The Dragon Rises Wellness Blog

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Somatic Psychotherapy, Mental Health Dragon Rises Center for Wholeness Somatic Psychotherapy, Mental Health Dragon Rises Center for Wholeness

The Hakomi Principles: Non-Violence

According to Ron Kurtz, the progenitor of Hakomi therapy, “To work nonviolently, we must drop notions about making clients change and, along with that, any tendency to take credit for their successes… that doesn’t mean we have to be passive; nonviolence is not inaction. We can work without using force or the ideas and methods of a paradigm of force.”

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Somatic Psychotherapy, Mental Health Dragon Rises Center for Wholeness Somatic Psychotherapy, Mental Health Dragon Rises Center for Wholeness

The Hakomi Principles: Mindfulness

Mindfulness is the fourth of the core Hakomi principles. In this context, the word “mindfulness” simply means the ability to have an experience and notice it at the same time. As Ron Kurtz, the progenitor of Hakomi therapy said it in his book Body-centered Psychotherapy (1990), “In psychotherapy, nothing is more useful than mindfulness”.

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Somatic Psychotherapy, Mental Health Dragon Rises Center for Wholeness Somatic Psychotherapy, Mental Health Dragon Rises Center for Wholeness

The Hakomi Principles: Unity

The unity principle means that we, like all living systems, “are made up of parts organized into wholes.” In other words, at the level of an individual, the unity principle holds that each of us is a complex, self-correcting system made up of interconnected parts. Additionally, the unity principle also holds that each of us is interconnected with an infinitely complex, much greater whole than we ourselves could ever be alone— because “we live in a participatory universe.” 

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Somatic Psychotherapy, Mental Health Dragon Rises Center for Wholeness Somatic Psychotherapy, Mental Health Dragon Rises Center for Wholeness

“The Problem With People Is That They’re Annoying”, or, Learning To Be Curious

Other-people-are-annoying tropes are all over the place: when your roommate (...spouse, kid, or whoever) leaves dirty underwear on the bathroom floor? Annoying. Your friends’ or partners’ little idiosyncrasies that were endearing at first? Annoying. The sounds of your lunch mate’s chewing, the kids crying, a restaurant roaring with so many voices that you can hardly hear yourself think? Annoying, an-NOY-ing, ANNOYING!

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Get Out of Your Head

And this is part of the reason why we use mindfulness and slowing down in our Hakomi-informed counseling work: it gives us just that little extra bit of space to turn down left-hemisphere inhibition, sense our bodies, feel our emotions, and hear from those small, quiet voices inside that guide us toward deeper truths about ourselves and how we want to be in the world.

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