Beyond Artist's Block
  • Home
  • About
    • Host Rachel Moore, LMFT
  • Listen
  • Blog
  • Resources
  • Support Us
  • Contact

Morgan Myers: How Horticulture Therapy Nurtures Healing

10/28/2022

0 Comments

 
Picture
Season 1, Episode 5

Today’s guest: Morgan Myers, LPC, is a therapist in East Dallas, Texas, with her own private practice. Her favorite clients are postpartum women, people working through spiritual hurt from the church, and creatives. She has begun to use horticulture therapy in her practice as a way to help people work through grief. She also plans to use horticulture therapy in her community to help with chronic depression, anxiety, and grief from the effects of COVID. Morgan has two daughters and has been married for 13 years.


SHOW TOPICS
• Art as a spiritual practice
• What is horticulture therapy?

• How gardening can help people find understanding in their current season of life
• Morgan discusses her own experience of spiritual hurt
• Why postpartum women need special care and often feel misunderstood


SHOW LINKS
• Morgan Myers, LPC
https://eastdallastherapy.com/morgan-myers
• Horticulture Therapy Institute
https://www.htinstitute.org


WHERE TO LISTEN
  • Apple
  • Spotify
  • Amazon
  • Google

​SUPPORT THE SHOW
• Rate & review on Apple Podcasts
• Buy Us a Paintbrush!
​


Disclaimer
​Beyond Artist's Block represents the opinions of its host and guests and is not meant as a substitute for therapy. It is for informational and educational purposes only. Please reach out to your healthcare provider with any specific questions you may have.

0 Comments

Rachelle Archer: How Creativity Fosters Community

10/14/2022

0 Comments

 
Picture
Season 1, Episode 4

​Today’s guest
: Rachelle Archer, MA, is an expressive arts practitioner, organizational consultant, and the founder of Artful Leadership. She helps leaders impact lives sustainably by putting wellness first so they can lead with a full tank and create a culture that supports both staff and the community they serve. Rachelle has over 25 years’ experience at the intersection of arts, education, and healing. She serves marginalized youths and the adults who support them and helps organizations thrive by fostering the individual, interpersonal, and institutional well-being that empowers them to live out their mission and flourish. She believes that everyone can be a leader, humans thrive in community, and the well-being of that community starts with us doing our inner work first.

SHOW TOPICS
• How Rachelle helped found the Monarch School in San Diego
• Why “coregulation” is important, especially when working with children
• How our trauma can get in the way of the good work we want to do, and what to do about that
• How organizations are responsible for setting up a culture of health
• Making conscious decisions WITH people rather than doing things to or for them
• “How do we make life more wonderful for you?”

SHOW LINKS
• Artful Leadership (Rachelle’s organization)
• The Artful Leader (Rachelle’s podcast)
• Monarch School
• VIA Character Strengths Survey

WHERE TO LISTEN
  • Apple
  • Spotify
  • Amazon
  • Google​​

SUPPORT THE SHOW
• Rate & review on Apple Podcasts
• Buy Us a Paintbrush!
​


Disclaimer
​Beyond Artist's Block represents the opinions of its host and guests and is not meant as a substitute for therapy. It is for informational and educational purposes only. Please reach out to your healthcare provider with any specific questions you may have.
0 Comments

Who Gets to Decide What Is Enough?

10/5/2022

0 Comments

 
Picture
I started listening to the podcast "Dead Eyes" recently. I'd been hearing about it for a while, and now I haven't listened to any other show since I started. It's really good. The host is a character actor named Connor Ratliff who was fired from the HBO miniseries "Band of Brothers." He only had a small part in one episode, but the story he was told about his firing was that the director of the episode, Tom Hanks, said Connor had "dead eyes." This feedback haunted him for years and almost caused him to quit acting forever.

In the podcast, he talks about what happened to him after being fired and he also tries to figure out what exactly *did* happen to cause him to lose the "Band of Brothers" job (Spoiler: He does get a chance to talk with Tom Hanks on the show eventually, but I haven't gotten to that episode yet). He also chats with other actors about their experiences of rejection and failure in the business and finds out he definitely is not alone.

One of the early episodes of
"Dead Eyes" (one with an unfortunate title) features the actor Tony Hale. I appreciated their conversation about fame what that actually means. Hale says regardless of the level of success someone reaches: "I'm sure there's still that part in all of us that think, Oh, but if I do this, it will be enough. It will be all okay. And the fact is: it's never enough. It's never enough. And it's a constant lesson to all of us to be like, 'Hey, let's wake up to what's around us. Let's practice being present.'

He tells host Connor: "You and I, we're the most  known we're ever going to be, and ever going to need if people who are close to us know us and love us. That's the most known we're ever going to need. You know, it's just all of those kind of daily lessons we have--I have to wake up to."

I love the idea that our most important fan base is the people who know and love us. It can be hard to hang onto this concept, though, when there is so much pressure to perform and strive and keep getting more and more status. But when does it end?

Later in their discussion, Connor tells Tony that he interviewed the actor who replaced him in "Band of Brothers" and compared their career trajectories. In response, Hale says: "
Even if that guy went on to win five Oscars and became whatever, that does not equate joy. That does not equate real living. If anything, these lessons where you grab onto that self-awareness and really see things around you, and really try to wake yourself up and see each other and love each other ... that's where the joy is. That's the equation."

I loved hearing this reminder to examine what success actually means to us. When we feel like we will never measure up or be good enough, it can be debilitating. And it definitely is joyless. Money and fame are great, but they may not give us what we actually need as humans. What do you think?

0 Comments
    A white dog is at the front of the image, and a smiling woman is at the back

    Author

    Rachel Moore, LMFT, (she/her) is the host of Beyond Artist's Block. Rachel is a Licensed Marriage &. Family Therapist based in San Diego, California. She is certified in EMDR and trained in Brainspotting, and she focuses on working with creative clients, including writers, artists, and musicians.

    Archives

    March 2023
    February 2023
    January 2023
    December 2022
    November 2022
    October 2022
    September 2022
    August 2022

    Categories

    All
    Acting
    Art
    Art Therapy
    Brainspotting
    CBT
    EMDR
    Episodes
    IFS
    Music
    Season 1
    Season 2
    Spirituality

    RSS Feed

Listen on Google Podcasts
Picture
Listen on Apple Podcasts
Disclaimer: Beyond Artist's Block podcast represents the opinions of its host and guests and is not meant as a substitute for therapy. It is for informational and educational purposes only. Please reach out to your healthcare provider with any specific questions you may have.
  • Home
  • About
    • Host Rachel Moore, LMFT
  • Listen
  • Blog
  • Resources
  • Support Us
  • Contact