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Divorce is Decisive But Doesn't Have To Be Divisive
She opened her sleepy young eyes, having been woken with a start, the house was quiet, it was very late, that she knew, but she felt scared, then she noticed there were lights on in the dining room and living room, then she heard them trying to keep their voices low, but she could still hear them and it was this fast talking that made her very nervous, she had heard it before and she hoped it didn't end up as it always did, With yelling and screaming. But then it started li
Geri Robertson, RC
Apr 65 min read
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Preverbal Trauma and Attachment
Geri Robertson, RPC There is plenty of research done on birth trauma from the mother’s perspective and how it can affect Mom; from the inability to bond with their newborn to the loss of trust in their own body, the trauma experienced can even result in PTSD, sometime preventing some women from having more children. However, there is little emphasis put on and understanding around how preverbal trauma - the trauma experienced from the perspective of the infant and how it affe
Geri Robertson, RC
Apr 35 min read
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Food and Mental Health
Today’s subject is a very human response to hunger. Eating. We eat specifically for survival. Eating was not done for any other reason but to continue the species. We didn’t think about it except to be in the active state of pursuit of food to sustain life. Our ancestors from the beginning of time worked very hard for their food. Men would get out daily to kill their food, bring it home and the women of the clan would prepare it. Everyone in the community had a purpose in the
Geri Robertson, RC
Feb 203 min read
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