John Shinavier - MA, RYT, LC

Therapist | Life Coach | Career Coach Speaker

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$Name Your Price / Sliding Scale

Posted by John Shinavier - Life Coach | Speaker on April 22, 2014
Posted in: General Blog. Leave a comment

 

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For a limited amount of time I am offering to see those who want and need therapy and cannot afford to pay the full value of a session.

The economics of Therapy are made up of overhead/ office, rent, location, etc..   Since I have an office in my home, I’ve reached a place in my practice where I can afford to see up to 10 people throughout my week on a sliding scale.  Sliding scale is the cost whose number is reached by both the therapist and the potential client for a 50 minute session.  I especially encourage young adults 18 to 30 who are just getting their life together, and between paying off loans and working can not afford to pay a therapist his or hers full fee, to call.

Sincerely

John Shinavier, MA, RYT, Life Coach                            

 310-402-3130

 

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When “Self-Loathing” Enters a Relationship

Posted by John Shinavier - Life Coach | Speaker on March 31, 2014
Posted in: Couples Blog, General Blog, Men's Group Blog. Tagged: Abandonment, Adults abused as a child, affording therapy, at your price, boundaries, changes in my life, cheaper therapy, Children of Abuse, communication theory, COMMUNICATIONS, conflicts in marriage, Depression, dialogue from the past, how to win a fight, Life Coach, low self-worth, Mental Health, mid-life, Old School, psychology, SELF HELP, self-hate, Self-loathing, Setting Boundaries, Sexual Abuse, Sliding Scale Therapy, therapy you can afford, what we carry into our relationships, When Boundaries are Crossed, When therapy is needed. 2 Comments

tumblr_mv2rchrotN1r4uuwto1_1280I’m speaking primarily to men in this blog, because in my experience with counseling couples, theirs is the voice that is quick to turn abusive towards themselves and toward their partner.

When life gets really tough for us men; loss of employment, loss of libido, a move to a new environment, or a new arrival to the family, we will lapse into a rather familiar voice.  Wether we want to admit it or not, the harsh sometimes judgemental voice is that of our fathers.  As children this was experienced in one of two ways.

  • A father projects his own fears, jealousy and arrogance onto his son.  You’re a bum, you’ll never amount to anything!
  • “I’ll never be more than I am.  I’m surprised your mother married me!”  Here’s dad not only being insecure, but telling you that your mother is somehow flawed as well.

Since these men were our first role models, like actors on a stage we received our first lessons on what marriage is like, and what a man and woman can or cannot do.  We unconsciously took this information in, because we’d yet to develop the skill-set necessary to quiet or process those voices of our parents which became internalized by their repetitive dialogue and action. During this Pre-operational stage according to the patriarch of cognitive therapy; Piaget, this usually starts at 18 months for a child and continues to around 8 years.   Young children are able to think about things symbolically.  Their language use becomes more mature.  But their thinking is based on intuition and still not completely logical.  They cannot yet grasp more complex concepts such as cause and effect, time and comparison. As young men we left home to take a job, attend college, join the armed forces or move to another state for some adventure.  All the while learning to be independent, to become what we wanted to be, or at least to try and figure out without our parents judgment’s.  The years past and the young man finds his own voice, and his standards of morality, fair-play and ethics.  We marry, divorce and marry again.  Sometimes we have children.  Our lives appear to be ours, completely original and away from our fathers predictions. ——————- “I’m just not worth worrying about.  I should have never moved here.  You have to take care of me as if I was a dog.  I have nothing to contribute!” This was expressed by a man to his wife during a session of couples counseling.  He had been unable to find employment in the two years since his move here to marry her.  Lately, they’ve been having disagreements, escalating with him shouting at her and her closing down, which to him felt like abandonment.  She was tired of being yelled at for the littlest thing and because he mistook her silences as her way of telling him she wanted a divorce, he assumed in session that perhaps he should just return to his country of origin. As men, we’re taught to keep messy feelings to ourselves and tough it out.  Isolation is a sign of resiliency, and to reach out for help, or share candidly with our spouse what we’re going through, is, for the most part, considered a sign of weakness.  This belief system was and continues to be “Old School”.  Consequently, its effect on men with feelings of self-loathing, hopelessness and rage limits the definition of how a man can express himself.  It leaves no room for all the positive thoughts, creativity and logic that took us years to get to. It is at these low times that we are most vulnerable to damaging thoughts or as Piaget like to call them; cognitive distortions.  We fall back into that which we thought we achieved some distance from, the cycle of self-loathing of our fathers.  Perhaps we’ve even talked ourselves into thinking that they were right all along in their assumptions and we are wrong. “A man is only a man if he can support his family.” If you weren’t given any brains then your life is like that of a draft horse.  You work until you drop.” “None of you are going to amount to anything.  You just watch and see.” “I get up and go to work, come home, eat, then its bed, and then its off to work again.  You call that living?” When our wives or long-term partners hear this kind of talk, it angers them and they get upset with us.  Some of them may even challenge our thinking, knowing its origins and tell us to stop talking like our fathers.  Our pride might take it a step higher, with the result being hurt feelings and closed doors.  Never a good way to be understood. It’s our fight or flight, knee jerk response to anxiety which covers our own feelings of depression that was loaded into our DNA when we were very young.  Relationships with our fathers can be complicated.  They’ve grown and perhaps mellowed and stopped voicing their criticisms.  If they are living they may be the first ones to let you know that their idea’s of themselves and you were mistaken. Its’ first and foremost essential to understand that it was someone else’s script that you memorized.  Yes, as much as we hate to admit it, some of us have turned into our fathers.  Yet, its important to distinguish the moment this dialogue from your father starts surfacing in your own relationships.  You still have a choice.  That choice being to distance and reject any ownership of this self-deprecating violence that brings such suffering and conflict to those we love. THE FOLLOWING ARE STEPS YOU CAN TAKE TO REDUCE OR STOP THESE REACTIVE THOUGHTS AS THEY GATHER ENERGY IN YOUR HEAD.

