About Karen and the FOCUSING ORIENTED ART THERAPY PROCESS



MY BELIEF IN THE POWER OF FOCUSING-ORIENTED ART THERAPY

It Began in Childhood

My introduction to the therapeutic benefits of art began when I was a toddler.  I nestled with crayons and paper in my father’s lap as he read the newspaper.  He guided and accompanied me in art making only when I asked. My scribbles became cats and dogs, weather and people, and stories about my day.  Both my parents took the time to tune into what my art work and I had to say.

At the age of five something too young in me screamed my lack of readiness to separate from home to enter elementary school. My parents decided school entry could wait a year, and that a different sort of preparation was needed as no kindergarten existed in our area. With a sheath of my art work in hand, my parents convinced the Vancouver School of Art to enroll me under-aged in weekend classes. I was ready for the elementary classroom by the time I turned six and continued those Saturday morning art classes until the age of 12 when the Vancouver School of Art shut down.

Throughout childhood I often used art to connect with my friends and with myself. Sometimes my parents would peek around a corner to watch me draw out, work through, and resolve inner conflicts before I headed back out to play.  Art making with others brought a soothing, relaxing resonance. It calmed us, opened us up to chat, and helped us sort through events of our lives.  Perhaps this is where my call to work in the helping professions began.




 A PASSION FOR FACILITATING EMOTIONAL WELL-BEING

As an Educator

My training in service to others started as a Teacher with a B.Ed. from UBC and a Professional Concentration in Psychology. After four years in the classroom I knew I wanted to do more to help children who were struggling to learn.  This led me back to UBC for a Master’s Degree then forward to work as a Reading Clinician for nine school districts in South Central Manitoba. My work with teachers and with children with learning disabilities was widely recognized and commended by the International Reading Association.  I moved next into the position of Learning Specialist and Consultant for the Child Care and Development Branch of the Manitoba Government. While working in this role with children affected by learning and emotional struggles, gifted Child Psychologist, Jerry Jonsson, introduced me to the application of Art Therapy with children.  This inspired me to train as an Art Therapist.

As an Art Therapist

I completed Master’s level training in Art Psychotherapy at Goldsmith’s, University of London, in 1995. While in England, I qualified as a Registered Art Therapist (BAAT-British Art Therapy Association), set up a successful post as an Art Therapist in a Residential School for children with severe emotional and behavioral struggles, and worked with a subgroup of BAAT to further integrate Art Therapy into Britain’s education system.

In 1995, I returned to Canada to the education field as a high school Special Education Support Teacher, while concurrently working as an Art Therapist. In 2007 I became a Registered Art Therapist with the British Columbia Art Therapy Association (BCATR). In 2016 I applied for and achieved Registered Clinical Counsellor (RCC) status with the British Columbia Association of Clinical Counsellors.

As a Focusing Oriented Therapist

In 2012 I took my first course in Focusing Oriented Therapy (FOT).  This client-centered experiential approach was discovered and developed by Eugene Gendlin based on his observations of clients who had successful courses of therapy. He discovered they used a natural process of listening to their body's sense of an issue to guide themselves forward into action steps for handling life's challenges.  I felt I had found the missing piece in my training.  Knowing I could integrate Focusing into my work whether that be in the classroom or in the art room, I undertook five years of study, and completed my Certification in Focusing Oriented Therapy (CFOT) in 2017.  




Inspired by the work of Laury Rappaport, who pioneered and developed Focusing Oriented Art Therapy, I too have found that 
the integration of Focusing with Art Therapy allows for deeper mind-body-spirit connections.  





   

                                        
It allows for artistic expression of the body’s felt sense of a situation, 
















                       hearing what the body wants to say, sensing for its emotional quality,  




then seeing what this inner landscape wants and needs, and which action steps to take into life and living.


It is from zig-zagging back and forth between mind and body, from right brain processing to left brain processing-- within the triangular relationship between therapist, client and artwork--that fresh insights come-- and shifts forward in self-healing and transformation can occur. 

Using Other Colours on My Palette

The needs and goals of my clients help me to determine which other client-centered approaches to integrate when working together. Attachment theory informs my work, as do current neuroscientific research findings. Dream Therapy, so akin to processes used with art work during Focusing Oriented Art Therapy, fascinates me and provides me and clients with another therapeutic avenue.   My years of experience and training as a Learning Specialist and Special Education Support Teacher adds depth and dimension to my assessments and observations of the 'change processes' within clients.  When fitting, I help augment their ‘change process’ with Narrative or Motivational or Solutions Oriented Brief Therapy and Psycho-educational approaches.  This enables clients to further their knowledge and to construct concrete action steps to use outside of the therapy room that feel right for them. 

My intent is always for the client to be in the driver’s seat and for me to take their lead. My job is to journey alongside-- to be an active listener, to respect the client’s wishes, process and readiness, to shine a light in areas already in view within their inner landscape--so they can listen to themselves to where they want to go. I feel privileged to accompany those children, adolescents and adults who choose to work with me.


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To get a sense of the process I use when working with children visit the Children  page.

To hear how children, adolescents and adults have benefitted from my work, visit the Testimonials page.

To book a Focusing Oriented Art Therapy workshop for a group of students, staff or friends, visit the Workshops page.


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