Supportive Counselling Edinburgh at Napiers Clinic

Supportive Counselling Edinburgh at Napiers Clinic John Kennedy's private counselling practice based at Dee Atkinson Herbalist and Napiers Clinic on Bristo Place. Sessions are now available online.

A friendly and experienced counsellor offering 1-1 counselling.

It's World Mental Health Day. Looking after our physical and emotional wellbeing are so important. Small acts of kindnes...
10/10/2020

It's World Mental Health Day. Looking after our physical and emotional wellbeing are so important. Small acts of kindness and care towards ourselves and others can make a big difference. What makes you feel better? Here's my personal top 3
1. Being active - whether that's a short walk in the fresh air or something more active like swimming. Kitchen dancing too :-)
2. Spending time with friends/family. Tricky at the moment and therefore all the more important. I always appreciate it when both sides are able to open up and feel heard. And having a really good laugh!
3. Spending time in nature. Autumn forests right now 🍂

Wishing you all something nourishing that makes you feel good today

D. Atkinson Herbalist

09/09/2020

This video is a little heartbreaking and also gave me hope. By seeking support when we need it we give ourselves a better chance of getting through life's tough moments. That first step is often the hardest especially if we feel we need to be strong. Men in Scotland make up 73% of the suicides. Reach out... to a friend, a family member, a helpline or to a counsellor. You're not alone.
D. Atkinson Herbalist

In addition to my work with adults in private practice I also work with children and young people in schools with an org...
19/08/2020

In addition to my work with adults in private practice I also work with children and young people in schools with an organisation called The Spark. Here's a blog post I wrote for them. Although it's aimed at parents supporting their children, it contains useful reminders for all of us about how we might approach ourselves and others with some compassion and understanding when dealing with change and transitions... something we've all been experiencing a lot of.

Loss is an inevitable part of growing up. Supporting children through loss means we must understand the different ways children process loss.

here's a link to my listing on the counselling directory if you'd like to read a little more about what I offer...D. Atk...
05/06/2020

here's a link to my listing on the counselling directory if you'd like to read a little more about what I offer...

D. Atkinson Herbalist

I am a friendly and experienced counsellor currently offering online counselling for those seeking support. I offer a safe confidential space to explore your thoughts and feelings and any issues you may be facing and support to find a way forward.

22/05/2020

It's mental health awareness week and the theme this year is kindness. Here's a poem about kindness and loss.

Kindness
By Naomi Shihab Nye

Poet, songwriter, and novelist.
Born 1952

Before you know what kindness really is
you must lose things,
feel the future dissolve in a moment
like salt in a weakened broth.
What you held in your hand,
what you counted and carefully saved,
all this must go so you know
how desolate the landscape can be
between the regions of kindness.
How you ride and ride
thinking the bus will never stop,
the passengers eating maize and chicken
will stare out the window forever.

Before you learn the tender gravity of kindness,
you must travel where the Indian in a white poncho
lies dead by the side of the road.
You must see how this could be you,
how he too was someone
who journeyed through the night with plans
and the simple breath that kept him alive.

Before you know kindness as the deepest thing inside,
you must know sorrow as the other deepest thing.
You must wake up with sorrow.
You must speak to it till your voice
catches the thread of all sorrows
and you see the size of the cloth.

Then it is only kindness that makes sense anymore,
only kindness that ties your shoes
and sends you out into the day
to mail letters and purchase bread,
only kindness that raises its head
from the crowd of the world to say
it is I you have been looking for,
and then goes with you every where
like a shadow or a friend.

D. Atkinson Herbalist

21/05/2020

It's mental health awareness week and the theme this year is kindness. I plan to share a few posts and videos that other's have put together over the coming days that highlight aspects of kindness and compassion that we might show ourselves or each other. Here is a beautifully written piece about the kindness of allowing ourselves to seek support when we need it... something many of us struggle to do. Enjoy :-)

Pooh woke up that morning, and, for reasons that he didn't entirely understand, couldn't stop the tears from coming. He sat there in bed, his little body shaking, and he cried, and cried, and cried.
Amidst his sobs, the phone rang.

It was Piglet.

"Oh Piglet," said Pooh, between sobs, in response to his friend's gentle enquiry as to how he was doing. "I just feel so Sad. So, so, Sad, almost like I might not ever be happy again. And I know that I shouldn't be feeling like this. I know there are so many people who have it worse off than me, and so I really have no right to be crying, with my lovely house, and my lovely garden, and the lovely woods all around me. But oh, Piglet: I am just SO Sad."

Piglet was silent for a while, as Pooh's ragged sobbing filled the space between them. Then, as the sobs turned to gasps, he said, kindly: "You know, it isn't a competition."

"What isn't a competition?" asked a confused sounding Pooh.

"Sadness. Fear. Grief," said Piglet. "It's a mistake we often make, all of us. To think that, because there are people who are worse off than us, that that somehow invalidates how we are feeling. But that simply isn't true. You have as much right to feel unhappy as the next person; and, Pooh - and this is the really important bit - you also have just as much right to get the help that you need."

"Help? What help?" asked Pooh. "I don't need help, Piglet.

"Do I?"

