transformation

My practice follows a non-pathological, transformational model of change.

A pathological model identifies what’s not working, and looks for how to fix it. It moves from a known (the problem), towards what’s currently unknown (a solution).

A transformational model cultivates our capacity to be with uncertainty or an unknown (a situation that doesn’t yet make sense to us) long enough to come into conscious relationship with what’s constricting our perception of the situation. It’s more a question of access — accessing clarity, creativity, courage, compassion, confidence, healing — than fixing or solving. There is an assumption of innate wholeness and resourcefulness in one’s Core Self and the relational healing field of Self.

A transformational model helps us notice the lens that is rendering a situation as chaotic or that’s creating suffering. It helps facilitate an internal shift, un-blending or de-roling from this lens to one that perceives fresh possibilities and engages our capacity for re-dreaming patterns, supporting outer changes in one’s life.