Relevant Links
You may also be interested in the work of some of my associates:

  Dr. Maureen O'Connell     www.eastsidetherapy.co.uk
I am a counsellor/psychotherapist providing an opportunity for a person to work towards living in a more satisfying and resourceful way. Counselling focuses on a particular current issue. Psychotherapy is a more in depth exploration of how an individual's attitudes and behaviour affect their life; do these serve them well or could they consider making some changes.



  Sheila Field     www.camdentherapy.co.uk
My practice is based in Chalk Farm, Camden. I have specific experience in different forms of abuse, particularly domestic violence; anxiety and depression; work problems, including bullying; and issues around sex and sexuality. I can see you for short term focused counselling or longer term, in depth therapy. My session hours are flexible, between 7 am and 7 pm weekdays and I can sometimes offer weekend slots.


  Amanda Falkson     www.psychotherapycity.co.uk
My practice is at London Bridge, in the heart of the City. My approach is concerned with the development of each individual's potential and to support the personal search to bring about a deeper, more meaningful experience of our lives. My training has provided me with a wide range of techniques and diagnostic models from both traditional and modern psychotherapeutic disciplines. This allows me to be open and flexible to different needs and be able to respond in a variety of different ways to my clients.
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Many of the paintings used on this site are taken from the work of Mark Rothko, born Marcus Rothkowitz in Russia in 1903 to a Lithuanian Jewish father and a Prussian Jewish mother. He worked with colour relationships to imbue his paintings with the tragedy of the human condition. He wrote, 'The most important tool the artist fashions through constant practice is faith in his ability to produce miracles when they are needed. [For the artist, the picture must be] as for anyone experiencing it later, a revelation, an unexpected and unprecedented resolution of an entirely familiar need.'