
Therapy is a quiet place where you can explore your inner world. I hope you will discover that, with a gentle, curious approach, even very painful feelings have the potential to be felt and transformed.
Let me share a little more about my approach so that you can decide if I am the person to share your journey. I am Amy. I've been working as a counsellor for 10 years - first, as a bereavement support worker, then in agencies such as Anxiety UK and Mind, and now, from a cabin that looks out onto trees. I believe that nature supports the therapy and creates a space in which you can gently explore whatever arises for you.
Let me share a little more about my approach so that you can decide if I am the person to share your journey. I am Amy. I've been working as a counsellor for 10 years - first, as a bereavement support worker, then in agencies such as Anxiety UK and Mind, and now, from a cabin that looks out onto trees. I believe that nature supports the therapy and creates a space in which you can gently explore whatever arises for you.

In a session, you can expect an opportunity to slow down and contemplate the things that trouble or intrigue you without being judged, advised or pushed. You hold the answers and, together, we will work towards finding them. I think of therapeutic work as a journey back towards yourself.
Your therapy will be unique but along the way we may use some of these approaches:
Focusing: This is a gentle but very effective way of exploring your inner knowing by getting in touch with, and more accepting of, your feelings as you experience them. As a British Focusing Association Recognised focusing practitioner, I will be able to support you in learning this nourishing tool for self-care.
Relational therapy: Petruska Clarkson's integrative psychotherapeutic framework, in which I trained, sets out five different kinds of relationship that exist between client and therapist. In our work together, we may move between these different ways of relating.
Polyvagal theory: These tools and exercises help you to become more familiar with the messages your nervous system is giving you and learning to understand your world and your responses through the lens of your bodily responses to them.
SandStory: In this gentle creative approach you reflect on your inner journey using a tray of sand and figures.
Clay work: this is a form of active psychotherapy in which you use clay as a means to look at feelings and emotions. I am a trainee on this Play Therapy UK approved course and am particularly drawn to the existential and Jungian dimensions of this therapeutic process.
Walk and talk: Nature is the best healer. If you would rather be out walking than sat in a room, then we can take the counselling sessions into the woods.
Self-compassion: I hold the heartfelt belief that self-kindness is the key to deep change. Compassion Focused approaches can help you to develop this attitude towards yourself.
Your therapy will be unique but along the way we may use some of these approaches:
Focusing: This is a gentle but very effective way of exploring your inner knowing by getting in touch with, and more accepting of, your feelings as you experience them. As a British Focusing Association Recognised focusing practitioner, I will be able to support you in learning this nourishing tool for self-care.
Relational therapy: Petruska Clarkson's integrative psychotherapeutic framework, in which I trained, sets out five different kinds of relationship that exist between client and therapist. In our work together, we may move between these different ways of relating.
Polyvagal theory: These tools and exercises help you to become more familiar with the messages your nervous system is giving you and learning to understand your world and your responses through the lens of your bodily responses to them.
SandStory: In this gentle creative approach you reflect on your inner journey using a tray of sand and figures.
Clay work: this is a form of active psychotherapy in which you use clay as a means to look at feelings and emotions. I am a trainee on this Play Therapy UK approved course and am particularly drawn to the existential and Jungian dimensions of this therapeutic process.
Walk and talk: Nature is the best healer. If you would rather be out walking than sat in a room, then we can take the counselling sessions into the woods.
Self-compassion: I hold the heartfelt belief that self-kindness is the key to deep change. Compassion Focused approaches can help you to develop this attitude towards yourself.

A little more about me
I am an accredited member of BACP with a postgraduate diploma in integrative counselling (2019). I initially trained in person-centred bereavement in 2015. I am a BFA recognised focusing practitioner and a SandStory therapist.
In addition to my counselling work, I am the editor of the British Association for Counselling and Psychotherapy's spirituality journal, Thresholds.
I am an accredited member of BACP with a postgraduate diploma in integrative counselling (2019). I initially trained in person-centred bereavement in 2015. I am a BFA recognised focusing practitioner and a SandStory therapist.
In addition to my counselling work, I am the editor of the British Association for Counselling and Psychotherapy's spirituality journal, Thresholds.