Wednesday, November 25, 2015

"An emotional and educational read.." #Prison #Anger #Faith 2 #Men in #rich #dialogue


"An emotional and educational read that charts an individuals struggle with anger 
and the challenging environment that they are forced to live in. 
The book offers solutions; useful tools and antidotes that we can employ as individuals to help us know ourselves and 'shore up' that Achilles heel. 
The book encourages us to take that leap of faith 
and rise from the ashes bathed in the knowledge of self worth and self discovery."

Jenn Mac

By Paul Wilson

This 1-2 sitting read is a rich dialogue between two fascinating men, captured through old-fashioned letter writing, that reveals the harsh nature of many people's lives in contemporary Britain. Bobby is a spirited, creative, entrepreneurial and surprisingly reflective man whose litany of very bad deeds finally catches up with him, until he finds himself in prison for the first time. Pip - a modern-day youth worker/saint, encourages Bobby to write everything he's thinking and feeling down, and as the letters progress, coaxes more and more soul-searching out of Bobby. Remarkably Bobby and Pip agree to publish the correspondence and now the reader can experience the deep dialogue about broken dangerous lives, peppered with courage, hope and belief. Its gutsy stuff, and its worth it.

Between the Bars
By Pip Wilson Bobby Hossain







Blob Tree 'Christmas And New Year Collection' of Communication Tools - DOWNLOADS



A Blob Tree Christmas And New Year Collection

Full collection of Blob scenes with a Christmas & New Year theme, includes : Blob Advent, Blob Annual Review (colour & b&w)Blob Changes (colour & b&w), Blob Christmas (2 versions), Blob Christmas Story, Blob Christmas TreeBlob EgyptianBlob GoodbyesBlob IncarnationBlob NativityBlob New YearBlob Party (2 versions)Blob World 2
Black & White & Colour versions (where available) all included
A total of 18 Blob Scenes in this pack (including black & white and colour variants)

LINK TO VIEW / MORE DETAILS / SHOP HERE
* the purchased images come without watermark and in full resolution
*remember to add your free Blob Tools Guide to your shopping cart






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5 Reasons We All Deserve Forgiveness



“To forgive is somehow associated with saying that it is all right, that we accept the evil deed. But this is not forgiveness. Forgiveness means that you fill yourself with love and you radiate that love outward and refuse to hang onto the venom or hatred that was engendered by the behaviors that caused the wounds.” ~Wayne Dyer
When we have been deeply hurt or betrayed by a friend, loved one, or even an acquaintance, it can be incredibly difficult to let it go and forgive them. Some acts seem almost unforgivable. But really not much is.
My belief is that people who hurt us are more often than not in a lot of pain themselves, and they’re making choices and decisions based on their own wounds.
I’ve spent the past two years working hard to forgive someone I loved deeply who hurt me. It hasn’t been easy and it’s taken a huge amount of time looking within, acknowledging my own mistakes in life, and seeing all the reasons it’s imperative I forgive others for their wrongs. They deserve it as much as I do.
It’s one of the most powerful and loving things we can do, and it ultimately brings us peace of mind and the loving energy we deserve in our lives.
So, why should you let go of your resentment and rage and forgive someone who has hurt you? A few reasons that have been motivators for me:

1. Forgiving allows the other person to work on themselves.

Nobody is perfect. We have all had times in our lives when things have gotten out of control or we acted in ways that weren’t in alignment with who we want to be in this world.
Yes, sometimes people do hurtful things because they are flat out selfish, but most of the time we screw up without meaning to. We all deserve a second chance to do better.
Receiving a second chance when I have hurt someone else has allowed me to step up my game and prove to myself and to them that I can do better.
Sometimes it’s taken time for me to really get it. We don’t change our thought patterns and behaviors overnight. But I know that when somebody has forgiven me, it’s forced me to take stock of my actions and motives and work on myself.
And in the process, I have shown up as the woman I want to be in this world and proven to myself and to others that I can change.
We wouldn’t even bother trying if another person hadn’t forgiven our actions as a way of saying, “I can let this go, and I trust and hope this experiences has taught you something.”

