Archive for April, 2009

Mental Health Monday Focuses on Ecopsychology

April 24th, 2009
April 24, 2009
For Immediate Release
For additional information:
Barbara Kerr, Executive Director of
Communications and Marketing Telephone:  360-992-2921
E-mail: bkerr@clark.edu

MENTAL HEALTH MONDAY FOCUSES
ON “ECOPSYCHOLOGY”

Looking for next steps after Earth Day?
This free session at Clark College can guide you.

VANCOUVER, Wash. — You took part in Earth Day, but what do you do now?

Personal sustainability will be the focus of Clark College’s “Mental Health Monday” event on Monday, April 27.

Dr. Thomas Doherty of Lewis and Clark College will be the guest speaker.  Dr. Doherty is a leader in the field and is the editor-in-chief of “Ecopsychology,” a new quarterly journal.  He has said that ecopsychology “expands our conception of health and wellness to include a connection with nature.”

The event, which is free and open to the public, will be held from noon to 1 p.m. in the Penguin Student Lounge, located in Clark’s Penguin Union Building.  Clark College is located at 1933 Fort Vancouver Way.  Driving directions and parking maps are available at www.clark.edu/maps

Earth Day 2009

April 22nd, 2009

Take Dr. Thomas Doherty’s Sustainable Health Questionnaire

Earth Day

Earth Day

By now, you’ve heard all about Earth Day.  So, what does sustainability mean for you–personally? For some ideas, try the Sustainable Health Questionnaire that Dr. Thomas Doherty uses with his clients. At Sustainable Self, we help create holistic and ecologically sustainable health for our clients –whether they are individuals or organizations.

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What is Ecopsychology?

Ecopsychology expands our conception of health and wellness to include a connection with nature. Dr. Thomas Doherty is a leader in this field and the editor in chief of Ecopsychology. We are pleased to announce that this new quarterly journal published its inaugural issue for Earth Day 2009. Ecopsychology features the work of international experts and researchers. Download articles from the first issue for free here.  Contact Dr. Doherty if you would like to contribute to this important venture at journal@selfsustain.com

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News & Events

  • In February, Dr. Doherty did a talk on green parenting for an eager group at the Parent Child Preschools of Oregon conference in in West Linn, OR.
  • Dr. Doherty just completed the first ever Eco-therapy class for counseling students at the Lewis & Clark Graduate School in April.
  • Thomas has also been collaborating with an international group of researchers on the American Psychological Association’s Climate Change Task Force.

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Contact us for a meeting today!

Dr. Thomas Doherty provides personal, couples and family therapy and consults to businesses and organizations. He focuses on helping environmentally minded people to get on track, be happy, and live sustainable lives.

Thomas works with major insurance companies and offers a discount for those paying out of pocket. Financial aid may be available for those with demonstrated need and for full time students. Please see our website or email clientcare@selfsustain.com for more information.

Premier Issue of Ecopsychology Launched

April 21st, 2009

Ecopsychology Journal

Ecopsychology Journal

New Rochelle, NY, April  21, 2009—Exploring the psychology of human-nature relationships and understanding the multidimensional links between humankind and its natural environment is at the core of the evolving discipline called ecopsychology and is the focus of a new, peer-reviewed online journal, Ecopsychology, published by Mary Ann Liebert, Inc. (www.liebertpub.com). The inaugural issue is available free online.

The goal of this new journal is to “chronicle ecopsychology as a transdisciplinary endeavor and social movement, advance the knowledge and practice of psychology and psychotherapy in an ecological context, and offer psychological solutions to environmental problems,” writes Editor-in-Chief Thomas Joseph Doherty, PsyD, Graduate School of Education and Counseling, Lewis & Clark College (Portland, OR), in an editorial introducing the first issue. In so doing, Ecopsychology will “raise provocative questions about consciousness, identity, health, and ethical living. The role of the Journal is to foreground these questions and create a space for dialogue.”

Doherty believes that ecopsychology places psychology and mental health disciplines in their true ecological context and recognizes crucial links between human health, culture, and the health of the planet. The field encompasses perspectives and reactions to environmental issues such as climate change, pollution, extinction, recycling, and the impact of one’s ecological footprint.

Ecopsychology will play an important role in the field of mental health and well being for children and adults of all ages,” says Mary Ann Liebert, the publisher of this innovative new Journal.

Included in the inaugural issue is an interview with Robert Greenway, Professor Emeritus in Psychology at Sonoma State University (Rohnert Park, CA), who discusses the development of his wilderness expedition program at the university and explores the development of an authentic language of human-nature relationships. Martin Jordan probes the link between how humans react to intimacy or early interpersonal attachments and their later relationship with nature. In the article entitled “Nature and Self—An Ambivalent Attachment?,” Jordan argues that this ambivalence arises from fundamental problems of human dependency and vulnerability, which have given rise to the current ecological crisis.

Until decision-making based on sustainability is the norm, promoting green behavior will require making people mindful of their interdependence with nature, propose Elise Amel, Christie Manning, and Britain Scott in the article, “Mindfulness and Sustainable Behavior: Pondering Attention and Awareness as Means for Increasing Green Behavior.” Researcher Peter Kahn, Jr. reflects on his experiences of wilderness in his essay, “Cohabitating with the Wild,” and ponders what it means for modern humans to be in contact with their own wildness as they strive to be healthy individuals.

Martin Milton initiates a dialogue based on published research on the role of the natural world and humankind’s relationship to nature in clinical psychological practice. His article, “Waking up to Nature: Exploring a New Direction for Psychological Practice,” encourages professional practice based on the knowledge of how humanity’s link to nature affects individuals’ psychological and physical well-being. How and where the term ecopsychology appears in the academic literature is the focus of a report by Miles Thompson entitled, “Reviewing Ecopsychology Research: Exploring Five Databases and Considering the Future.”