the Henny Flynn podcast

Tap to send me your reflections ♡ My guest today is psychotherapist, writer, international trainer, and world expert in imagery based therapies, Dr Dina Glouberman. The co-founder/director (since 1979) of Skyros Holistic Holidays, Dina is also the founder/director of the Aurora Centre in Southern Italy; training therapists, counsellors, and consultants in ImageWork. This is a frank and generous exploration of what led Dina to develop her pioneering ImageWork therapy - touching on painfu...

Show Notes

Tap to send me your reflections ♡

My guest today is psychotherapist, writer, international trainer, and world expert in imagery based therapies, Dr Dina Glouberman. 

The co-founder/director (since 1979) of Skyros Holistic Holidays, Dina is also the founder/director of the Aurora Centre in Southern Italy; training therapists, counsellors, and consultants in ImageWork.

This is a frank and generous exploration of what led Dina to develop her pioneering ImageWork therapy - touching on painful stories from her past and revealing the transformation that can come from purposeful exploration of imagery and visualisation.

Dina began her work as a psychotherapist in the early 1960s and continues to share her life-long learnings with others through her books, courses and the diploma in ImageWork - first run this year (2023).

At the end of our conversation, Dina says: “We’re all in this together”

To me that feels like the most fitting phrase; it sums up the deep connection Dina offers those who work with her. And it speaks to our universal connection - with others and with our Self.

I am so honoured to be sharing this conversation with you today. Dina is one of my own teachers and I have seen first hand the beneficial power of ImageWork, both with my own clients and through my own experience.

If you’re curious to find out more, see Dina’s website - and if you’re a practitioner and want to learn how to use ImageWork with your clients, take a look at the Diploma course running in 2024. I have loved my own process of deepening my knowledge.

*****
CONNECT WITH DINA

https://www.dinaglouberman.com/

BOOKS BY DINA

Life Choices, Life Changes

The Joy of Burnout

You Are What You Imagine

Into the Woods and Out Again

ImageWork - a guide for practitioners and counsellors

*****

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What is the Henny Flynn podcast?

A space to settle in and listen, and see where the episode takes you. This inspiring, reflective podcast is an invitation to travel deeper, with compassionate self-enquiry.

Henny shares insights from her own life, alongside practices that help us connect with our inner wisdom, explore our relationship with change and find a greater sense of flow. Henny believes we all hold our own answers, so there are no one-size-fits-all solutions here. This is a space to be with what’s true for you, and to grow from there.

If you’re drawn to slowing down, listening in, and exploring what it means to live with greater authenticity, this podcast is for you. Guided by psychology, mindfulness, therapeutic coaching, flow journaling, and everyday compassion, we explore ideas that help us step further into our inner worlds, in order to shape the changes we seek in our outer worlds.

Unknown: And then to go deeper
and to realise I'm not what I

do, I'm something else and I'm
going to find out what that is.

You know, so the Bernanke gives
them not just permission, but

there's almost a requirement
unless they, some people just

want to get better and go back.

But the ones that take it
seriously, really have to go

deeper to find out where their
true joy is, and, and not what

they do. You know, because what
do you do? Well, that depends.

Welcome to the podcast. That's
all about deepening our self

awareness with profound self
compassion. I'm Henny, I write

coach and speak about how
exploring our inner world can

transform how we experience our
outer world. All founded on a

bedrock of self love. Settle in
and listen and see where the

episode takes you.

My guest today is
psychotherapist writer,

international trainer, and world
expert in imagery based

therapies. Dr. Dena gloop has
been the co founder and director

since 1979. So it's been running
for over 40 years of Skaros

holistic holidays. Dina is also
the founder director of the

aurora Centre in southern Italy,
where she trained therapists,

counsellors and consultants in
image work. This conversation

today is a frank and generous
exploration of what led Deena to

develop her pioneering image
work therapy, touching on

painful stories from her past
and revealing the transformation

that can come from purposeful
exploration of imagery and

visualisation. At the end of our
conversation, Dina says, We're

all in this together. To me,
that feels like the most fitting

phrase, it sums up the deep
connection. Dena offers those

who work with her. And it speaks
to our universal connection with

others and with ourself. I'm so
honoured to be sharing this

conversation with you. Dina is
one of my own teachers, as

you'll hear in the conversation.

And I have found that the
application of image work is

absolutely transformational in
the work that I do with my own

clients, and in the way that I
have experienced image work

personally, I can't wait to
share this conversation with

you. It is wide and deep, just
like the world of the

imagination.