2. If we show others compassion, we learn how to develop it for ourselves.

Often when we are holding onto resentment toward someone who hurt us, it’s about our ego. We want them to suffer as much as we did.
One of my close friends has been teaching me about compassion. I don’t show much for myself, so I have a difficult time showing it for others. But as I have slowly learned to develop compassion for people who have hurt me, digging deep into the reasons why they may have done it, it’s allowed me to develop more compassion for myself for the things I have done.
Developing compassion for someone who has hurt you is a powerful and integral step toward healing for both of you.

3. Forgiveness helps everybody involved move on.

Not everyone and every situation is meant to be a part of our lives forever. Sometimes, they are there for a period of time to teach us something, and once their purpose is served they move on and the next chapter of our story begins.
As difficult as it may be to let people go, whether they are a long time friend, a family member, a spouse, or a lover, when we forgive them we create a space for them to move onto their next chapter, as well as ourselves.
If we’re holding onto the old story of “what they did to us,” we can’t create a space for better things to come into our life.

4. When we know better, we do better.

I live by Maya Angelou’s quote that for most of us, “when we know better, we do better.” I truly believe that people don’t go around intentionally trying to hurt others, especially those closest to us.
Most people are doing the very best they can with what they know, how they were raised, and where they are at in life. I know that I personally have often made the same mistakes over and over again until I really got the lesson and developed the tools to do things differently. When I’ve known better, I’ve done better.
Try to recognize that every experience in your life, especially the most painful ones, are teachers that reveal to us what we still need to master. You have the opportunity to become better if you can avoid holding onto the bitterness.

5. Without forgiveness we don’t grow spiritually.

The process of spiritual growth is infinite. Some of our spiritual lessons are to learn compassion, self-love, and unconditional love for others. We are still operating at the bottom realms of our spiritual growth when we are carrying around feelings of hate and bitterness and thoughts of revenge.
When we receive somebody else’s forgiveness, I believe we graduate one step up that spiritual ladder. Whether we feel we deserved it or not, somebody gave it to us. And when we receive such a beautiful and selfless gift from somebody else, we are compelled to give it back.
This mutual exchange of loving energy between people who have wronged us is a beautiful step forward on our spiritual journey.
The bottom line is, forgiveness is something we ultimately do for us. Not the other person. And without it, the pain inside our hearts will never heal.




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Blob Tree 'PARIS ATTACKS' communication tool in practice



Great feedback from a Youth Worker
who used 
BLOB PARIS ATTACKS
with a youth group.

A good example of how to use/getting people of all ages to reflect on this major issue in the world.

Thank you James for your permission.

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

Just wanted to say that the resource worked brilliantly. It took a couple of minutes for our leaders/volunteers and young people to get their heads round it, but once they had it worked better than I could have imagined. It really opened a lot of in depth discussions and provided  all of them with assistance in how to express themselves in relation to what went on.
 
The ability to be able to use it as a means for the young people to express how they felt initially, to how they feel now, and to where they want to progress to was particularly useful as it opened up conversations about how they are already starting to shift and change how they feel meaning that their end target seemed far more realistic and attainable to them.
 
We used it for a group of 14 11-14 year olds in an after school group we run at our church. And split the 14 of them into smaller groups and projected the picture onto a screen that they could easily go up to and point at if they needed to. It did mean we had 4 people up pointing at different ones at various points but this added to the small group discussions and conversations.
So do pass on our gratitude for the resource and that it was definitely very successful in the group we used.
 
James Yielder
Assistant Youth Minister
Knowle Parish Church

SEE HERE TO GET FREE DOWNLOAD
http://www.blobtree.com/blogs/news/67811205-blob-paris-free-download
SEE HERE FOR FURTHER DETAILS
http://www.pipwilson.com/2015/11/paris-shootings-attacks-by-blob-tree.html 



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Monday, November 23, 2015

Group work. OBJECTIVES:: Developmental Building Confidence Encouraging self esteem Christmas theme.




Group work.
OBJECTIVES::
Developmental
Building Confidence
Encouraging self esteem
Christmas theme.

Context::
A late night gathering
of Hostel Residents
late teens/early 20's
separated from family
for various reasons
and feeling it ........




I started by giving each member of the group 
a little Christmas tree the size if a 5 pence coin.
See above sprinkled on my desk today.