  • STOP VOICING THE NEGATIVE THOUGHTS.  Your voice is a very central part of your own personal power.  You’ve listened to it since birth.  The effect it has on you, with whatever information you’re feeding it, makes it stronger than any other voice.  If your calling yourself a loser, your voice brings it right back to you and as you hear it, its effects are like taking orders and over time will produce that loser. That’s the power of your own voice.  Imagine the good it could produce if your tone changed and you expressed that you were a winner!
  • NOW, LET’S GET THOSE THOUGHTS.  It’s considered a cheap shot, a blank slug and a total waste of breath when a negative thought is delivered on the back of anger.  So I understand when you say you can’t control your thoughts, so do the next best thing, “HESITATE” before you are about to say anything out loud to yourself or before you share it with someone else.
  • YOU ARE NOT STUPID.  You have to want to change, right?  Usually when you get a feel of how this works, you might also take a breath, because physiologically while the thoughts are building in your head and are determined to capture your voice……you’re not breathing.  As your heart is hammering for more oxygen, you’re getting pretty angry.  Take a breath and then take a deeper one.  Give the moment a chance to transform.  It will.  I promise.
  • THIS MAY BE NEW INFORMATION FOR YOU, so I’ll break it to you gently.  YOUR THOUGHTS ARE NOT REAL.  The way I explain this to clients is that there is very little of a filtering system that decides what goes in and out of your head.  Those sophisticated neuron pathways can deliver any amount of information without discretion.
  • NO ONE CAN CONTROL THEIR THOUGHTS.  I’ll say this again.  The most educated and respected minds in the country cannot control the stream of random thoughts that go in and out of their heads throughout a day.
  • THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN ALL OF US is what thoughts we choose to pay attention to, and the amount of time that we give them.  For example, if some foolish thought comes to a new-born’s sleep deprived parent to put a pillow over their child’s face to quiet them, is that really going to be carried out?   ITS JUST A THOUGHT!

So, let me ask you, are you still a card-carrying member of the “My Thoughts are Me” club?  Understand that all our lives we will be in some sort of skirmish with our thoughts.  In the course of time we will hopefully come to depend more on our intuition to help us make better choices.  Any arguments for; I believe these thoughts are real and I have to express them, are moot.  Court is adjourned.  The case, thrown out for lack of substantial evidence.   John Shinavier , MA is a Therapist/Life Coach in Private Practice.  Give me feedback on what specifically you need help with.  Rate the blog or E-mail me at jjshinavier@gmail.com

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Move Your Body

Posted by John Shinavier - Life Coach | Speaker on March 11, 2014
Posted in: General Blog, Yoga Therapist/ Instructor Blog. Tagged: aging, aging gracefully, Awareness, body-mind-spirit, breath control, exercise, health, Mental Health, movement, present moment, reinvent yourself, watch a baby, Yoga. 4 Comments

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“It doesn’t get easier as you get older, but that’s your choice.  Move your body or the alternative is, you’ll probably end up in a wheelchair.”   Words of wisdom from my beloved 72 year old yoga teacher who was still teaching until a month before her death of cancer.  If you’ve come to the same decision in your life and you’ve chosen to begin or continue working out, walking, dancing etc., then chances are you’ll still be able to push through most of what aging puts us through and continue living a life of quality.

I’ve done many of the disciplines of body movement in my life, tree climbing as a kid, ocean swimming, Taekwondo, weightlifting, dance and yoga are only a few.  As I age, I find that for me it’s important to practice yoga everyday, and swim when I can find a pool or a fresh body of water.

Which brings me to yoga.  Yoga can be practiced in any space, no matter the area; in you’re in bed, or in the smallest of studio’s apartments. Rotating the head, carefully, in neck rolls while sitting at your desk can release much of that tension that is held in the shoulders and neck areas.  Removing your shoes to point and flex your feet will keep your Achilles tendon from hardening.  Abdominal breathing oxygenates your blood quickly when all breathing is done through the nose.  Learning this is simple.  You lay on your back, place a book on your stomach, breathe through your nose and direct it to you diaphragm.  When you see that book moving up and down as you inhale and exhale, then you’ll be able to practice it while sitting at your desk or waiting for a light to change in traffic.

Lately my model for perfect flexibility is a baby, specifically toddlers.   Watch a baby struggle to stand; they use their hands as much as their legs.  Look how they play with their toes, swing their arms forward and backward etc…  You’ll never get younger, but if you can learn a few moves from a toddler and you practice them, like they do, your body will respond, and you’ll never again lose that sense of gratitude when you incorporate movement into your daily life.

John Shinavier, MA , RYT, Life Coach

Go to <a href=”http://www.thumbtack.com/Kali-Natha-Yoga-the-yoga-of-developing-the-Mystic-within-you-Los-Angeles-CA/service/1062451″>Kali Natha Yoga, the yoga of developing the Mystic within you.</a>

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Coaching the High-School or College Graduate for Success in an Indifferent World

Posted by John Shinavier - Life Coach | Speaker on January 28, 2014
Posted in: Life Coach Blog. 2 Comments

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  • Language Skills

Breaking down how you speak

How much do you have to say? (It turns out, less is  more)

Replacement vocabulary (holding their interest)

Speaking with absolute conviction (how to practice, and hearing how you express yourself)

English 101 / How you speak validates you or keeps you down.

Personal shortcomings (Stuttering.  Huh is never used in conversation.)

 Appearance

How much do you actually have the power to change?  What’s with the uniform?

What your appearance says about you

Personal flaws i.e.: sweating, personal hygiene, talking while gesturing

 Knowledge of Self

Finding your personal power (self knowledge is your strongest ally)

Finding what you already have that could help you and rejecting the rest

Knowing what you want, and knowing when to compromise.

Recognizing and dealing with your own demons and how to manage them.

You have the knowledge, but not the social skills.

Networking…..something you do your whole life.

Knowledge of Company

Basic knowledge of interested company

Resume rewrites/ There is more than one resume!

Elevator pitch/ 30 sec. to sell yourself.

What ARE you are bringing to them?

On the Spot wisdom

How to calm yourself (Breathing & Acting)

The wisdom of hesitation

When thrown, how to get back on track

When to be personable

It’s just a job and not a political office.  When to use humor

How taking rejection as a challenge instead of a personal flaw.

The first importance of the first 30 seconds

Coming out of isolation and joining the work force

Sometimes you have to “settle”.

Finances

School loans? Savings? Part time vrs. Full time (putting off your dream)

Clear communication skills ( Knowing when to push and when to fold when presented with a $number.  Staying home (saving money) vrs a life-style (that you can’t yet afford).

—

Your schooling is behind you now and hopefully has prepared you for not only the job market, but the social one as well.  Maybe you have or haven’t got any connections in your choice of business.  Maybe you were lied to by well intentioned parents and friends and reassured that your future was set.  Maybe you were given things that you wanted instead of earning them.  The former has developed a muscle that you never had to.  Guess what?  They have the edge.

