in early recovery, I am frequently at risk for relapse due to a perceived inability to manage my experience.
Addiction, recovery: Thinking outside the box by SYDNEY CROMWELL October 27, 2016 Steve and Pam Moore started the Moore Institute, currently in Cahaba Heights, in 1996 to help others struggling…
Survey of Men and Women with Substance Use Disorder in Halfway Housing Brandi McNeely Addiction Research Foundation Men and women in sober living in order to recover from substance abuse…
Refuge Recovery One Day Retreat Saturday June 1, 2019 9am to 4pm with Jean Tuller, Executive Director of Refuge Recovery The Cultivation of Happiness: Life in Recovery So much of…
In this Workshop, we will first clarify and deepen our understanding of the Instincts, seeing them at work in our personal experience. We will also examine how our particular instinctual “stack”—the way we prioritize our basic human needs and values—is the pattern that most keeps us locked in the repetitive habits of our personality. (One of the quickest ways to unlock the Passion and Fixation of our type is to understand and work on the imbalance in our Instincts.) Recognizing the way we give energy to certain needs while neglecting others brings balance and helps us integrate the deeper experiences of Essence and Being that we may have had. Without such Inner Work, even profound experiences of Spirit and Oneness cannot affect our lives the way they could.
The Workshop will employ experiential dyads and triads, meditation, movement work, and music to help participants recognize the ways that these patterns express themselves in their lives. We will also explore concrete ways in which to bring greater balance in our approach to our instinctual life. Our approach is relaxed and conversational, with an emphasis on the development of our capacity to remain in Presence.
Explore Native Healing and Spiritual practices Bring a notebook or journal to write in