Loss or Grief therapists in Cupar, Scotland Scotland, United Kingdom GB
We are proud to feature top rated Loss or Grief therapists in Cupar, Scotland, United Kingdom. We encourage you to review each profile to find your best match.
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Heather Macfarlane
Registered Psychotherapist, Cognitive Behavioural Psychotherapist
Grief is a normal human reaction to loss of any kind. It is an essential, but uncomfortable, process that we must go through in order to move forward. Moving forward can be scary though and the process of grief itself is a lonely place. I can offer you a comforting, supportive space to work through those emotions.
15 Years Experience
Online in Cupar, Scotland (Online Only)
Birgit Schreiber
Psychologist, PhD and MA in Psychology
Loss and grief can be so hard to experience and it takes time and a path to help us through it.
24 Years Experience
Online in Cupar, Scotland (Online Only)
Abi Jude
Counsellor/Therapist, MBACP Member
Loss and Grief can effect us in varied ways. Sometimes it can reach back to earlier memories or experiences and sometimes it is clearly an event such as death of a loved one, the end of a relationship or separation. We can feel stuck, depressed, frozen or manic. I will work with you to identify your feelings and experience and find a way to move forward.
13 Years Experience
Online in Cupar, Scotland
Gordon Wax BA HONS MBACP
Counsellor/Therapist, Pschoanalytic psychotherapist
It can be considered that all parts of life is about loss and grief which can result in any emotion and behaviour.
11 Years Experience
Online in Cupar, Scotland
Well on the Way
Therapist, Reichian Therapy (Character Analysis & Bodywork), Ecotherpay, Family Constellations, Touch for Health Kinesioogy, Natural Healing, Accredited facilitator of the Work that Reconnects
Loss and Grief are part and parcel of the human condition, personal and collective. However, when they come knocking our plans and expectations of a ‘normal’ life can go out of the window. How can we learn to be with this difficult guest? Francis Weller writes: “Grief is more than an emotion; it is also a faculty of being human. It is a skill that must be developed, or we will find ourselves migrating to the margins of our lives in hopes of avoiding the inevitable entanglements with loss. It is through the rites of grief that we are ripened as human beings. Grief invites gravity and depth into our world. We possess the profound capacity to metabolize sorrow into something medicinal for our soul and the soul of the community”. This requires that we are acknowledged and held, just as we hold and acknowledge those who we have lost.
42 Years Experience
Online in Cupar, Scotland