Perhaps you need to sit down with someone that you trust to help you on your way, a Coach who will help you edit and prepare yourself for the professional world.  Someone who see’s and hears how you got this far, and knows to tell you the truth about how you come across.  Someone who sees past the bull shit but never makes you feel like your being judged.  Someone who believes in and helps you find your own individual personal power.  A coach who only wants you to be as big as you can “out there” and knows that playing small serves no one especially yourself.

John Shinavier, MA, RYT, Life Coach

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Procrastination

Posted by John Shinavier - Life Coach | Speaker on January 4, 2014
Posted in: General Blog. Tagged: #procrastination#anxiety#depression#do it differently#maintaining your goals#low self worth#mid-life#putting off#lazy#john shinavier#, 3, Abandonment, Adults abused as a child, boundaries, Children of Abuse, defense mechanisms, Depression, dragging your feet, goals, how to, insecurtiries, laziness, lazy, loneliness, low self-worth, male menopause, mid-life, negative feelings, procrastination, putting off, read now, SELF HELP, self-hate, Setting Boundaries, Sexual Abuse, When Boundaries are Crossed. 1 Comment

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(Your Inner Slug )

Procrastination is an engine of regret.  It has been defined as the voluntary delay of any action that we realize we ought to pursue now.

For habitual individuals and frequent dawdlers who tend to harbor self-critical thoughts and wrestle with depression and anxiety, they consistently are found to yield more to impulses more often than other people.  When chronic procrastinators are asked about their thoughts, they tend to share snippets of a dark, gloom-ridden internal dialogue.  “I am too stupid to do this,” they say, or “If I can’t complete this paper, everything else I’ve done is meaningless.”

Numerous studies have demonstrated that negative emotions diminish self-control.  Anxiety undermines diets, as well as smokers’ efforts to quit. When people feel upset, they are more likely to act aggressively, spend too much money or play video games when they know they should be doing something else, like studying or working.  Feeling down is a strong predictor of relapse in a number of addictive behaviors, such as alcoholism and drug use.

Distraction, it turns out, is a fabulous way to cast off unwanted feelings. [ADHD]  We doodle in the paper margins, sweep the floor, call a friend or take a nap.  This quells our emotions for a while.  This is our way of restoring self control or dodging our feelings.

Turning the mind away from a dull or disturbing thought is one reason we delay.  A Bruised ego might compel someone to procrastinate as a way to repair his sense of self.  After a set back a person might open up face-book or check out the latest sports scores to affirm his sense of connectedness.

Many procrastinators use a set of thoughts known as counterfactuals (contrary to facts). These statements often begin with phrases such as “at least” or “if only”—-, “at least I didn’t crash the car!” or “if only I’d gotten a good nights sleep.”  Downward counterfactuals always illustrate that things could have been worse.  This serves to elevate mood.  Upward counterfactuals, which capture how we might have avoided a mistake, do the opposite.

Individuals, who procrastinate more, dreamed up more downward counterfactuals than those less prone to postponement.  Chronic idlers might be less resilient when beset by negative feelings, so their defense mechanisms kick in sooner.  There is discomfort that comes when you approach a task that brings up insecurities, and for some people that is just not a place they like to be.

What to do

One obstacle for any procrastination-beating technique is that managing our internal state and herding our thoughts and feelings so they align with our highest goals—often demands self-control, and this effort can leave us with less cognitive firepower for the tasks at hand, Resolving to not check e-mail for an hour, for example, can make you more likely to sneak into the kitchen for a bag of chips.

The idea that negative emotions drive procrastination has opened up new approaches for bolstering resilience.  Several strategies that leave self-control intact are now being discussed.

For instance, since my wife and I moved into a new house, I was determined not to fill up our new house with stuff from our last house, so it remained in the garage where, when we both had the time, I assumed that we would go through it all again and get rid of the majority of the clutter.  Every time I opened the garage door, I was overwhelmed with all the boxes and the fact that it was increasing and not the opposite.  It wasn’t until months had passed when I purchased two large tables from a yard sale, where I could use one table as a work-bench in the garage and the other I would refinish and place against the dining room wall.  The shift in motivation that made me go through and get rid of most of the boxes was the space I needed for my workbench.  Clearing out the gaggle of moving boxes in the garage became virtuous, not vexing.  Without realizing it, I had tapped into one key way for overcoming procrastination: a new motivation! 

This is called cognitive reappraisal a deliberate move to change the meaning of a situation by altering our emotional response to it.  In my case thinking of the task as self-improvement [a la work bench which I could then repair or make furniture for our new house] decreased my vulnerability to the temptation of taking that nap whenever I thought of tackling the clutter.

If you can harness the incredibly powerful force of your emotions, you’ll have a lot more fun than if you’re constantly turned around and around by them.  Your initial emotions to tackling any thing out of your comfort zone are not the only emotions that you have.  If you break the task at hand down in smaller parts [going through 3 boxes per day in my garage], inevitably the job gets done.

Another way to view an event more positively is to give yourself a break.  Because procrastination seems to trigger harsh self-criticism, it may be self-reinforcing, sending us spiraling further downward.  For this reason, Self-Forgiveness: a three-step process to reduce the emotional distress that procrastination stirs up.  It entails acknowledging having made a mistake, weathering feelings of guilt and than experiencing a shift in motivation as self-punishment gives way to the positive feeling of self-acceptance.  Acknowledging your error and feelings of guilt, and then move on.

Self-affirmation can restore self-control, because we are powerfully motivated both unconsciously and consciously to pursue self-worth.  By reflecting on the best parts of ourselves it stops our fixation on the negative, which at times we are so use to, that it’s almost a perverse pleasure, and to focus descriptively on what matters in life.  Seeing the bigger picture can be the motivation to change.

Over time, by hesitating before surrendering to the nap, or the drink, or the internet, our self-control becomes stronger and we can begin tailoring external circumstances instead.  Ultimately, it seems, the key is not to constantly fight temptations but to learn to avoid as many of them as possible.

Thus self-control may not be the capacity for titanic acts of willpower but instead an ability to shape one’s environment proactively through effective habits and routines.

So if your planning on starting an exercise plan the next day leave your workout clothes laid out for the morning and tuck your keys under the clothes the fewer obstacles the fewer opportunities for negative emotions to arise.  And when you encounter an urge to avoid doing what matters most, check in with your feelings first.  They may rule the moment, but you can still have power over the day.

John Shinavier, MA

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Things You May Not Have Heard About Yoga!