Then I asked what feelings they had - 
seeing - feeling this. 
As usual, many have difficulty to contact how they feel. 
Out-slipped words like 
'I hate Christmas', 
'I don't like Christmas', 
'I have no money to buy, not even, one present.'

I then moved to asking them 
who the main human characters were 
in the Christmas story. 
The first word uttered was 'Santa'. 
Soon after there was a list of eight mentioned - 
come on - you can do this yourself now!

Their names/descriptions went into a hat, 
Jesus too. 
Each drew one and I went around the circle 
asking how they thought that one character 'felt' - 
feelings question.

Here are some stand out feelings;

Mary - stressed
Joseph - scared/worried
Innkeeper - guilty
King - good-to-give
Shepherd - in awe
Angel - 'yes'! - sorted!

Three noted as negative feelings and 
they were the main focus of the whole affair 
as responsible adults.
The rich - feeling good to give not receiving.
The tough rough/simple life style shepherd - awe - overwhelmed.

The last one was a dead pleased Angel 
who really knew that this was pretty good news 
........... "YESSSSSSS"

Why do this?
Why do I do this sort of group work?

• am on a journey to cultivate in myself, 
and others, an increasing ability 
to be able to get into contact my/their own feelings.
• Looking at others and empathising is a learning process into sensitivity.
• Articulating those feelings is a process of 'owning' such powerful things as feelings and becoming Emotionally Literate.
• A human identification with a powerful historical spiritual human story. 
Reality at Christmas - to escape the tinsel 
for some small moments ....
.... and it was stinking good .........

Why not try it on humans around you?
Adapt - of course.
You never know, they may be pleased to talk 'real' 
midst the rest of the Christmas slippery slope.

I am 'being' with, during the past week, 
humans who are;
Visibly self harming
Severe depressed
Lost and uncertain
Lonely and afraid
No place like home to go at Christmas
Refugee
No money for food.
Failing health - vulnerable.


Deep feelings and disturbed
(the last one is me 
and I want to be disturbed!)"

So that was a group work experience.
It stirs my bones
to feel what they feel.
Create a space where they can trust.
Trust at a level
where they can share vulnerabilities.
Not that ANSWERS are given.
BUT support by being able to voice
their inner life - hurts - struggles ......

Do you know anyone hurting at Christmas.
It can be overwhelming
but - we can't do everything
but we can all do something .....


bBeautiful this Christmas .....



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'The Eye of the Heart,’ ....... produces insight -IN SIGHT





The Intelligence of Emotions: Philosopher Martha Nussbaum on How Storytelling Rewires Us and Why Befriending Our Neediness Is Essential for Healthy Relationships

“Emotions are not just the fuel that powers the psychological mechanism of a reasoning creature, they are parts, highly complex and messy parts, of this creature’s reasoning itself.”

The Intelligence of Emotions: Philosopher Martha Nussbaum on How Storytelling Rewires Us and Why Befriending Our Neediness Is Essential for Healthy Relationships
“The power of ‘the Eye of the Heart,’ which produces insight, is vastly superior to the power of thought, which produces opinions,” the great British economic theorist and philosopher E.F. Schumacher wrote in his 1973 meditation on how we know what we know. He was responding to the Persian poet and philosopher Rumi who, seven centuries earlier, extolled “the eye of the heart” as seventy-fold more seeing than the “sensible eyes” of the intellect. To the intellectually ambitious, this might sound like a squishy notion — or a line best left to The Little Prince. But as contemporary scientists continue to shed light on how our emotions affect our susceptibility to disease, it is becoming increasingly clear that our emotional lives are equipped with a special and non-negligible kind of bodily and cognitive intelligence.
The nature of that intelligence and how we can harness its power is what Martha Nussbaum, whom I continue to consider the most compelling and effective philosopher of our time, examines in her magnificent 2001 book Upheavals of Thought: The Intelligence of Emotions (public library). Titled after Proust’s conception of the emotions as “geologic upheavals of thought,” Nussbaum’s treatise offers a lucid counterpoint to the old idea that our emotions are merely animal energies or primal impulses wholly separate from our cognition. Instead, she argues that they are a centerpiece of moral philosophy and that any substantive theory of ethics necessitates a substantive understanding of the emotions.


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See Beautiful #YouAreBeautiful

Fun Facts of Life - check yourself against them.