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  • Format: ePub

"It's so good to have these pieces collected in one place, so that we can clearly see their value, and feel gratitude for Kamalamani's wisdom, wit, common sense, deep knowledge of Buddhism, and enormous generosity of spirit. I have always felt that Buddhism, especially Vajrayana, has a profound connection with body psychotherapy; and it is a great pleasure for example to read Kamalamani on Green Tara - a figure of personal meaning to me - and her development of Shunryu Suzuki's brilliant slice through mind-body dualism: 'Our body and mind are not two and not one.... Our body and mind are both…mehr

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"It's so good to have these pieces collected in one place, so that we can clearly see their value, and feel gratitude for Kamalamani's wisdom, wit, common sense, deep knowledge of Buddhism, and enormous generosity of spirit. I have always felt that Buddhism, especially Vajrayana, has a profound connection with body psychotherapy; and it is a great pleasure for example to read Kamalamani on Green Tara - a figure of personal meaning to me - and her development of Shunryu Suzuki's brilliant slice through mind-body dualism: 'Our body and mind are not two and not one.... Our body and mind are both two and one'. This book will be of great help to anyone interested in body psychotherapy, in Buddhism, and in ecopsychology, or in the relationship between the three." - Nick Totton, Body psychotherapist, trainer and author of Embodied Relating: the Ground of Psychotherapy

"Her heart and mind are open to the world, allowing it in and herself to live outwardly with compassion and love."

-Nancy Eichhorn, Founding Editor-in-Chief of

Somatic Psychotherapy Today

What can the theory and practice of somatic/body psychotherapy, ecopsychology and Buddhism offer to each other? For the past five years, Kamalamani has shared life and work at the confluence of these fields in her quarterly Bodywise articles for Somatic Psychotherapy Today, an independent international publication representing various modalities in body psychotherapy, somatic psychology, and pre-natal and perinatal psychology.

This volume brings together these quarterly Bodywise articles. Kamalamani explores client work in embodied and relational ways, drawing upon her practice of Buddhism. With her characteristically warm, immediate, accessible tone, Kamalamani encourages personal reflection and professional consideration as she offers insights illuminated by traditional Buddhist texts along with personal and clinical anecdotes that range from birth to death, from meditating with character to Reich's character structures, from trauma and terrorized bodies to diversity, embodied spirituality and pre-natal and peri-natal psychology. She often provokingly offers more questions than answers and writes in a way that offers not only a sacred space for opening, sensing, being quiet, but also joining forces with our global communities in feeling the outrage, the love, the fear, the bliss that comes with interaction. She reminds us again and again of a whole-earth, ecological perspective, bringing sentient life and living processes into awareness in the course of everyday life, practice, and the work of healing.

All proceeds from this book will be donated to the ongoing costs of creating and publishing Somatic Psychotherapy Today, helping to defray the costs associated with an independently run international magazine. It is through generous gifts like Kamalamani's and others' who donate to Somatic Psychotherapy Today that it continues to exist.

Kamalamani works as a relational body psychotherapist, ecopsychologist, supervisor, and facilitator based in Bristol, England. She is author of Meditating with Character and Other than Mother: Choosing Childlessness with Life in Mind and has been an apprentice of the Buddha since 1995.


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Autorenporträt
Kamalamani is a body psychotherapist, ecopsychologist, supervisor and facilitator with an interest in how therapy is shaped by its social, political, ecological and cultural context, drawing upon her experiences of being a development worker in sub-Saharan Africa, a lecturer in International Development at the University of Bristol, her current meditation practice and being a child lost and found in nature. Having practised Buddhist since 1995 she is also curious about the interface between therapy and Buddhism. Previously a steering group member of Psychotherapist and Counsellors for Social Responsibility, Kamalamani was also editor of Transformations. In addition to several journal articles she has written two books: Meditating with Character and Other than Mother: Choosing Childlessness with Life in Mind and is currently working on her third. She facilitates ecopsychology and Wild Therapy workshops and retreats.