Pooh and Piglet talked for a long time, and Piglet suggested to Pooh some people that he might be able to call to talk to, because when you are feeling Sad, one of the most important things is not to let all of the Sad become trapped inside you, but instead to make sure that you have someone who can help you, who can talk through with you how the Sad is making you feeling, and some of the things that might be able to be done to support you with that.

What's more, Piglet reminded Pooh that this support is there for absolutely everyone, that there isn't a minimum level of Sad that you have to be feeling before you qualify to speak to someone.

Finally, Piglet asked Pooh to open his window and look up at the sky, and Pooh did so.

"You see that sky?" Piglet asked his friend. "Do you see the blues and the golds and that big fluffy cloud that looks like a sheep eating a carrot?"

Pooh looked, and he could indeed see the blues and the golds and the big fluffy cloud that looked like a sheep eating a carrot.

"You and I," continued Piglet, "we are both under that same sky. And so, whenever the Sad comes, I want you to look up at that sky, and know that, however far apart we might be physically...we are also, at the same time, together. Perhaps, more together than we have ever been before."

"Do you think this will ever end?" asked Pooh in a small voice.

"This too shall pass," confirmed Piglet. "And I promise you, one day, you and I shall once again sit together, close enough to touch, sharing a little smackerel of something...under that blue gold sky."

************************************

D. Atkinson Herbalist

Like many of the practitioners at the clinic I've moved to online working in order to continue supporting people and hel...
02/04/2020

Like many of the practitioners at the clinic I've moved to online working in order to continue supporting people and help keep us all safe. Finding ways to look after ourselves both physically and emotionally during this troubling time feels really important. Giving yourself some time and space to do this within a supportive therapeutic relationship can be helpful. Sessions with me are available with me via skype. Feel free to get in touch if you'd like to find out more. John

D. Atkinson Herbalist Supportive Counselling Edinburgh at Napiers Clinic

Our team of practitioners are doing telephone/ Skype consultations, our shop is open and we are dispensing herbs, tinctures, oils, vitamins and supplements. www.deeatkinson.net

19/03/2020

These uncertain times can provoke strong and understandable emotional responses in all of us. How can we protect our mental health and stay well in the coming days and weeks?
Here are 5 things we can do each day to help ~

1. Stay connected. Find ways to stay in touch with people you love whether though skype chats, walks in the park together or get creative and have a conference call dinner party! Staying connected boosts our oxytocin levels which is a hormone that bonds people and reduces stress.

2. Seek out alternative media sources that support us. There's been an amazing variety of creative responses from musician's live streaming concerts, online classes in everything from yoga to life drawing to cookery to online book groups... the list is endless and much of it free! And of course we can also turn off the laptop and listen to our favourite music or read a book :-)

3. Limit the time spent watching the news and on social media, particularly if it makes us more anxious.

4. Keep some rhythm and routine to your day, especially if you are staying at home more. Even small things like showering and dressing in the morning and keeping going to bed at your usual time can be really helpful. Have a plan and include some variety too.

5. Food and exercise. If we can, eat well and keep moving. Comforting eating and 8 hours of netflix may be tempting but having a healthy diet and staying active have proven benefits to our wellbeing. Get outdoors, spend time in nature and breathe

D. Atkinson Herbalist Supportive Counselling Edinburgh at Napiers Clinic

Well it's almost time to say goodbye to 2019 and welcome in 2020. For anyone who is living through change or knows that ...
31/12/2019

Well it's almost time to say goodbye to 2019 and welcome in 2020. For anyone who is living through change or knows that change is needed... counselling can be really useful tool to support us through the process of letting go and stepping into the life we want. Sessions with John are available for both short and long term work. Contact details are on my website or you can message me on here. Wishing everyone a healthy and happy 2020.

On this final day of 2019, all of us here at D.Atkinson Herbalist and Clinic would like to thank all our wonderful customers, colleagues and suppliers for your support over the past 12 months. We couldn’t have done it without you! Here’s to a very happy, healthy and peaceful 2020!

We close today at 4pm and reopen on Friday the 3rd of January.

23/03/2019
20/01/2019

The start of January is, for many of us, a time to look ahead to the coming year with the hope of change. We might have the intention to get fit, change an unhealthy habit, be more assertive, lose weight and so on. Gym memberships boom in January for good reason. And yet many of us will be all to familiar with the experience of getting to late January and discover our intention to go out jogging twice per week has failed to materialise! We find ourselves settled into the familiar but slightly unsatisfactory patterns we hoped might change through willpower alone. Powering through situations may work sometimes. The rest of the time we need something different. Counselling can support us to make changes in a more realistic and sustainable way. It allows us time and space to reflect on what we really want and need. It gives us a genuinely supportive environment to reflect on how best we might achieve this. And, if we stumble, someone is there to slow down with us and reflect on why the stumbles happen. We can see what happened and work out what is needed to move forward in different ways. Counselling can offers us the chance to make real change through understanding, support and encouragement.

To see if counselling might support you over the coming year book an introductory session at Napiers Clinic with John Kennedy. Appointments are available on Monday evenings and Friday 9am-6pm.
Call John direct on 07890 685 346 or Napiers reception on 0131 225 5542
www.supportivecounsellingedinburgh.com at D. Atkinson Herbalist

Counselling, Counsellor, Edinburgh, Napiers Clinic, John Kennedy

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Edinburgh

Opening Hours

Monday 5:30pm - 9:30pm
Friday 9am - 6pm

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