So Dina, welcome.

Thank you, honey. It's always
lovely to talk to you.

Yeah, same. It's really do you
know what, it's interesting

before? Before I opened up the
call, and, and I was thinking

about this conversation, I
realised I felt a bit nervous.

And I was reflecting on like,
Well, why is that? And then I

came to the conclusions because
it's important. This

conversation feels valuable. And
it feels important. And so

anything that's got kind of
resonance brings any emotion

with it for me. So I just wanted
to share that really.

Thank you. It does feel
important when it's important to

share it with you, because I
think you're kind of present on

a deep level.

Yeah, well,
takes one to know one, I'd say.

Yeah, it's a tough place to be,
but we're doing it.

Yeah. So in the intro, I shared
a very brief bit about you and

the work that you do and the
fact that you're a

psychotherapist and you founded
scare us and you're also an

author. And I also shared that I
am currently studying with you,

although that our programmes
obviously due to end really

soon. So this kind of the timing
of this feels really good as

well for me that it's like it's
almost like a sort of point of

closure in in that part of our
connection with each other,

although hopefully it'll go on
much longer. But I have, the

whole time we've been working
together, I've been really,

really mindful of the role that
image work plays, in enabling

people to deepen that self
awareness that they have of

what's important for them,
what's driving them, the belief

systems that they have, etc.

And, as I've said to you, before
we began, I am really fascinated

in the role that self compassion
also plays in that process of

gaining self awareness. And I
suppose my sort of first

question for you is, does does
that feel true for you, as well

just, you know, is self
compassion, something that that

has kind of featured in the work
that you do? Or the stuff that

you've experienced in your life?

Has it been like a conscious
thing? Because it feels very

present for me? When I'm with
you, that compassion is part of

it?

Yeah, it's a really interesting
question. So I'll just tell you,

my first thought is that
when we speak the language of

the culture, we share the words
in the numbers. And so when

we're speaking, the that the
conventional wisdom of the

culture in some way, you know,
and, and that when we go deeper,

and we get imagery, we're
speaking, a universal but also

our personal language. And so
it's a way of being on our own

side, in a way, it's a way of
understanding the images that

are guiding our lives and
understanding them. When I say

personal and universal in a way,
it's saying that, which is just

personal to me, it's not just
personally, it's also got a

universal meaning. And so you
know, when I was younger, my big

thing was a search for truth.

And I just, you know, and
actually, when I came to

England, it was because, in
large part because I was looking

to find out what other other
cultures saw, saw a life because

I'd spent some time in Israel
and discovered that people

thought differently, and I
thought, well, if people think

differently in different
cultures, how do you know what's

true, you know, I was looking
for this sort of absolute truth,

which, of course, it's not out
there. And I think when I

started working with the imagery
I found that I was looking at, I

could look for my own personal
and universal truth. And that

carried me through what carried
me through my whole life, all

the difficulties, or the
visioning or the understanding,

or the insights, or the kind of
kind of wonderful moments, and

it's also been the thing that's
helped me to help other people

who are very relieved, again, to
find their own images instead of

there's a level at which when
you speak the language of the

culture, you're an observer of
your own experience, and maybe

there's some judgement about it.

And some of the negative words
we use come from the culture you

know, even though we don't
believe in them, we find

ourselves calling ourselves
names. I'm a failure. I've never

been any good, you know, all
this kind of thing. People say,

but when you kind of explore
your own imagery mean so for

example, I'm, I'm saying I'm a
failure. At can't create

anything now. But if I go
inside, and I say, I have an

image of a tree and Anna, and I
haven't got any fruits this

year, what's happened? How did I
stop having fruits suddenly, in

an experience that is, is is
making sense of things without

judgement. The clues, let's
say, I love that, that, that

that phrase, making sense of
things without judgement,

because so often I feel and just
sort of reflecting back on your

point around The culture carry,
it's almost like we sort of

carry the stories of the culture
or the environment that we grew

up in. And this idea of making
sense of things immediately

brings us up here into this the
kind of prefrontal cortex and

the logical mind and, you know,
rationality making sense. But

the way that you've just
described it is about sort of

making sense almost like with
the heart or with the, with the,

that deeper wisdom.

Absolutely. And with your Sage,
it's with your heart and soul

and your larger mind. Because we
have the control mind that goes,

Yeah, but yeah, but yeah, but,
and which keeps us so called

rational. But when we sink into
another level, we still have a

mind, but it's a larger mind,
it's a more universal mind. And,

and the imagery is part of that.