Posted by John Shinavier - Life Coach | Speaker on December 3, 2013
Posted in: Yoga Therapist/ Instructor Blog. Tagged: allignment, Benefits of Yoga, breath retention, contemporary, exercise, fitness, fresh post, health, practice, solar plexus, spiritual teachers, The body is your temple, Yoga danger, yoga teachers. 2 Comments

Things You May Not  Have Heard About Yoga!

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  • Do not look at your body as you would a stranger.  Adopt a friendly approach to it…………..be sensitive, be alive/
  • Do Yoga for Spirit
  • Do Yoga for health
  • Do Yoga for fun
  • Elongate, open…..extend through the exhalation.  (this is helped through gravity and breathing)
  • Holding your breath is counterproductive, this blocks expansion.
  • All breathing is done through the nose, with a few exceptions.
  • Learn Diaphramic-Breathing….lie on your back with a small book on your abdomen, and if your breathing correctly the book should be going up and down.  (very important)
  • Do the postures without aim, without competition.
  • Circle around until you find a fit for your body.
  • Do not let your mind wander….be completely here.
  • The positions help to extend the space between the vertebrae, relieving the stress to the spinal cord, accumulated during the day’s activities.
  • Bring suppleness, youth, back to parts of the body that have tightened.
  • All movements originate from the spine.
  • Sometimes unexpected things happen, that cannot easily be explained.  When tension leaves, tears, joy, bliss come up.
  • Pushed by rush most of the time…we are compressed, mean and narrow minded.  Let this moment penetrate your hearts. 

Yoga Acharya, as taught by his Guru; Ma Jaya Sati Bhagavati

Follow this Link for more information on Swami’s Yoga :<a href=”http://www.thumbtack.com/Kali-Natha-Yoga-the-yoga-of-developing-the-Mystic-within-you-Los-Angeles-CA/service/1062451″>Kali Natha Yoga, the yoga of developing the Mystic within you.</a>

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Take the List out of your Head

Posted by John Shinavier - Life Coach | Speaker on October 28, 2013
Posted in: Life Coach Blog. Tagged: Life Coach. Leave a comment


Your mindIn working with clients I try to use the last few minutes to ask them to relay back to me what was discussed in their session.  This tells me what they didn’t hear or take in and it lets them say in their voice what they remember.   Many will forget that they have some homework to do by their next session.  I always encourage each client to arrive at therapy with a notebook that is used just for jotting down questions, statements or themes of their sessions.

Like most people we keep too much of what we have to do or remember in our short term memory bank.  I’ve always been a big list person.  Like a calendar on the wall or on your phone with a reminder alarm, you write a note when you want to change something in your life, and then as you practice doing the behavior on a daily basis you place a mark on each day on your list or calendar.  It seems, in my experience, that the people that do this get more things done and know their priorities better.  For example if your working on growing a better sense of self-esteem, I might ask you just for the week to speak no negativity of yourself for that week.  Never mind what comes in your mind, for one week try and not speak badly about yourself.  The list is you taking responsibility for wanting to change.  It’s there on your mirror or your desk in the same spot everyday just to remind yourself what your short term goal is for the week.  This simple tool if practiced, shows your progress, where if it’s only in your mind, you’ll never be truly sure.

John Shinavier, MA, Solution Focus Therapist, Life Coach and RYT

 

 

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The Comprehensive Final Sessions

Posted by John Shinavier - Life Coach | Speaker on September 23, 2013
Posted in: Life Coach Blog. Tagged: Coaching, community, Employment, Executive Life Coach, Finishing School for the unemployed, Graduate Prep, Job Prepaation, Job Preparation, Job search, job search graduate peep, leadership, Life Coach, Prepatory. Leave a comment

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 A Preview of What is Expected of You and How to Prepare Yourself For It!

My Coaching and Therapist careers have brought to my attention the need for the following Skills/Insights when entering the Job Market whether your fresh out of School or been unemployed for a number of years.  

   ♦  Though the graduate has worked hard for the past two to six years and knows his/her subject well, it seems more is needed, an edge if you will, to secure employment in a weak and crowded job environment.  

   ♦  You’ve been unemployed for a year or more and your confidence needs a boost and your resume some “Spin”?

   ♦  Coming out of Isolation and joining the Work Force.  

   ♦  Suddenly Single to No Longer Working From Home.

     

1.  How you say, what you say, speaks volumes about you.

Breaking down how you speak.  How much do you have to say?

Replacement words (holding their interest) Thesaurus anyone?

Speaking with Conviction.

English 101.  Personal shortcomings (Huh, is never used  in conversation.)

2.  Appearance

What your appearance could be saying about you.

3.  Knowledge of Self

Finding what you already have that can help you and knowing how to edit.

Recognizing and dealing with your own “limitations” and how to manage them.

4.  Knowledge of “The Position”

Resume Rewrites to bring yours to the top of the pile.

What Are You bringing to Them?

5.  On the Spot wisdom

Importance of the breath and learning the subtext necessary to good acting when needed.

When thrown, how to get back on track.

How taking Rejection as a challenge, instead of a personal flaw.

It’s just a job and not a Political Office.  When to use Humor!

Your schooling is behind you and hopefully you feel ready to seek employment in your field of interest.    It’s been a few years since your last job, and self-doubt has really begun to be the loudest voice in your head.  Maybe you were lied to by well-intentioned parents and friends and reassured that your future was set, only to find that it’s not going to be that easy.  

Perhaps you need to sit down with a 3rd party that will be honest with you and help you edit and prepare yourself for the professional world.  Someone who sees through the fear but never makes you feel like your being judged when he gives you feed-back.  Someone who believes in and helps you find your own individual power.  A Coach who only wants you to be as big a presence out there as you can and knows that its time you regrouped and assessed honestly what you have to offer.

Twenty to thirty minutes free consultation for new clients only.  John Shinavier, MA

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Self Hate

Posted by John Shinavier - Life Coach | Speaker on January 10, 2013
Posted in: General Blog. Tagged: adoption, adoptive children, boundaries, Depression, low self esteem, Mental Health, self injury, self-hate, troubled teens. Leave a comment

415058_10150650562399163_198107929162_9309210_1115111128_o (1) Self Hate  

Understanding

Hatred of self originally comes from the inability to have or maintain boundaries.  As a child who had been abused once boundaries were crossed, you lost the ability to understand what was happening to you, why it was happening, and what your part in it was.  This is complicated with conflicting feelings at the time of the original abuse and who the perpetrator was.  If this was a trusted important figure in your life and the abuse was the only attention that they gave you, then it can sometimes be misconstrued as affection.  Trying to make sense of “why” something as happened afterwards as a child is impossible.  If this sounds difficult for you as an adult to imagine why something was done to you, imagine yourself at the age of when the abuse happened, trying to figure it out at that age!  A child barely has the ability to hold one thought in their heads, how would they be able to hold all of the conflicting feelings and thoughts that abuse brings in?

