Kaspa Thompson: psychotherapist and Buddhist teacher

Kaspa Thompson: psychotherapist and Buddhist teacher www.kaspathompson.co.uk Helping people with anxiety, depression, unhelpful habits and painful feelings heal and become free.

I've just had some space open up to take on new therapy clients. People get support from me with strong emotions, with a...
18/07/2024

I've just had some space open up to take on new therapy clients.

People get support from me with strong emotions, with anxiety or depression, with relationship struggles, stuckness, or for healing trauma and letting go of unhelpful beliefs.

I use IFS (Internal Family Systems), a powerful way of getting to know ourselves; of creating more spaciousness and groundedness; of letting go of our unwanted reactions, emotions and behaviours; and for healing our emotional wounds.

Drop me a DM if interested, or do pass on my details.

If you're interested in working outside with clients, or using the natural world as the therapist, I can recommend this ...
02/09/2021

If you're interested in working outside with clients, or using the natural world as the therapist, I can recommend this training.

There's an introductory weekend coming up.

Wild Therapy with Leonie Guest & Jayne Johnson

Middlewood Trust
Roeburndale
Near Lancaster

Friday, Saturday & Sunday
8th/9th/10th October 2021

17/02/2021

Wild Meditation Diary

Recently I’ve started practising outdoors now and again. I long to go out to a truly wild place and sit in meditation there, but under current lockdown guidelines we are only supposed to go outside for exercise including a short rest of up to a minute…

As I wondered down to the bottom of the garden this morning I was conscious of the many human hands that cared for and curated this space as well as the non-human forces that have shaped it.

It had rained overnight and everything was damp. I noticed the wetness of the lawn but not the quality of solidity of the earth beneath. When I was out meditating at the weekend the ground was frozen solid and the hardness of the earth. There must have been more give and softness to that solidity today, but I wasn’t paying attention. It’s easier to notice the unusual states.

At the beginning of my practise I noticed the smell of damp wood. It could have been the deck I was sitting on, or dead branches stacked up beneath the hedge behind me. A little later I noticed the smell of fox, and then it was gone again, appearing and disappearing as the wind changed direction.

My attention was drawn to the bird-song, and then to the rough bark of the silver birch tree, and then to our dogs playing on the lawn. I noticed some part of my mind wanting to make connections and to find some lesson or wisdom that I could bring out of the practice and share with you all.

In that act of noticing my mind quietened and my body settled more deeply into the chair. I was aware of my weight and of the reliability of the earth supporting me. Thoughts arose telling me that we could destroy the natural earth completely and yet there was still something deeply reassuring about sitting there.

I was aware of the changes in the garden even in the last few days, buds growing on trees, the weather changing, and new flowers opening. In the midst of noticing all of that change, I also had a deep intuitive sense of something permanent or eternal.

Lock-down can be tough, and lock-down can be an opportunityHow are you doing in these unusual times? My dreams have been...
15/04/2020

Lock-down can be tough, and lock-down can be an opportunity

How are you doing in these unusual times? My dreams have been particularly vivid since lock-down started: old memories finding their way to the surface and inviting attention and letting go. With less face-to-face contact the ups and downs of my moods has been easier to notice. Some days I’m relaxed, and some days my temper is shorter than usual.

Most people I speak to have noticed a background anxiety running through their days: thoughts about getting social distancing right; worrying about themselves or family members; worrying about health and worrying about finances.

If you’re locked-down with another person existing tensions can become more obvious as there’s less of the old life to give you a break from each other.

All of these difficulties can also be opportunities. Everything that disturbs us is also a signpost to deeper work.

If you notice an argument brewing, if you’re slowly becoming aware of defending a point of view unusually strongly, or taking a stand over some minor thing, then here is something to pay attention to.

In the moment of heat, there is an opportunity to notice the energy that’s arising — the particular mix of thoughts, feelings and impulses to act —and to invite some separation between you and that energy.