And so the imagery, we use the
imagery first, to, to illuminate

what our, what I call our
everyday imagery is, what are

the images that are underlying
our experience, which may be

outdated or negative, or not
good for us. But first, we have

to find them. And then, you
know, so for example, if I get

an image of a bird that flies
flying in a really confused way,

and can't get its bearings. So
that is what's going on now. And

maybe it turns out that the
birds been hit by something. And

maybe in real life, it was hit
by someone saying something

awful to them as well. So I'm
identifying first, what's going

on. And then I start working
with it. And I say, okay, if I'm

evil were like, from above, what
would I say to that bird? I'd

say, Oh, you've just got badly
hurt, don't keep flying. Just

rest and see what happens. So so
we start to move through, the

place that we're at with an
images may be jarring, or

painful, or comes from Pat from
the past or from our childhood.

And we try to bring it into a
bigger picture with, as you say,

with compassion. It is really I
hadn't thought of it that way.

But it is all about compassion,
because we're saying it's okay

for you to be as you are. And
there is a way forward.

Yeah. Yeah, absolutely. And I
think it's also there's this,

this place of non judgement in
the, it's, it's okay, whatever

image comes up, you know, I
know, one of the sort of

instructions or invitations is
that is to accept the first

image that comes to mind, even
if we don't like it, or even if

we're confused by it, or, yeah,
think it's an unattractive

thing, whatever it might be, go
with it, and don't judge.

Absolutely. And you'll find that
that has gold in it, once we

bring it to the surface. And if
we start to work with it, in our

I remember, I once had an image
of being a tin can that was

kicked around, of course, I
wanted to get rid of it, but

because I kept it on, I started
to explore what was going on,

when I needed to do about it,
and so on. So it's so I almost

think the worse the image, the
more the golden it, you know,

that may be just, like, might
not be true.

Well, no judgement. I was
reminded, as you said, as we

were just talking about that of
the first time I took myself

through an image work exercise,
I think before we began working

on the diploma and and all and
the image I had or the kind of

sense of the image because
that's one of the things I'd

like to touch on at some point
actually is it's not necessarily

about images, you know,
pictures, it's about it can also

be that sort of sense of
something. And so I had this

sense of some salmon swimming in
a river. And I was just I was

completely nonplussed by these
salmon i and, and it was just

this short patch of river and,
and I found it a bit boring this

image, and I stayed with it
because that was the guidance.

And as I explored it more and
panned out, I realised I wasn't

the summer And I was actually
the river. And the salmon were

these thoughts endlessly
swimming upstream. And as the

river I was just holding them
stuck in place. And as they

panned out and became
consciousness looking down, I

realised, actually, as a river,
I had this beginning that

stretched all the way back, and
this ending that stretched all

the way forward. And I, I'd lost
sight of the fact that I had

this, this sort of length and
breadth and depth to me. And

that the salmon were just being
salmon, they were just doing

their thing. And when I let them
go, they would move on and other

someone would come, and that
would be fine. And so that place

of like trusting the process, I
think, is also a huge part of

the compassion, the non
judgement.

And I would say that you're also
the salmon, and salmon, you're

also the river and that we are
multi level. And that's really

wonderful.

And I was also the willow tree
that looked down on the river.

And each one has a quality that
we can recognise, because the

salmon is going somewhere, isn't
it? Going home? Yeah. And I

think you recognise that, that
about your experiences. So when

the river is flowing, endlessly,
and and that also you recognise,

and I don't know that the will
but there was something about

that, that's also an aspect of
you. And it's really wonderful

to know that we're not this
simple, boring, I'm like this,

I'm like that, but I'm all these
things, and more. And so we're,

you know, amazing to you.

This, there's something in that
about labels about and I think

this sort of touches on what you
were saying earlier, as well

about the culture, the language
of the culture, that we can end

up carrying all of these labels
about ourselves and, you know,

conversation that people often
have, it's like, you know, how

much they hate the question
about what do you do? Because

it's this narrow, constraining
label. And

America, one of the questions
those to ask at a party is what

do you make? Meaning? Do you
see so as a British girl?

What's really interesting, as
you know, I read a book about

burnout. And that is called the
joy of burnout, because it's

about people eventually finding
their joy. But the, the, the

really painful thing people talk
about, who have been committed

to what I say what I call that,
you know, they're like this with

the golden eggs, they have all
these achievements, and so on.

And the really painful thing is
going to a party and being

asked, What do you do? And at
the moment that they've burned

out, then not doing anything?