It was My Fault

To question adult authority is one of the most fearful things that a child can do.  If the adult in charge is an alcoholic, or is unable to express themselves in an appropriate way, then for a child to challenge their authority would invite consequences, punishment.  Remember to most children adults are viewed as powerful and all knowing.  This is the imperfection of “childhood logic.”  The parents or guardians are the first role models in a child’s life.  Their actions and their dialogue with the world around them are absorbed by the child.  If they have fear, the child will have fear or at the least mistrust.  If the parents are listless and uninvolved, this will give rise to feelings that they will not be there to protect the child.  This makes the child reluctant to share or question their parents in fear of upsetting them further and could overtly give more responsibility to the child.  This is called “parentification”, when the child takes on what would be seen as adult responsibilities.  He or she has two ways to react to this, fight, or retreat into themselves.  Neither is healthy, but expressing the anger in the moment is the healthier of the two.

Children as a rule find it difficult, if not impossible to blame their parents for their hateful behavior; instead the child will internalize this and blame themselves.  It must be something that I did?  The abuse continues, whether its emotional, physical or sexual, and since the child does not have the intelligence yet to see their parents clearly as flawed, then the abuse that is being done to them is justifiable, because they have little to no worth.  They must be bad, hated and worthless.  They must “need to be abused, punished” because of their badness.  Children cannot blame their parents-so they blame themselves.

Abandonment

Self-hate is often a side effect of children that have been adopted, or suffered under one or both parents who have struggled with substance abuse, or been part of a divorce.  Abandonment will be at times the core issue of a client struggling with self-hate.  Who would want them if their own parents didn’t?

Growing

The more the children are ignored, treated with indifference or treated with hatred, the more the children will hate themselves.  Eventually, children as they grow older may learn to hate their parents, but their first response is to hate themselves.  Self hatred reveals itself as the child grows into their teens and is the root of self-injury behaviors.  Without intense self hatred, survivors would not be nearly so prone to cutting, burning, overdosing or any number of self-destructive and suicidal behaviors.

Relationships

It’s easier to be in a relationship where the survivor loves someone else more than they are loved.  Being in a healthy relationship is being comfortable accepting the reciprocal love-caring-compassion-support from others.  People that inherently hate themselves find it very difficult to believe that they could be loved or that they are lovable.  This will eventual cause problems in those relationships and will undermine the strength of them.  People that truly hate themselves can’t imagine that anyone will be in relationship with them for any period of time, so abandonment will follow and be part of the self-confirming self-hate cycle for the victim.

The Problem

The emotional pain connected to feeling hated or unworthy of love or protection cuts very deep to the emotional core of a person.  In many cases after years of therapy, the survivor may have an understanding intellectually what this is, but after years and years of blame and shame the self-hatred feels locked into place.  It’s just sooooo hard to feel differently.

The Present

Some of the long term affects of self hate:

  1. Low self worth and depression
  2. Underlying feelings of abandonment.
  3. Long term self-hatred and self-loathing.
  4. Loneliness and isolation.
  5. Sadness, emotional pain.
  6. Self injury, and suicidal thoughts and behaviors.
  7. Drug and alcohol abuse.  Self medicating.  Acting out in self destructive ways.

A Way Out

Stop hating yourself.  Direct your hate, if it helps, at the person or persons who neglected or abused you.  If you pay attention to the messages that your body is constantly sending, you’ll be starting at the right place.  Try this experiment.  It’s Sunday, and on Sunday let say, you always call your parents.  If your parents were the ones who abused you, then you’re going to notice that physically, you hesitate before you make that call.  Listen and notice what your body is telling you.  Your palms may be sweating, and your breathing shallow.  Your body which retains memories on a cellular lever is warning you not to have contact with your abusers.  Those memories if used correctly hold wisdom.  Hang up that phone!  Right then, you have set your first boundary!

Cognitively, your mind will continue to send you false messages of yourself.  It may sound something like this; you’re a piece of shit.  You’ll never change.  It’s too late now!  Go ahead, call your parents. The idea is to stop identifying with what your mind tells you.   Your mind is like a cheap AM radio that has no pause button, nor does it discriminate between a good message versus a bad one.  It lets everything in.  Since we cannot control our minds, the least we can do is to stop identifying with the faulty belief system that preaches that we are what we think!  When you really start observing the messages that the mind is constantly sending, and realize that most don’t hold a grain of truth, then you begin to learn detachment.

The Practice

To practice Detachment one has to rewire, reprogram how they take information in.  Learning to hesitate, pause before you find yourself following a thought with an action that has no validity is a good start.  Detachment is learned through practice.  Sometimes you find yourself overwhelmed with anxiety or depression.  You let your guard down and followed a thought into a tiger’s cage.  When you begin to have the feelings of overwhelm, you say out loud or in your mind “Stop!”  Just stop!  Take a deep breath that physiologically brings oxygen to your bloodstream.  This action alone lowers any anxiety that you’re experiencing.

Often the victim is triggered and then becomes reactive. By practicing the above, you will find yourself freer to experience with full awareness the present moment.  Remember, feeling follows a thought, and not the other way around.  Living with detachment firmly in place, you stop wasting your energy and consequently, you’ll feel better as well.

Refusing to let someone get close to you physically.

Being touched when you don’t want to be touched violates you.  It makes you an object.  By allowing this to continue, you allow yourself to feel like a piece of garbage.  It further perpetuates self hate.

Refusing to allow someone to get too close to you emotionally.

We do not live in a world of unconditional love.  We live in a world of selfishness, where others try to get their needs met, even at the expense of your needs.  People will try and get you to open up when you don’t feel like it. (Pay attention to your bodies signals)  They say you’re uptight, or don’t share or respond when their insisting on your participation.  It’s very possible, if you hesitate and listen to your own intuition, that they will use your information against you.  Allowing yourself to be pressured like this hurts only you—and that is an act of self-hatred.  For many who were abused as children, the lack of boundaries enabled the abuser to confuse and manipulate you and afterwards, that information that you learned from them was never fully explained to you. (Another example of how self hate gets its grip on you).

Refusing to betray your moral values.

