An interactive workshop for psychotherapists interested in transforming their own relationship to money, while examining how ‘the fee’ influences clinical and professional outcomes.
During this workshop you will:
- Learn to have meaningful conversations about money and ‘the fee’ that enhance the therapeutic relationship
- Expand your thinking about money beyond the practical, incorporating dimensions of privilege, power and symbolic meaning
- Gain insight into your own relationship with money, exploring and potentially transforming deap-seated dynamics
Overview
A taboo in many families and cultures, money is a potent symbol. While it can represent aspiration, status and security, for some it’s tied up with lack, envy and resentment. Money can be idealised, becoming a dominant principal in the psyche, which might starve the Self of a more meaningful living. Conversely, money can be demonised or deprioritised, especially when self esteem is low. This, in turn, may limit access to resourcing, depriving one of a capacity to manifest in the world.
Looked at through a developmental lens, both the mother and the father complexes are implicated, as are many stages of self and social identity formation. These inherited beliefs can, if unexamined, remain somatised and/or unconscious, undermining our capacity to reach toward purpose. Combined with structural disadvantage, they are are often implicated in repeating patterns of trauma. Indeed, examining one’s relationship to money often connects us with deeply ingrained developmental and intergenerational traumas. Inner work to redefine such patterns is important psychological, spiritual and social work.
Clinically, the fee is a principal ingredient to the therapeutic frame, and remains a clinical agency throughout the therapy. Some professional bodies recommend the fee is reviewed regularly, at least in line with inflation. Yet it can be a conversation which is neglected, sometimes due to it lurking in institutional or supervisory shadow.
Despite the significance of money, many therapists treat it as a purely practical matter, or a topic not deserving of much attention in the consulting room. Many of us feel awkward about bringing it up and may avoid difficult conversations.
If we work thoughtfully and curiously with money, we can recognise power and privilege, while also helping clients grow better awareness of their own assumptions. By working with the fee in a relational, fair and transparent way, the fee can come to represent care, commitment and respect to each other and the process.
Content Structure
In order to contain this broad topic, we will use the following structure to guide and focus our exploration.
- Archetypal – money as a symbol; from a historical perspective and implications on personal and collective meaning.
- Cultural – how contemporary collective meanings might show up in the consulting room.
- Ethical – how we might considering power, privilege and fairness, without colluding with unconscious processes.
- Developmental – connecting symbolic meaning with the parental dyad and the life of the family, including intergenerational factors.
- Institutional – our own professional organisations, their norms and cultures which influence money.
- Clinical – how “the fee” might be set, maintained and adjusted and how this can be explored relationally.
Testimonials
“Thank you for a very enriching workshop with a considered balance between theories, process and practice. It provided me with substantial food for thought that continues to resonate in my work.”
“I found the workshop quite transformational. Working in an embodied way with early life complexes related to money has stirred up a profound process in me. I can see it will open new dimensions in how I work with clients.”
“I had no idea of the role money has played in culture across time. This workshop helped me make sense of how this archetype lives within me. For the first time, I feel I’ve truly grasped something essential about my relationship with money both personally and professionally.”
Format
Friday (7-9pm)
The evening session steps through material from the above structure, to provide some points of discussion and reflection.
Held on Zoom as an interactive lecture, with breakout sharing.
Notes will be provided but the lecture will not be recorded.
Saturday (9:30am-1:15pm)
After a nights sleep, (and maybe a dream!), we will meet in-person to work experientially.
Part 1: Personal creative reflection, including small and large group sharing.
Part 2: Group exploration of clinical material and optional role play.
The Saturday session is held in a group meeting place in Kings Cross, Central London.
Break included, with light refreshments.
Dates
Not currently scheduled. To be informed of future events please sign up on the workshops page..
Price
£150, contact me for concession info
Sign up
Workshop places are limited for quality. If you’d like to join, please fill out the registration form below. If you’d like to be informed of future workshops, please use the sign up form on the workshops page.