And it's a real moment of truth,
to feel the shame of that. I

can't answer that question. And
then to go deeper, and to

realise, I'm not what I do, I'm
something else. And I'm going to

find out what that is, you know,
so the burden that gives them

not just permission, but that's
almost a requirement, unless

they, some people just want to
get better and go back. But the

ones that take it seriously,
really have to go a little

deeper to find out where their
true joy is, and, and not what

they do, you know, because what
do you do? Well, that depends.

I have a very personal resonance
with that. So I think I hit my

first burnout. Not I think I
know, I hit my first burnout at

university. Wow. And ended up
dropping out for a year. Yeah, I

was an early starter, you know.

And, you know, learn a huge
amount from that experience. I

knew, I knew I needed to make a
change because I heard myself

crossing the road and I heard
the voice in my head say, if

only a car could hit me just
enough that I ended up in

hospital for a while, but I
don't die. And I got to the

other side of the road and I saw
something needs to change here.

Notice that this is what people
would say to me, that's what

people think. If only I could
end up in hospital with those

lovely white sheets and not have
to do anything and not I had to

go to work. But they couldn't
say no to work. They had to have

the accident, you know. So it's
good, you were listening.

But I did listen, and I dropped
out of university for a year.

But I did go back, which is even
more sort of surprising. And

then I hit another one, when I
was in my late 30s. And and then

the, the one that really when
the universe and my body worked

really together and decided this
time, she's got to bloody well

listen. So that was in 2016,
when I when I really almost

didn't make it through. So that
experience of birth,

you almost died.

So I had pneumonia three times
that year. And the third, the

third bout I ended up with
another virus was trying to shut

down all my internal organs. And
I had sepsis. Oh, yeah,

isolation suite, isolation
suite, still on my phone

answering work emails. So you
know, when you said at the

beginning, but actually I think
it was before we started

recording, and he said, Oh, you
know, you're you're a real go

getter or something, you you
know, you get things done. drug

of choice? Is the tell
me something you said there was

something you needed to learn?

And you're gonna, what? Do you
know what to do? Well, it was

through all of those.

Oh, a number of things, I think.

But
what was it that you were self

compassion? There was self
compassion. And that's why

you've made that your max work?

Yeah. And I think that is, I
think that's the sort of

beautiful thing that people do
this generous generosity, that

whatever they have suffered
from, they want to make sure

that other people, if they can
help it, if you can help it, you

don't want other people to
suffer from what you suffered

from and with life's work.

And, and so and so that feels
like a really beautiful question

to turn to you, actually.

Because having read your book,
into the woods and out again,

and read of some of the
experiences that you've had,

what politics sorry about that,
it's, it feels to me, like so

much of your life's work has
been inspired by the pain, the

beauty and the pain of what
you've experienced. And so

what's what what would you say
is the thing that you are

offering out into the world to
support others from having to

experience?

So as the one thing I mean, is
interesting question, because

there's the I suppose there's
the method, which is, I'm

teaching people how to use their
deepest imagery to understand

themselves to deal with it
difficulties to, to create their

life afresh, because that's what
I used to get me through really

difficult times. And what was
amazing was that I would just

make up a weird sort of image
thing, a house of truth, or seem

to me, I was making it up house
of truth, or pulling back the

energy like like spaghetti from
some, you know, strange things,

and then I would try them with
other people. And they worked.

So it was like, oh, there is a
universal quality to these

images. They are mine, but
they're also also universal. So

on one level, I was teaching
people the way, the way the

methods I used on my own mainly
to get myself not just through

it, but through in a creative
way, and to be able to create

wonderful things which I had the
privilege of doing. But on

another level, I think I find
that people I meet will tell me

things they've never told
anyone. That's not because of

the imagery. I think it's
because they feel and someone

said that I would be
unshockable, that I would be non

judgmental, that I would just
listen and say, Oh, yes, I know

what you mean of course. And I
have this expression which

people really resonate with, of
looking at people and yourself

with compassion for your pain
and limitation, and respect for

your magnificence at the same
time. And I think that, that is

like a great lesson for people
to learn. Because when we're

feeling bad, then we are bad,
then we're no good, then nobody

would love me, you know, all the
negative stuff happens. But for

someone to say, I can see your
suffering. And I have compassion

for that. And I also know that
you're amazing at the same time.

