Paul

Paul
Winter Kayaking

Wednesday, December 1, 2010

Changing Continents

Wild Gestalt has changed continents! After 10 years living and working in the UK, I have returned home to South Africa. This explains (a bit!) why there has been very little activity on Wild Gestalt.

Over the past twelve months I have been reaquainting myself with the wonderful variety of people, landscapes, terrains, climates and atmospheres of this wonderful and exciting country.

I've spent time in the Cape mountains I so love, camped in the Karoo, hiked in the mountains of Golden Gate where I watched magnificent vultures soaring on mountain ridges. I've been told off by a mother elephant, and watched a jackal stalk an eland calf. I've even kayaked with whales, enjoying the exhilaration of being so close to them on the water, and thrilled by the sound of their breathing.

I've enjoyed a range of feelings in these moments. I've enjoyed the peaceful moments the wilderness can provide. And I've felt a connection with my own past and with the people who have shared my life.

Perhaps most importantly of all, I feel the deep sense of homecoming through the connecting of familiar landscapes, with my history, my family and my friends.

Monday, November 17, 2008

Cederberg Sampler


I've just had a refreshingly wild experience in the Cederberg, South Africa. This area has been designated a "wilderness area" and doesn't dissappoint. In preparation for a workshop this coming weekend I spent two days and two nights camping at Nuwerus and hiking alone in the surrounding mountains.


Once out of the valley where the camp site is located I felt perfectly isolated from the world outside. The rugged, red rock seemed to bounce the early summer heat back under my sunhat in an attempt to parch my skin, pale from the cloudy English summer.


I'll update "wild gestalt" when I have more time. But so far I've nearly put my hand on a snake while clambering out of a rock pool in the river (wearing nothing but a startled look!), patted a tame springbok, stared at the night sky white with stars, watched the meteors as they fizzed across the immense African sky and watched a small mountain buck bounding effortlessly over the broken rocky terrain.


I can't help wondering about the lives of the early inhabitants of these mountains in their hunter gatherer bands.


More soon.

Saturday, October 25, 2008

On Seasons, Cycles and Excitement

It has just gone 6pm as I sit and write this in my London apartment. Outside, the streetlights are on and the last remnants of the sunset sillouette the trees outside. Nature has ended a cycle of growth and is pulling back into itself for the long northern winter. Wind over the past few days has blown the autumn leaves into ankle deep drifts on the pavements keeping the streetsweepers very busy indeed. In spring it all starts again, the cycle of birth, death and rebirth.As a Gestalt practitioner, this cycle of life is reflected in the theoretical model of "cycles of experience". My life is a cycle, every meeting is a cycle, every experience is a cycle within a cycle. Sometimes a cycle is interrupted, I'm not fully present, perhaps anxiety gets in the way, transposing itself over the excitement. So I'm not fully present and I don't really see the other person, or really experience the moment. Part of me isn't quite there.The power of working in a Gestalt way whether as a therapist, coach or facilitator, is to work with the present awareness, to really get inside the current experience on all it's levels and in all its complexity. What's my heart doing, how am I breathing, what physical sensations can I feel, how do I really know that I'm happy, sad, anxious, excited? Do my thoughts actually correspond with everything else I experience in myself? What do I do to interrupt the cycle of experience and to keep me from a full engagement with the present?As I write I can feel my own excitment bubbling up through my body. As the winter draws in in England, I am planning a workshop in South Africa next month. The thought of this future event results in pleasure and excitement now. The season for working outdoors is drawing to a close in the UK and another is starting (for me at least!) in the Cederberg in a few weeks.So while there is always something to look forward to and to plan for, there is always a rich present experience to be had right now! Sometimes pleasant, sometimes unpleasant, but rich and exciting nevertheless!

Monday, October 13, 2008

A Woodland Weekend


I've just spent a long weekend camping in woodland near Battle in Sussex. I participated in a workshop led by Martin Jordan (http://www.ecotherapy.org.uk/) which looked into psychotherapy in the outdoors. The combination of experiential work in the woods, and the sharing of ideas and thoughts was an incredibly rich learning experience. And there is more too it than that.


As I write this I am sitting in my flat in Wimbledon looking out into the trees in the garden and on the Common beyond, I am very aware that I have brought more than just ideas to do with the work back home with me. I notice a feeling of connection with the greenery outside and yet I am also feeling very present in my indoor world. The television is on and from time to time I catch up with the latest in the financial crisis as I tap away on my keyboard.


Ecopsychologists talk about how as humans we have "split off" our relationship with the planet. Denying our essential relationship with the planet, believing ourselves to be something apart from the natural world. And that the excessive materialism and consequent environmental crisis is a direct result of this alientation from the very organism we depend on for our survival as a species.


In nature, there is a "self-regulation" that works. Maybe because it is a whole system. Perhaps the banks are in such a mess today because they were not regulated in terms of the whole system i.e. the governments left them alone. Having been watching the BBC's Big Cat Live, I can't help comparing this to taking the preditors off the Mara and watching the herd animals graze themselves into a desert and their own demise! The bankers left to their own devices have overgrazed, the system is lopsided, we need to let the preditors back in to regulate the system.


My experience of being out in the woods and coming back to the city has emphasised my place in the greater whole and has left me feeling peaceful. The world's financial crisis somehow put back in perspective. At one point on Sunday I lay alone in a sunny meadow munching on a sweet apple picked fresh from a lone apple tree. The sun, as it dipped low in the sky, picked out a network of fine spider webs that seemed to link every blade of grass in the field. Millions of spiders were at work doing what we all do, surviving as best we can on planet earth. And I am part of this web of connectedness, whether I realise it or not. Where I lay in the grass, hundreds of webs were destroyed. I can't avoid making an impact in the world. Every action, every meeting with another person or another creature changes something. A good example of Field theory, used by Gestaltists, that says everything is in some way connected.


My snooze in the meadow effected the spiders, the reckless City bankers are having an effect on the economy which in turn will impact me to a greater or lesser extent. The economy will recover and the spiders will continue spinning their web in the field.


I suspect the feeling of peace I'm left with today has something to do with my raised awareness of the interconnectedness of things, and my place in it.








Monday, September 8, 2008

Workshop: Cederberg Mountains, South Africa

I will be running a three day workshop in the Cederberg Mountains near Cape Town, South Africa from 20 until 23 November 2008.

This rugged mountain range provides the backdrop for getting in touch with the self, others and the greater whole in which we live.

For more information go to my website: www.wildreaches.com and click on "library".

I look forward to meeting you on the mountain!

Go well!

Paul

Friday, June 13, 2008

Gestalt Experiential Weekend: September

Put this provisional date in your diary for the next Wild Gestalt outdoor workshop.

13, 14 & 15 September 2008

More details to follow.

If you would like to be kept informed about the weekend please send me an email.

In brief, the weekend will consist of gentle hillwalking combined with Gestalt enquiry into the here and now. Emphasis is on awareness of yourself in relation to the group, the natural environment and your internal processes.

I look forward to hearing from you.

Regards
Paul

Saturday, April 19, 2008



"The mind in its natural state can be compared to the sky,

covered by layers of cloud which hide its true nature"


Kalu Rinpoche