Offerings / Services
I am currently accepting new clients.
Therapeutic Conversations & Letters
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Do we click?
To respect your time and resources, I offer and recommend a free, no-commitment, 15-20 minute phone or video meeting where we might get to know each other a little and see if we might be a good fit.
Your stories and experiences are important, and it makes sense to want to gauge a new person before sharing those stories and experiences with them.
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To support accessibility and sustainability of services, especially in the time of COVID-19, I offer only phone and video conversations so that we can connect from wherever we might have access to a phone, computer, internet, and some modicum of privacy.
For more information about privacy, security, and video platform capabilities, please see the Phone & Video Considerations page.
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Sometimes a little more time to think, revisit, and craft a response can offer a welcome therapeutic space. This may be an alternative or an addition to verbal conversations, and can be a welcome form of record keeping for conversations that can feel ephemeral.
If you might like to see if this could be of use to you, please schedule either an intro call or letter / email.
This is an excerpt from The Economics of Narrative by David Nylund & John Thomas (1994, p. 4-5), which (despite the unfortunate formatting) explores the impact of therapeutic narrative letters:
“Although my intuition told me the letter-writing process was well worth it, I had not documented evidence of its usefulness, particularly in the context of managed care. I conducted a survey to determine the impact on my clients of narrative letters that asked them to indicate if the letters they received in therapy were: (I) Very Helpful, (2) Helpful, (3) Not Helpful, or (4) Harmful. The respondents were also requested to elaborate on their response to this question. There were two additional questions. Clients were asked to identify the "worth" of a narrative letter versus face-to-face interviews (e.g., one letter is equivalent to two interviews). Lastly, clients were invited to estimate the percentage of gains in therapy due to the letters alone (What percentage of the gains you made during counseling are due to the letters sent to you?).
After I had obtained 40 surveys, I tallied up the findings. Thirty-seven participants indicated that the letters were "very helpful" The remaining three considered them"helpful". The average worth of a letter was 3.2 face-to-face interviews, with the highest single rating as I0 and the lowest as .25. As a group, 52.8 percent of the gains made in therapy were due to the letters alone. The average length of therapy was 4.5 sessions.
The clients' comments on the survey forms also lend support to the therapeutic value of letter writing. The following comment by one of the participants is representative of many other responses:
"At first, I was a little awestruck over the fact that someone would take the time to write me. Your letters put the finishing touch on each session. They have given me support and encouragement. If I was feeling very down, and I knew that there were no appointments available, I referred to the letters and had a counseling session between myself and the letters. The letters are stronger than the fear; they have documented growth. In turn, I feel stronger. I really like your questions; they provoked deep thought. Because of your letters, I feel that therapy has been greatly enhanced for me."
Narrative letters appear to break down the distinction between therapy in the office and therapy outside of the office. They provide the message that being in the world is more important than being in the therapy office. When therapeutic activity continues even after the therapy visit, clients are more likely to rely on their own knowledge and less on the expert knowledge of the therapist. This view is in stark contrast to traditional therapy assumptions.”
Rates for Services
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1 hour conversation: Sliding scale $50 - $160
Rationale: $25-$60 are common rates for student counsellors; many low-cost counselling programs range $50-$80+; CCPA and BCACC recommend a range of $120 - $160+/hour.
Each therapeutic conversation represents approximately 3-5 hours of work, taking into account administrative labour and professional development (it’s just me behind the curtain, I am the accountant, web developer, receptionist, et al.).
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1 exchange: $50 - $150
1 exchange = one letter or email from each of us.
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The following description is borrowed from Alexis J. Cunningfolk:
The top price range ($130-160+) is a pay-it-forward price that is a small percentage above the actual operating costs of a session. This supports access for people who are needing to pay lower than actual cost.
The upper price range ($100-120) is the actual operating costs of a session. This includes administrative work, client contact, resource gathering, and more.
The middle price range ($75-100) is for those who are able to meet their basic needs but have little-to-no expendable income. Paying full price for a session might require the sacrifice of something else but will not create hardship.
The lower price range ($50-70) is for those who struggle to meet basic needs and paying full price for a session would create hardship in some way.
For a visual of this sliding scale guidance, please click here.
Strategies
The Parking Lot
To avoid finding yourself at the end of a conversation without touching on the things you wanted to talk about, consider jotting down a few notes in a designated notebook or app on your phone.
This keeps you on track and provides valuable data to reflect on after some time has passed;
Any time “I should talk about this in therapy” comes up, write it down. We don’t rely on our short term memory in these parts, we have systems in place!
Pick One Thing
If Overwhelm or Apathy is present, consider picking one thing (only one) to shift or mull over between our conversations. Some examples of this might look like:
substituting "I can't" with "I'm struggling with this";
considering what relationship you would like to have with Anger;
trying to eat more regularly;
counting to 10 before responding to others when Frustration is present.
Look for Patterns
If you're noticing the same dynamics or feelings present, consider doing some data collection: what's happening around you when these things occur?
Have you slept/ate/hydrated?
What part or role are you playing (honestly & objectively as humanly possible)?
What kind of media do you engage with?
Does it reflect your values in action?
Zoom out a little and see if you can find any patterns linking your thought processes to the movies, books, social media, videos, or podcasts you engage with on a regular basis.
Mapping some of these things out can give us a solid base to start reworking some ingrained narratives during our conversations, which has a similar effect on therapeutic conversations as optimum light and a plant mister does on houseplants.
to give your therapeutic conversation the best growing conditions
Inclusive Workshops & Consultation
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To respect your time and resources, I offer and recommend a free, no-commitment, 15-20 minute phone or video meeting to discuss what your organization is hoping for and if I might be a good fit for the task.
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To support accessibility and sustainability of services, especially in the time of COVID-19, I offer only phone and video connections for organizational support. This may change in the future.
For more information about privacy, security, and video platform capabilities, please see the Phone & Video Considerations page.
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Engaging and relevant workshops or group facilitation, co-created and tailored to be of most use for your particular purpose. All workshops at present are conducted remotely to support sustainability; this may change in future.
I draw from a background in teaching and facilitation, and have run workshops and webinars on curriculum, inclusive business practices, respectful communication, and more.
I currently have space for co-created workshops and group facilitation. If this might be of interest, please contact me to discuss your ideas and your organization’s needs.