Many religions are based on this, however in this context, I will give credit to ones own intuition.  Your intuition is an older system than your brain.  It’s where that expression “fight or flight”, originated.  Animals are intuitive.  They will not do anything that is counter to what their intuition is telling them.  It means being true to yourself.  It’s something that if you’re made aware of early on in your life, it will be the compass that you can fully rely on the older you get.

John Shinavier, MA, RYT, Life Coach

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For Men, it’s time to take that idea and turn it into ACTION

Posted by John Shinavier - Life Coach | Speaker on September 9, 2012
Posted in: General Blog. Tagged: addictions, becoming a man, COMMUNICATIONS, goo, GROUP FUN FOR MEN, MALE ANIMAL, MALE EGO, MEN TALKING, mens groups, NEEDED ADVICE, NEW MEN'S GROUP FORMING, PROCESS GROUP, psychotherapy, PSYCHOTHERAPY GROUP, SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE, SELF HELP. Leave a comment

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If you stop and start questioning your choices in relationships, careers, girlfriends, boyfriends, religion, addictions and amusements and you would like a a safe place to process the feelings that come up from past choices, and to gain some tools and a little more insight on your choices that are ahead of you,  then this is the group for you.  Go to Blogs / Men’s groups where at the top of the page is “Seasons of a Man’s Life”.  This is a new group forming just for you.
Continue Reading

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Seasons of a Mans Life…..Group Now Forming

Posted by John Shinavier - Life Coach | Speaker on September 4, 2012
Posted in: General Blog, Men's Group Blog, Therapy Blog. Tagged: for men only, life change, life changing, masculine wisdom, maturity, Mental Health, mid-life, psychotherapy mens group, reinvent yourself, When therapy is needed, Who am I?, wisdom, you must change your life. Leave a comment

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Generally speaking, a man can wake up at any point in his life.  Developmentally  this happens first in his early thirties.  It’s a gut feeling that he senses when he’s not doing what he supposed he’d be doing or is not where he feels he should be in his life.  He also might come to the realization that what his choices may have been at a younger age were more his parents choices then his.  It can be a little overwhelming in the early thirties, but there is still hope and youth to fuel any new direction, whether it be in career, relationship,  or higher education.  Some years later there is quite a different man entering his late thirties, early forties.  If he has not met any of his important goals that he had set in his late twenties or early thirties,  then, this realization can have a crippling effect  coupled with an urgency to change his life.  His whole world is sometimes called up for review and his attempts to change may show themselves superficially in buying that sports car, leaving his spouse/partner, cheating on the one he does have or self medicating his feelings of low self-worth by drinking, using drugs or just behaving badly.

“Seasons of a Man’s Life” is a small group of like-minded men who will gather together one night a week for ninety minutes of introspection, discussion, education and story telling.  Along with interesting exercises that will reveal what truly is important to them.  The group will hopefully find answers to questions, learn problem solving skills that will help them reevaluate their lives and find fresh energy for the work that lays ahead of them.

If this sounds like a group for you or for someone you know, please call me for an initial free consult to see if you could benefit from such a group?  It’s open to all men between the ages of thirty to fourty eight.  It will initially run for eight weeks at the cost of two hundred and seventy five dollars, payable at the first meeting.    The group is planning to begin towards the end of September.  You will be given an informative packet of the schedule and the topics that will be discussed on any evening.  I look forward to hearing from you.

Sincerely

John Shinavier, MA, Life Coach, RYT

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Short Term Therapy

Posted by John Shinavier - Life Coach | Speaker on August 9, 2012
Posted in: General Blog. Tagged: breathe into change, career change, Change in your life, Life Coach, Mental Health, mid-life for the man, overwhelmed, pschotherapist, quick results. 1 Comment

“Whatever makes you happy….do more of it!”

“Whatever makes you sad….stop doing it!!Image

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“One Clients Goals Reached”

Posted by John Shinavier - Life Coach | Speaker on May 31, 2012
Posted in: General Blog. Tagged: Awareness, Being in control, Centered, Goals Reached, It's over, Mental Health, One Client, reinvent yourself, Self, self acceptance, Setting Goals, When Therapy is over, Who am I?. 4 Comments


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Many clients ask me when will they be finished with therapy.  It is measurable.  Below is one client who reached their goals in a relatively short time.

One Client’s Goals Reached

  • Be aware
  • Breathe
  • Stay in the Moment
  • Be Free
  • Assume nothing, Expect nothing
  • Don’t project for yourself or others.
  • Tell yourself the truth and then move on.
  • If people say its okay, then let it be okay.
  • Own your own feelings.
  • Speak your mind.
  • Don’t own what’s not yours.
  • Don’t be a container for the feelings of others.
  • Act, as if.
  • You do not have to be thinking or feeling something.
  • You do not have to have an opinion, or voice one.
  • You do not have to react.
  • Choose neutral or nothing at all.
  • Know your triggers.
  • Don’t be so hard on yourself, or others.
  • Select your thoughts don’t let it be the other way around.
  • Let the bossy girl go.
  • Be the calm center in the storm around you.
  • Support, don’t protect.
  • Receive kindness.
  • Talk less, listen more.
  • Stop trying to fix things.
  • Don’t judge, yourself, or, others.
  • Don’t take things personally.
  • Relinquish your need for external approval.
  • Watch where you put your energy.
  • Drink as you pour.
  • Unzip, Detach, Have some Fun!  Remember there is freedom in simplicity.

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The Lessons of Anxiety

Posted by John Shinavier - Life Coach | Speaker on May 28, 2012
Posted in: General Blog. Tagged: ,Depression, Sexual Abuse, Abandonment, , Self-Help, Self-Hate, Low Self-Worth, Children of Abuse, Adults abused as a child, Boundaries, Setting Boundaries, When Boundaries are Crossed,, after the meltdown, How to handle stress, How to win when you've lost., Just Breathe, learning from your fears, stop reacting. 1 Comment

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The Lessons of Anxiety
5-28-2012
For those of you out of work, or barely making ends meet on to what you bring home, you might find yourself filled with anxiety. A client recently reported his anxiety over losing a job that he had only gotten two months prior. During his two months on the job, he had been happy and full of promise. The company which hired him had to let him go because of financial reasons. Since he was the last hired he was the first to be let go. He was angry and took the move as an excuse to go out drinking every night, complain to his friends, and act badly. I reframed his situation as a chance to react in a different, more productive way.
One of the many lessons that I have learned in my life when I am rejected is to not react for 48 hours in a way that could make my situation worse. In doing this I sometimes discover positive things (sometimes related to the rejection) and sometimes not, that I would not have learned about myself had the incident not happened, in this case a loss of employment.
In some twisted way stress is good for you. It can make you bigger and not something that you necessarily have to run from. The universe is asking for you to stretch your capacity for change more than you’re used to, so you can “hold” or contain even more. Sometimes this “more”, is connected to feelings of discomfort, and if you know yourself well enough, it can be an opportunity to grow. It can make you stronger to reassess and clarify your goals, test your willpower and show the world and yourself what you’re made of. Learning to feel and stay connected under stress is a sign of maturity. We envy those that appear to have this, and how we take in our world without merely reacting to it, goes a long way in achieving that same strength in ourselves.
John Shinavier, MA, RYT, Life Coach

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How to Change the way we talk to each other when emotions are high.

