Courses in Leeds, using peer-to-peer co-counselling for:
self-confidence, assertiveness, and handling emotions
with Richard Mills, BA, BSc, BACP Accredited Counsellor/Psychotherapist, CCI Co-counselling Trainer


 
   
 

Co-counselling is...
A co-counselling session
People's stories
How to get into co-counselling

FAQ: frequently asked questions
4-day residential event
Theory and practice

This a celebration poster, the very first thing that drew me to co-counselling Celebration Posters
   
  Co-counselling is...  
 
  • Self-directed - you decide!
  • Peer-to-peer
  • 37 years old
  • Fun
  • Free (once you've done the course)

The aim in CCI is to help you raise self-confidence, self-esteem and your ability to grasp life fully, helping you live autonomously, creatively and in touch with your emotions.

CCI Co-counselling is a therapeutic tool that aims to help you find out more about who you are and how you operate. It enables you to discover and acknowledge your real, profound and everyday feelings, and to work with them to achieve greater emotional well-being and better relationships of all kinds.

CCI challenges the view that some feelings are taboo and that you should not have them. It can help you come to terms with your past and your present, so that difficult feelings have less of a grip on you.

 

Fear
Fear


Anger

Sadness
Sadness
Joy
Joy

 

Whilst co-counselling uses long-established tools from mainstream therapies, it has important differences from these:

  • Two co-counsellors divide up their session time equally, taking turns to be either the person doing the listening/helping (‘counsellor’, for want of a better word) or the person working on himself or herself (‘client’, for want of a better word).
  • Both people have learned the same set of techniques and tools on a 5-day course
  • No money changes hands
  • It can take place in a group too, at the many events that we hold.

 


Co-counselling in a pair - the original format

Assertiveness tips

Messages from the past

Mad, Bad, Sad and Glad

Coming soon:

Shame and Guilt
The 7 Deadly Sins
Here and Now
Defences
The truth...
Content v. Process
Envy and Jealousy
Ambivalence
Selling Yourself
Count your blessings?

 

Co-counselling is a practice of structured working with equals, which, after training, you can use for the rest of your life, working with one or more co-counsellors, in a safe and supportive framework. Using the repertoire of co-counselling methods you can choose to work on your self, and change the way you are in the world.

Co-Counselling is a powerful and accessible form of therapy with a 40 year history. It draws on a range of approaches - Gestalt, Catharsis, Psychoanalytic, Person-Centred, Process Oriented Psychology (POP), Cognitive, and Reichian. It focuses on both body and mind to produce insight. Whilst the foundation course is aimed to be a therapeutic experience in its own right, it gives participants the skills to continue to use co-counselling for their own personal development afterwards.

These techniques are used to work on the self, with regard to three areas: patterns, discharge and re-evaluation. These areas are adressed on the course, and in summary are:

  • patterns of behaviour that get in the way of creative living (eg withdrawing from contact),
  • physical discharge or expression of bottled up or hitherto hidden emotions (eg crying or laughter), and
  • re-evaluation or review of the truth about who I am and where I come from: making sense of my present behaviour and relating it to both my current life and to my past.

Co-counselling International aims to encourages a culture of validation. Being direct with people about our positive feelings is something that can feel very difficult: it can be difficult both to give and receive compliments and appreciations. This is something that is worked on in co-counselling: we actively celebrate ourselves and others. This can feel like a big challenge, and the co-counselling course helps work on this. I have drawn immensely from this culture: it has helped me rise above my inner shame and self-doubt, move away from embarrassment about telling someone what I like about them, and has helped me move towards enjoying success and being proud of who I am.

The forum where this has been so influential for me is the co-counselling residential events. At these events and on co-counselling courses there is an option to write celebrations to others on 'celebration posters'. (See the picture below and celebration posters.)

validation posters

There is also an important fun element in the co-counselling culture, so we play games and enjoy ourselves in a celebratory way too - it's not only about looking at our serious sides. At the residentials there is often a DIY caberet: if you decide to take a turn it can feel like you are in front of the most sympathetic audience in the world.

Cabaret
Cabaret at a residential

 

 
   
   
   
  Oakwood House, 637 Roundhay Road, Oakwood, Leeds LS8 4BA email: richard@richardmills.co.uk Tel: 0113 219 5526
For professional therapy and counselling in Leeds visit: www.richardmills.co.uk
This website is copyright Richard Mills 2011.