Bristol Creative Counselling and Supervision

Bristol Creative Counselling and Supervision I believe everyone has the ability to realize their potential and over thirty years experience helps me tailor my service to meet your needs.

I have worked in mental health settings, organizations representing people with disabilities, homelessness, bereavement, grief and loss, rape and abuse, parenting and pregnancy issues, all from a person-centred approach. Alongside this I qualified in counselling adults, children and young people, couples, complementary therapy, hypnotherapy, supervision, creative writing for therapeutic purposes,

dance movement therapy, and volunteered with self-help groups. I have been involved with many organisations, including employee assistance programmes and HTV, and delivered training and workshops on creative interventions. I enjoy all aspects of this work and the challenge of meeting a wide range of different needs.

14/10/2023

Two Moons (1847–1917), or Ishaynishus (Cheyenne: Éše'he Ôhnéšesêstse), was one of the Cheyenne chiefs who took part in the Battle of the Little Bighorn and other battles against the United States Army.
Two Moons was the son of Carries the Otter, an Arikara captive who married into the Cheyenne tribe. Perhaps known best for his participation in battles such as the Battle of the Rosebud against General Crook on June 17, 1876, in the Montana Territory, the Battle of Little Big Horn on June 25, 1876 and what would prove to be his last battle, the Battle of Wolf Mountain on January 8, 1877. Two Moons' defeat at Wolf Mountain by General Nelson A. Miles led inevitably to the surrender of his Cheyenne band to Miles at Fort Keogh in April 1877.
After the surrender of his Cheyenne band, Two Moons enlisted as an Indian Scout under General Miles. As a result of Two Moons' pleasant personality, the friendliness that he showed towards the whites, as well as his ability to get along with the military, General Miles appointed him head Chief of the Cheyenne Northern Reservation. As head Chief, Two Moons played a crucial role in the surrender of Chief Little Cow's Cheyenne band at Fort Keogh.
Two Moons traveled on multiple occasions to Washington, D.C., to discuss and fight for the future of the Northern Cheyenne people and to better the conditions that existed on the reservation. In 1914, Two Moons met with President Woodrow Wilson to discuss these matters.
Two Moons was one of the models selected for James Fraser's famous Buffalo Nickel

14/10/2023

One of my favorite squirrel models was the pleasantly plump Bashful. His unwavering dedication to eating often led to accidents, leaving me with suspicions of an underlying issue. Little did I expect him to embrace parenthood, but here he is: Son of Bashful, or S.O.B. for short.

14/10/2023

Chief Sitting Bull of the Hunkpapa Lakota and his family at Ft. Randall, South Dakota. 1883. Rear L–R Good Feather Woman (sister), Walks Looking (daughter) front L–R Her Holy Door (mother), Sitting Bull, Many Horses (daughter) with her son, Courting a Woman

14/10/2023

Pe**te Drummer. 1927. Photo by Edward S. Curtis.

13/10/2023

Catecahassa or Black Hoof (c. 1740–1831) was the head civil chief of the Shawnee Indians in the Ohio Country of what became the United States. A member of the Mekoche division of the Shawnees, Black Hoof became known as a fierce warrior during the early wars between the Shawnee and Anglo- American colonists. Black Hoof claimed to have been present at the Battle of the Monongahela in 1755, when General Edward Braddock was defeated during the French and Indian War, although there is no contemporary evidence that Shawnees took part in that battle.
Little documentary evidence of Black Hoof's life appears in the historical record before 1795. He probably took part in the Battle of Point Pleasant during Lord Dunmore's War against the Virginia militia in 1774. During the American Revolutionary War, he may have taken part in the siege of Boonesborough in 1778, which was led by Chief Blackfish, as well as the subsequent defense of the Shawnee village of Chillicothe in 1779. In the Northwest Indian War, Black Hoof was defeated by "Mad" Anthony Wayne and, following the collapse of the Indian confederation, surrendered in 1795.
Like Little Turtle of the Miamis, Black Hoof decided that American Indians needed to adapt culturally to the ways of the whites in order to prevent decimation through warfare. During his later years, Black Hoof became an ally of the United States and was responsible for keeping the majority of the Shawnee nation from joining "Tecumseh's War", which became part of the War of 1812.
Black Hoof resisted the policy of Indian removal that the United States implemented soon after the War of 1812. He never signed a removal treaty, and continued to lead his tribe until his death in Saint Johns, Ohio in 1831. After his death, the Shawnee were eventually compelled to emigrate to the West.

13/10/2023

Posing with Glee: As he revel in the beauty of autumn's colors, this squirrel can't help but break into smiles, their laughter painting a canvas of pure woodland delight.

13/10/2023

The Ute Pass Trail originated just below the springs of Manitou, Colorado, through Ute Pass and into the White River country of Utah. With the Indians dragging their travois along this trail, the route became easier to follow and eventually became a safe route to the Colorado gold fields. Starting in 1860, the mineral rushes to Colorado resulted in large settler migrations that began the first major threat to the Ute way of life. These Ute men pose on horseback as part of the marking ceremony for the Ute Pass Trail on August 29,1912. – Courtesy Southern Ute Cultural Center & Museum

22/09/2022

AJ Assoon!
Chicken Dancer!
Gathering of Nations Pow Wow 2022
Mark E Lawson photo

21/03/2020

Learn how to find and create opportunities for positive social change, with this online course from The Open University and Oxfam.

29/09/2017

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Wednesday 4pm - 8pm
Thursday 8am - 8pm
Friday 8am - 8pm

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