Posted by John Shinavier - Life Coach | Speaker on May 13, 2012
Posted in: Couples Blog. 1 Comment

 Conflict / Resolution

How to change the way we communicate with each other when emotions are high.

  1. Awareness is first.  (I am going to do this differently this time!)
  2. Agree on a hand signal or a simple word like Popcorn when your not available to talk yet.   Agree to respect this in your partner.
  3. Sometimes we are crushed for time, so give your partner a time when you will be available to talk.  In this way you show that you are listening to them.
  4. Nothing is resolved when your angry, so don’t even try.
  5. Take notes on what upsets you at home, and bring them into your therapy.  (We all have busy lives and writing something down is the key to remembering it.)
  6. See, honestly, what your part in it is. (Be honest with yourself.)
  7. Discuss the problem with your significant other.  (When their available!)
  8. You may find out that some are not conflicts, and that change, will and can be easier than you thought.
  9. The importance of the above is that you move your awareness (how you process things, and how you willingly want to change your behavior) to share it with him/her.  This is true intimacy.
  10. Since you’re not expressing your feelings at the time (backing down or confused) where else are they coming out?  (Unconscious behaviors, addictions etc.)
  11. How is this behavior slowly destroying the relationship?
  12. Are you willing to change??  (Now we’re talking!)
  13. If so, what are the trade- off?   Remember the word COMPROMISE?  It’s not just a word that you read about.  It’s the cornerstone of every good relationship.
  14. Remember your role models for communicating?  Do you really want to continue that cycle or do you want to make up your own?

John J. Shinavier MA, MFT Int., CYT, Life Coach

2012  May 13th  Under Couples Blog

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Everyone Has To Move Their Body!

Posted by John Shinavier - Life Coach | Speaker on May 10, 2012
Posted in: Yoga Therapist/ Instructor Blog. Tagged: changes in my life, Yoga, Yoga for the senior. Leave a comment

As I brought to a close a “Yoga Stretch” class that I hold every Monday night, I mentioned the following to my hardy group of students.   Now, this is not your typical  Hollywood yoga class.  There are no yoga bunnies in the front row nor is there any rock music playing, just a group of aging adults who want some flexibility and balance in their bodies.  The oldest is 76 and the youngest is 45.  All were intimidated to go to any of the local yoga classes which here in West Hollywood seem to be on every other block along with Starbucks!

As children most of us had unlimited motion to play with our bodies.  Now, unfortunately, because the majority of people never hear of stretching until much later in life, it suddenly becomes to dangerous and uncomfortable to try much more than raising one’s arms.  What this thought process does is rewrite our script for the second half of our life.  Old people are going to be stiff, in pain and uncomfortable their bodies.  It reads as if it was written in stone.  Unless you’ve had some horrific aggressive surgeries there is no reason why you can’t bring flexibility back into your life.  Whenever we seem to try something new, we unconsciously judge ourselves  by saying; “I can’t do this I’m too stiff!  No one says that getting back in shape is going to be without its detractors.  What I teach my group is to use their voices in more positive ways like: “I can do this.” or “I love moving like this.”  Our own voice, the voice we were born with can be our ally or our friend.  It’s the voice we know the best, and should never be used voicing negativity against ourselves.  It hurts, and it carries a lot more weight and harm then you think.

One student of fifty four years had this to say: “I’m going to make the second half of my life as vibrant as the first half, only this time with more awareness!”

John Shinavier is a 500 hr. registered Yoga Teacher/Therapist and has been doing yoga most of his whole life.

For more information on John go to <a href=”http://www.thumbtack.com/Kali-Natha-Yoga-the-yoga-of-developing-the-Mystic-within-you-Los-Angeles-CA/service/1062451″>Kali Natha Yoga, the yoga of developing the Mystic within you.</a>

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“I wasn’t raised to take care of myself!” / check out this article in down-loads.

Posted by John Shinavier - Life Coach | Speaker on April 25, 2012
Posted in: General Blog. Tagged: Adults that refuse to grow up. The spoiled adult. Adults that act like children. Raised in privledge. Leave a comment

Parents over envolvment in their childrens lives to the point where the child rather than launching decides to stay with Mom and Dad

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New Year / Time to Reboot.

Posted by John Shinavier - Life Coach | Speaker on January 8, 2012
Posted in: General Blog. Tagged: changes in my life, New Years resolutions, positive energy, present moment, reboot, resolutions, The New Year, time passes, Trying to make change stick, workout partner. 1 Comment

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Procrastination: The act or habit of putting off or delaying, and thus putting off important tasks to a later time.” Wikipedia

Inertia: With regard to effort, to resist motion, action and the like, inactivity,sluggishness.

With regard to those hopeful “New Year’s Resolutions”, if the above two states did not exist, most of us would have a much easier time following through with the changes that we hope to make in the new year:

  • Manage to devote an hour each day to write.
  • Rising at the appointed hour to engage in some form of exercise.
  • Read less fiction and more biographies.
  • Make more time to get together with friends.

It all sounds possible and within my means to do. But, then time passes and procrastination comes along with a healthy dose of judgement for me not doing something that I had planned to do in the past and failed.  Judgement in and of themselves come equipped to siphon off any amount of positive energy I might have had when I decided to make some changes in my life.  Since I have already made the mistake of going over past unfinished business, I find that I am no longer in the present moment and inertia from being overwhelmed soon follows.

So, after many many years of good intentions, I now understand that to stick to any kind of well meaning promise to myself that involves real change, I have first to stay in the present moment and start out very small with something that is within my power to affect real change.  It is important to note, that this moment of choice is something that is not dependent on another’s involvement, thereby removing that variable like an inconsistent workout partner who will meet me at the gym.

