Where Do We Go When Healing Becomes Ill?: Navigating the Empire of Trauma

$347.00

This course offers a unique opportunity to explore these vital questions and ensure our profession continues to evolve and thrive.

Bayo Akomolafe

Dear human-helper-of-humans,

Many of us in the healing professions have shared a growing sense of needing to go beyond our traditional training to meet the unique challenges of our times.

There’s a feeling of being confined by current therapeutic practices.

You might have even found yourself thinking: “Am I truly addressing the root causes of my clients’ struggles?” Traditional methods sometimes feel like they only scratch the surface.

“Why do I feel limited by the tools and techniques I’ve learned?” The issues we face today are more complex than ever.

“Is there a deeper way to connect with and support my clients?” Current practices can feel restrictive, leaving little room for deeper exploration.

While this is anecdotal, it suggests that we are in a period of significant change and questioning.

During these times, it can be helpful to explore new perspectives and ways of thinking. This is an opportunity to ask a few important questions:

What does healing look like post-pandemic?

How do we address healing when our very understanding of humanity is influenced by racial and environmental factors?

How do we support clients when they are deeply connected to broader ecological and ancestral contexts?

As one-who-cares, it could be that these questions feel irrelevant to you in such a time of crises. But the hospital itself is ill, my friend. Only you can truly assess the real impact of your care on those you help.

 

 

I am here to facilitate a mutual co-inquiry into the factors affecting care and well-being, and what this means for your practice and the traditional therapeutic relationship.

This course explores the concepts of healing and challenges current clinical practices. It’s not about providing new tools or techniques, but about addressing the underlying tensions present in modern healing practices that often go unacknowledged.

This course does not provide specific solutions. Instead, in an era where quick fixes are often inadequate, we focus on the healing process itself. I invite you to join a global exploration of the challenges we face as healers today, so we can collectively redefine our roles and approaches.

(This is not a typical course)

Five Video Training Modules

Five Video Training Modules

Five Pre-Recorded Training Calls

Five Pre-Recorded Training Calls

Downloadable Course Materials

Downloadable Course Materials

Private Member Dashboard

Private Member Dashboard

What You Get from "Where Do We Go When Healing Becomes Ill?"

Trauma & Whiteness - A Conversation With Resmaa Menakem

Trauma & Whiteness - A Conversation With Resmaa Menakem

The Emergent Role of the Therapist - A Conversation With Thomas Hübl

The Emergent Role of the Therapist - A Conversation With Thomas Hübl

What Does A Politics of Restoration Miss? A Conversation With Sanah Ahsan

What Does A Politics of Restoration Miss? A Conversation With Sanah Ahsan

The Client Is An Ecology - A Conversation With Tyson Yunkaporta

The Client Is An Ecology - A Conversation With Tyson Yunkaporta

The Plantation of Wellbeing - A Conversation With Akilah Riley-Richardson

The Plantation of Wellbeing - A Conversation With Akilah Riley-Richardson

Leadership as a Modality of Care - A Conversation With Amy Elizabeth Fox

Leadership as a Modality of Care - A Conversation With Amy Elizabeth Fox

Plus, Bonus Dialogues with Bayo:

Themes for our co-inquiry

Meet Your Presenter

Báyò Akómoláfé, Ph.D.

Báyò Akómoláfé is a widely celebrated international speaker, posthumanist thinker, poet, teacher, public intellectual, essayist, and author of two books, These Wilds Beyond our Fences: Letters to My Daughter on Humanity’s Search for Home, and We Will Tell our Own Story: The Lions of Africa Speak.

Báyò is the Founder of The Emergence Network and host of the online postactivist course, ‘We Will Dance with Mountains’. He currently lectures at Pacifica Graduate Institute, California, and University of Vermont, Burlington, Vermont. He sits on the Board of many organizations including Science and Non-Duality (US) and Local Futures (Australia).

Reviews

There are no reviews yet.

Be the first to review “Where Do We Go When Healing Becomes Ill?: Navigating the Empire of Trauma”

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Free Access Now