WELLBEING PHOTO-GRAPHY WORKSHOPS
MINI PHOTOGRAPHY MISSIONS TO OPEN NEW PERSPECTIVES
Away from everyday stressors, the natural world becomes a fertile space to play and imagine new possibilities. Within the workshops, the camera offers a simple way to tap back into our creative capacities with ‘mini missions’ to refresh old thinking and awaken new perspectives.
NATURE AS PSYCHOLOGICAL GUIDE
Just as we know the moon controls the tide, so night-time controls our sleep/wake cycles. If we slow down and take time to notice, the same concept can be applied psychologically. The metaphors within nature can act as helpful guides when our psychological selves have become out of balance.
TAILORED TO YOUR GROUP'S AIMSSAFE, GUIDED WORKSHOPS FOR SMALL GROUPS
My creative and therapeutic professional background inform the design of each workshop. I’m interested in providing a safe space to help settle the nervous system and uplift the spirit. Find out more about my background here or feel welcome to get in touch to arrange an informal chat.
GROUNDING & UPLIFTING
Photography offers a universal language, stimulating human capacity to consider and create change using a multi-sensory approach. The calming environment of the natural world acts as a catalyst to explore, re-imagine and construct creative paths towards self-awareness and wellbeing.
WORKSHOP FEATURESSAFE & INCLUSIVE
TAILORED CONTENT
Facilitated by Jac, experienced photographer-facilitator with a therapeutic background
Small groups of 6-8 people, carefully tailored to respond to the needs/aim of your group/org
GROUNDING & UPLIFTING
NO SPECIAL EQUIPMENT
The focus is upon wellbeing, phone cameras or any other camera are all perfect
Mini photography missions to capture the imagination and generate new perspectives
WHAT WE SEE IMPACTS HOW WE FEEL
HOW WORKSHOP ACTIVITIES CALM & UPLIFT
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Photography can act as a helpful bridge from the preoccupations of our individual minds to the wider world. When our focus becomes fully engaged with the world beyond our internal dialogue, we might achieve moments of what is commonly known as mindfulness - a state of calm connectedness. This is amplified when surrounded by the simplicity and magic of the natural world.
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The natural world offers symbols or templates of managing psychological challenges such as: growth amidst adversity, adaptation, cycles of change, forging new paths and working with the current. The act of photographing these symbols re-frames old narratives and imprints new helpful psychological templates to guide future action.
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By using the camera as a metaphor for our eyes, we can gain insight into how we literally and psychologically see things and in doing so identify old and unhelpful patterns. For example, we may metaphorically: have a psychological tripod stuck in the same position - experiencing the same thing over and over, or a cracked lens distorting the view. Mini photography missions offer a refreshing chance to quite literally try a few new perspectives.
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When we proactively create something new, such as making symbolic sculptures with personal or found objects in the landscape, the natural environment takes on the role of ‘safe container’ for creating new psychological possibilities. Getting our hands involved, shifts the focus from human as observer to maker, amplifying our capacity to create change. Photographing our creations reinforces new neural pathways in our brains - the building blocks of change.
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Powerful photographic activities can also take place indoors, using our own printed photographs alongside other meaningful 2D images. As the brain uses autobiographical memory and present sensations to assign an emotion to what we see, making new photographic collages can be a dynamic tool in challenging old unhelpful narratives through new constructions.
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In a group setting, we additionally become aware that we form part of the natural environment for each other. Creative group exercises gently mediate our interpersonal development as an important - yet often sidelined - balance to any self development we undertake as individuals.
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A safe and supported group space offers an invitation to integrate new insights through sharing workshop experiences, hearing the perspective of others or simply being quiet for a while. Above all, each individual has choice to participate in a way that feels safe.