Offering Connection Within a Wider Community Context: The Heart Wood Groups for Men

Keywords: 1

Abstract

Our aim is to offer a ‘receiving climate’ in which men, a majority of whom are survivors of trauma, who are at levels one and two of Carl Rogers’ tentative Process Conception of psychotherapy, feel safe enough to begin to strengthen their contact functions (levels of psychological contact with self, others and the shared environment). Since 2018 we have offered person-centred men’s therapy groups in a woodland setting. Group members are welcomed into our community for as long as they need. Groups are facilitated in a ‘contact-orientated’ way; we don’t assume psychological contact but work continually to gauge its level with group members, and to facilitate the strengthening of contact through contact reflections within an activity orientated group. Activities include bushcraft and cooking on the fire. Groups comprise up to twelve men and two or three facilitators, and are of 3 to 4 hours duration. Sessions are weekly through spring and summer, and are currently bi-weekly through autumn and winter. An independent researcher evaluates our service annually through voluntary recorded interviews with the men which take place in the woods by the fire. Our person-centred facilitation means that we constantly listen and respond to feedback from the men about their experience of the groups. The outcomes of these interviews and the feedback we get from group men throughout the process show that we are able to offer a receiving climate to these men who are suffering considerably, but cannot engage with therapy in the way it is generally offered.

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Author Biography

Chip Ponsford , Heart Wood Charity in the UK Trainer in Training with the Pre-Therapy International Network

Person-centred psychotherapist and supervisor (Dip Practitioner Counselling, Person-Centred at City Lit, London. NCPS Accredited) is the founder, a Lead therapist and Lead Facilitator at Heart Wood Charity in the UK Trainer in Training with the Pre-Therapy International Network. 

From his very first placement client in 2010 to now,

Chip has always had clients with Difficult Process (Warner 2000), who need to work outside, and with whom psychological contact cannot be assumed.

Chip has worked in private practice in London and since 2015, in Northumberland.

At Heart Wood Chip has worked closely with Rab Erskine since 2015 in developing a ‘contact orientated’ way of facilitating men’s therapy groups in woodland. They have facilitated training in working outdoors, and Pre-Therapy & Contact Work training for the staff team and for non-staff, qualified therapists.

References

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Erskine, R. (2023). Nature-based and contact-orientated: A specific kind of encounter. Person-

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Hawkins, J. (2024). Keynote from the AGM. Person-Centered Quarterly, Autumn, 10–16.

Mearns, D., & Cooper, M. (2017). Working at relational depth in counselling and psychotherapy (2nd ed.). SAGE Publications, Ltd.

Mearns, D., & Thorne, B. (2000). Person-centred therapy today: New frontiers in theory and practice. SAGE Publications, Ltd.

Rogers, C. R. (1951/2003). Client-centered therapy: Its current practice, implications and theory. Constable.

Rogers, C. R. (1995). On becoming a therapist: A therapist’s view of psychotherapy. Mariner Books.

Van Werde, D. (2007). Contact work in a residential psychiatric setting. In P. Sanders (Ed.), The contact work primer: A concise introduction to pre-therapy and the work of Garry Prouty (pp. 60–71). PCCS Books.

Published
2025-12-30
Cited
How to Cite
Ponsford , C. (2025). Offering Connection Within a Wider Community Context: The Heart Wood Groups for Men. Psychological Counseling and Psychotherapy, (24), 36-41. https://doi.org/10.26565/2410-1249-2025-24-05
Section
PSYCHOTHERAPEUTIC MODALITIES, METHODS AND METHODOLOGIES