapy (CPP). This approach integrates concepts of mindfulness and awareness with modern psychological perspectives and approaches.

This approach to counselling and psychotherapy does not require you, as the client, to be familiar with mindfulness. Instead, my own mindfulness practice is intended to support me in my work. 

Mindfulness is about meeting whatever is happening in the present moment with awareness, compassion, warmth and non-judging acceptance. All therapists aim to provide a therapeutic space imbued with these qualities. In the case of mindfulness-based counsellors and psychotherapists, these qualities are underpinned by their own awareness and mindfulness practices.

Mindfulness also comes into our work together in other ways. We may bring awareness to what arises in the here-and-now as we talk and explore together. This might include noticing thoughts, feelings and bodily sensations as they arise in the present moment.

Psychotherapy trainings such as Core Process Psychotherapy are typically delivered at postgraduate level and often involve years of teaching, practice, and personal and professional development.

As part of my training, it was a requirement that students undertake personal therapy for at least a year prior to starting, and for four years during the training itself. The training also expected students to develop mindful awareness through regular mindfulness practice.

This commitment to deep self-work underpins a Core Process psychotherapist’s capacity to hold a client’s process and to offer a therapeutic space where in-depth inquiry can occur. I continue to engage with mindfulness both as an academic interest and as a spiritual practice.

Short-term therapy

In short-term therapy, the work tends to focus on the particular issue, or issues that have prompted you to seek therapy. You may for instance be experiencing or be recovering from a period of transition or change in your life.  You may therefore decide that you want to use the therapeutic space to support you in working through the thoughts and feelings arising from this event.

It could also be that there is no particular event or situation that has led you to explore the option of therapy. The therapy space can be used to work on feelings such as anxiety, depression, anger, stress and low self-esteem. 

Longer-term therapy

Longer-term or open-ended therapy allows more time to explore the connections between your past experiences and your current thoughts, feelings and behaviour. It also allows space to notice and better understand your inner psychological processes and interpersonal dynamics. Insights from our work together also have the opportunity to become further established in your day-to-day life. 

While we may agree a notional length to our work at the start of therapy, this can be revisited at any time. Normally I would suggest meeting for six appointments to begin with and then for us to use the therapeutic space to reflect on where we want to go from there.

Online therapy

During the Covid pandemic, many therapists and clients had to adapt quickly to working online. One benefit of this shift has been the way it has opened psychotherapy to a wider population.

My experience is that online therapy can offer the same potential for depth and meaningful change as in-person work, and where for whatever reason it is not possible to work in person, it offers an opportunity to undertake both short-term and open-ended therapeutic work.