“Hey there reactive energy, I see you, I don’t know why you’re here right now, but I trust you think you have a good reason. Maybe you can take a step back and experiment with letting me handle this conversation without you.”

Some feelings are easier to work with in this way than others. Some will seem happy to trust you, and some will retain their strong grip. Whatever happens, this kind of noticing — paying attention without judgement, and inviting space —is good for the whole system.

If we make a note of these moments, we can also take them as the starting points for deeper work.

Why would you want to do deeper work when life is already more complicated than usual? Because working with a therapist to follow the trail these moments offer, and offering healing and letting go where it’s appropriate, you’re much less likely to get triggered in the same way in the present day again.

This has a benefit not just in lockdown, where conditions are more difficult, but the whole of the rest of your life. My experience is that each time we do this kind of work, we become generally steadier and more able to relax than before.

I know that I have my own ‘ought’s and ‘should’s that would take an invitation like this and create another burden out of it. At the beginning of our lock-down I remember seeing tweets about Shakespeare writing King Lear whilst in quarantine and how that felt like a pressure for me to do more.

So please take this as the gentle invitation that it is, rather than something extra to accomplish, and drop me a line if you are interested in a therapy session.

Image by Alexas_Fotos from Pixabay

Due to the cornavirus outbreak I am now seeing all clients online via Skype and Zoom. I’ve always had mix of face-to-fac...
24/03/2020

Due to the cornavirus outbreak I am now seeing all clients online via Skype and Zoom. I’ve always had mix of face-to-face clients and online clients from all over the world, so it’s not such a big change for me.

Online work is different, of course. There’s no greeting at the door and walking down the hallway into a room that we both physically occupy. Some clients like a handshake, and there’s no handshake online.

The connection between us is different, and it is still just as real. The work that my online clients do is just as transformative as those that I have worked with face to face.

My job is to support your connection to all of the different parts of yourself, to encourage you to meet yourself with kindness and curiosity. I do that by bringing those qualities in myself to our meeting, and I can do that just as well through Zoom or Skype as I can face to face.

In these unusual times we can find ourselves feeling all sorts of different things. Being in lockdown might create anxiety or depression, and it might bring anger and frustration to the surface. If you need some extra support, I’m here. Book a session.

24/03/2020

Last week I moved all of my therapy clients online. I've been seeing clients from all over the world via Skype and Zoom for years now, so it's not such a big change for me.

It's not the same, but it's possible to do just as powerful work.

Here's my article on why change is so hard and what we can do about it.
20/02/2020

Here's my article on why change is so hard and what we can do about it.

I want to change, so why can’t I change? It would be nice, wouldn’t it,...

Here's the podcast: Gifts, transactions and why it's hard to stay gratefulWhy are gifts so important? Is everything a gi...
15/02/2020

Here's the podcast: Gifts, transactions and why it's hard to stay grateful

Why are gifts so important? Is everything a gift? What’s the difference between a gift economy and a transaction economy? Why is it hard to stay grateful?

Go on, have a listen ;)

Image from Pexels. Public Domain. Why are gifts so important? Is everything a gift? What’s the difference between a gift economy and a transaction economy? Why is it hard to stay grateful? To…

15/02/2020

Recording a podcast episode about the difference between a gift economy and our transaction economy...

Just updated the qualifications on my therapy page - because a couple of weeks ago I qualified as a Wild Therapist! I go...
13/02/2020

Just updated the qualifications on my therapy page - because a couple of weeks ago I qualified as a Wild Therapist! I got a certificate and everything!

"What is Wild Therapy?" I hear you ask.

It's about including the other than human in the therapy practice. When I'm working outside, what does this particular place evoke? How is it to be a human animal? Can we allow the natural world to support healing and growth?

Read more here: What is Wild Mind?

I’m half-way through my training in Wild Therapy. You may have seen me writing about the power of working outside before (here and here). We work outside a lot on the Wild Therapy training, but it …

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Malvern

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