A tool which has proven useful in the past has been to keep some record, some marked evidence, like a daily calendar that I can check, that is proof to me that I have accomplished what I had set out to do.  There is something tangible in keeping this kind of proof that establishes oneself in the present.  It brings to mind the crude slashes that I made on a maple tree that grew in my childhood backyard that affirmed for me that my birthday or the start of summer vacation was just so many days away.  Later it was marking a calendar in college which was evidence that I had studied every day for a final.  In New York in the early seventies when I became a vegetarian, it was a chalk board with a magnetic strip mounted on the front of my fridge where I kept the amount of days that I kept to my intent not to eat meat, and that included those scrumptious all beef franks served with bright splashes of hot mustard sold on the streets!

My small change this year happens to be spending no less than 15 minutes each morning in meditation.  So far, I’m right on schedule.

Now take a moment and think and celebrate thoughts of what you wish to happen for you in the new year.

Good Luck!

John Shinavier, MA, RYT, Life Coach

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Why Therapy? Why Now?

Posted by John Shinavier - Life Coach | Speaker on December 21, 2011
Posted in: Therapy Blog. Tagged: Finding a therapist, The right therapist for the client, the wrong type of therapist, When therapy is needed, When therapy is useful. Leave a comment

 

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Therapy in all its forms is available to just about anybody.  From Free Clinics to private practice, there are good therapists to be found in both. It takes courage to reach out when you need help. It takes time and tenacity to find the “right” therapist (more on this later.) It also takes a willingness on your part to bare your soul to a stranger! Therapy as a rule will require a commitment of time anywhere from three to eight months, depending on your specific need.

The following could be reasons for you to seek out a therapist:

So, lets say you’ve become aware of a pattern of behavior in yourself that you’re not particularly proud of. Your parents (if you’ve shared this with them) have said
“Don’t worry so much. We love you.” This is well-meaning advice, but it didn’t work when you were a teen, and it doesn’t work now. You go to a good friend and they might respond:
“You always feel this way after a breakup. It’ll all change when you meet someone new.” Possibly true, but these feelings that come in between relationships never seem to change, and always keep you doubting if you made the right decisions to begin with.

Nothing is going to change in what you’re feeling, because you may be choosing poor behavior to avoid feeling worse. These behaviors could be drinking to excess, not sleeping or sleeping to much, over eating etc..   What needs to happen, is for you to process these feelings in a different way, before you  begin to notice any difference in your situation.

————–

Your whole young adult life you’ve never been without a job/career. In fact working has “been your life!” Somewhere you forgot to have any kind of meaningful personal life. Your social life consisted of who you were working with, and when that job was over you fell in with the people on your new job. The cast of your social life could be scripted as if its from a reality show. This may have worked fine for you in the past, but now its all becoming too overwhelming and empty.

————–

You’re in your twenties. Your parents loved you, but they never instilled any worldly wisdom, barring their own mistakes, in you. You’ve been drifting perhaps for years now. You notice that your peers are doing exciting things with their lives, such as going after a particular career, or enrolling in school, or traveling to some other county to work. You’ve never left your birthplace and right about now, you feel like your the only one who feels like they’ve reached a plateau and are stuck!    

—————-

You desperately want to change, so you start asking around for recommendations of therapists that others might suggest. Initially, everyone seems expensive or the places that offer free to sliding scale fees have long waiting lists.  Your back to where you started. Don’t be discouraged. Save a little money, or ask for a loan from someone who knows your situation, then if that is secure, start calling and leaving messages (short) on therapists answering machines asking if you could see them for an initial visit. The term “initial visit”, is using therapy language that communicates to the therapists that you are a bit more savvy in your search.  For some it’s considered the first meeting,  for others it’s a meet and greet that requires no commitment from either of the parties.  After you’ve left more than a few of these messages on therapists machines, you’ll find that several will return your call.  

Most of  the therapists that I know have good hearts. Most of them, not all, but most of them will see one or two clients if not for free, then at a sliding scale. It all depends on their work load, and if they’re able to manage  working with possible clients who cannot afford their full fee. If they agree to see you for that initial first visit, then show up on time, and know what it is that you want to see them about. Understand, it is possible that they will hear you and take you on for a limited amount of sessions.

In the beginning of this blog I mentioned working with the “right” therapist.   This means finding a therapist that works in a style that your comfortable with.  Some therapists work in the here and now, while others will concentrate more on your past, in other words, what brought you to this point in your life.  Some will give homework, while others will just listen to you and say very little.  These are all correct therapeutic modalities, but not everyone of them is going to feel like  a fit for you.

In the end, its going to be about the relationship that you have with your therapist that will provide the trust to provide the corrective experience for you to heal.     

John J. Shinavier, MA, RYT, Life Coach

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Men’s Groups

Posted by John Shinavier - Life Coach | Speaker on September 30, 2011
Posted in: Men's Group Blog. Tagged: man and therapy, Men need to talk too, mens groups, therapy and men, Therapy for men, therapy groups for men, wounded warriors. Leave a comment

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As a rule, groups are recommended as the last step in the healing process in many types of therapies.  That transition from working in isolation with yourself and a therapist, to the socialization aspect of sharing much of that same information with men who have struggled with similar problems is when closure, (if this is possible), happens. Most often the client and myself will come to a realization that for the client to continue healing, he or she must continue to heal in a group setting.

An example of this is would be a man who is going through a “mid-life crisis.”  He might be experiencing depression, anxiety, loss of libido, addiction, career change etc..  When he has worked through one or all of the above issues that are specific to his situation with an individual therapist, then group therapy would put those issues in perspective.

Group therapy can be a most powerful experience.  The sharing of the individuals experience with a group of men in a safe environment lets him know that he is not alone in his feelings.  In the listening and the exchange of information what has been experienced as overwhelming is normalized by the collective amount of feed-back that he receives from the group. He now acquires tools and information from the group as well as choices that he never would have thought possible on his  own.

*  *  *  *  *

The following are a variety of groups that I could be running at any given time.  Call if you are interested in joining…

  • “Seasons of a Man’s Life.”  The overwhelming awareness that time is passing and you must change your goals, views etc. Normally the age for this is men from thirty-two to forty-eight.
  • “The Way of Healing From Sexual Abuse.”  Healing from the sexual abuse that happened to you as a child or young adult.  This will be open to men from age eighteen to fifty.
  • “Dealing with the New Economy.”  A combination workshop/group processing for the man who is trying to adapt in this uncertain time.  This is open to any man from age twenty to sixty.
  • “Finding and Depending on your Intuition as your source of truth”  A man’s
    guide to his spiritual/mystic self.  
    This group would be open to any man who is looking to find his own spiritual tools.

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    Therapist ~ Yoga Instructor
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