This year the theme of the Tavistock Relationships Clinic Summer School was ‘The Couple’s Projective System’. The workshop was four intensive days of lectures, seminars, case-study presentations and small clinical discussion groups.
Tavistock Relationships Advanced International Summer School 2017
Tales of Attachment
On December 5th 2015 I attended the Commemorative Conference on John Bowlby’s 25 Anniversary. The conference was a homage to psychoanalyst, psychologist and child psychiatrist John Bowlby the founder of Attachment Theory. In essence Bowlby’s research provided the evidence base for how the kind of love, or lack of love, we received in our early childhoods continues to affect the kind of relationships we are able to form in later life. It was Bowlby who realised the importance of a secure base, and how we resort to defensive strategies when we feel that our secure base is under threat. His work has been a hugely important influence for me in my work as a psychotherapist.
Cherry Potter
Group psychotherapy abroad
At the end of November I attended a group psychotherapy workshop in Palma de Mallorca. Organised by a group analyst from Palma, Joan Coll, it brought together participants from various parts of Spain, Portugal, Germany, the US and the UK. The theme was “Trabajando en grupo. Nuevas perspectivas” (Working in goups- new perspectives). Through lectures and discussions in small and large groups. we explored how the cultural and social unconscious emerges in communications and relationships, as well as how group psychotherapists from different countries understand their theoretical foundations and how this is reflected in the way they work. A contribution that I found particularly interesting was by Professor Elisabeth Rohr from Germany, who talked about her work as a supervisor with health professionals in South Africa, Guatemala and the West Band. She showed how her position as an outsider allowed her to recognise unconsciousbarriers to effective work, which were rooted in the social conflicts of each country.
Palma is not necessarily a place you go to for professional purposes. But for me it was an eye-opener to look beyond the tourist attractions and to meet colleagues who, like myself, work with people who need help with their emotional and mental helth problems. I came back inspired by the beautiful winter sunlight and the warm welcome I received. I think it is important to get out of one’s own professional comfort zone, to learn about how colleagues from other countries think and work – although doing it all in Spanish was quite a challenge for me!
Welcome to our new website
We’ve been working with Online Business Development Specialist and SEO David Rosam and Web Developer and Designer Clive Walker on updating the Brighton Psychotherapy and Counselling Practice website.
This new site has more information about our services and brings our web presence bang up to date alongside the city’s other leading practices.
We hope you like it.
Read our blog
This new blog section is where each of us – Cherry Potter, Anne Marie Salm and Brian Solts – will be writing about developments in the psychotherapy, counselling and mental health fields.
Can we help you?
The most important aspect of our work on this new site is making the practice more visible when people are looking for help in Brighton and the surrounding areas.
If you’d like to talk to us, please call 01273 682544 or use our contact form.