And I discovered this when I was
working with people's fears of

the future, because I discovered
that their fear of the future, I

mean, say it was a being poverty
and said, poverty and sitting

under the arches. It turned out,
it wasn't that they didn't have

money, and were under Dr. And
turned out that it was because

they collapsed, and forgot who
they were. And that was the

thing they were afraid of so. So
my method of dealing with it was

to take the person, the present
person into the future picture

and look at that person with
compassion, and also respect to

their magnificence. And the
person would wake up and say,

Oh, I'm not just a slob under
the arches, you know, I'm a

creative person I can, I can, I
can manage this. So maybe on the

deepest level, it is teaching
people that compassion for their

pain and limitation. Doesn't
mean that they're not

magnificent. It's that they are
both that we are all both and,

and that, and that someone who's
going through hell is going

through hell, but that doesn't
make them any less magnificent.

And that is, is a really amazing
thing to know. And I think it's

a relief to people. It's a great
relief. I remember once when I

had this experience of realising
that the difficult things and

the good things were like the
cocktail of being me. And it

wasn't that I was bad when I
felt bad. You know, when I

realised that I just got hard, I
thought, oh, I can do anything,

then. You know,
it's definitely been one of the

big learnings for me in in the
months that we've been working

together is this. Well, I mean,
I think I described it actually,

in one of the sessions, one of
the practice sessions that we

did is there is room for pain
and joy that that that's how it

kind of felt that it translated
inside me was that I have room

for pain and joy, I don't the
joy does, doesn't have to be

pushing the pain away. And the
pain doesn't have to overwhelm

the joy, there is room for both.

And so yes, I, I hear that. The
resonance of what you're, you're

saying that that is the thing
that sits underneath, and it

immediately prompts a question
for me, like, as you were

growing up, who, who gave you
that? That experience of seeing

you in your magnificence and
respect for your pain?

See, interesting question and
did I think it was only sort of

under the surface, but I have a
feeling that my father

understood me and saw who I was.

Because I was like him in some
ways. You know, so after doing

scarer us in creating this
wonderful world, and, and

knowing that that would have
been his, you know, he would

have wanted something like that.

And I said to him, how do you
feel? And my father was very

brilliant and creative, but also
very socially unskilled. He's

probably add all the things we
didn't know about, you know, he

was he's probably hyper at, you
know, all these things that stop

people from achieving what they
want to and I said, How do you

feel that you couldn't fulfil
that great potential view as you

said, Well, I feel okay, because
I feel like you've done it

because that's what I would have
liked to do. So I thought my

father I had something of the
quality of going deep into the

personal and the universal,
especially the universal, I

think he had that quality, but
it was never nourished in him.

So it took it was only when he
was older that he started to

understand himself better. So I
think that might be, I remember

I had a cousin who's lap I used
to sit on. And I think that was

amazing that someone wanted me
to sit on their lap. My family

was difficult for me, because
because I had a sister that

died, probably why was while I
would, was just conceived, and

therefore there was a feeling in
the family that things were not

right, and that I wasn't the one
they were waiting for, anyway,

because I wasn't heard. I think
that now I didn't know it better

than
I was. There's an awful lot in

your book. So it's not again,
which is immensely moving. And I

have to say it, having read it,
it gave me I felt like I had a

much deeper understanding of
where image work came from. And,

and the source of, of what
you've just been talking about

in terms of respect for pain and
magnificence. And, and you

obviously, you know, and
listening to what you said about

sort of searching for truth, you
know, that that being a kind of

mission that you went on. And
then this recognition that the

truth actually sits inside it's,
there's a as I say, this, I've

got I've got this image of this
map, this this kind of map of

the world and watching so hard
kind of, you know, travelling,

travelling around and doing this
inner world exploration as well

as the material world X. And you
you talk really candidly about

your psychotic episode that you
experienced in your 20s? And I'm

curious about what that taught
you about managing this

distinction between the image
world and the material world?

And how how to kind of hold
that, that delicate balance

between the two, to ensure that
you get the most from both, I

suppose.

Yeah. So I think, for example,
when I was in college, I had a

professor who wanted us to
explore our dreams. And so he

taught us a method, which was
very powerful if that you wake

up, but you try not to even open
your eyes, and with your eyes

closed, you write the dream
down. And as I lived, as I wrote

these dreams, I began to really
be involved with them, because I

was started remembering them or
No, you really, it's a powerful

method. And then one day, I
thought, Well, why do people

think that reality is more
important than the dream world?

It's just that there's
continuity in the one and not

the other. But we spend a lot of
time, you know, and I heard this

question. And I said, Oh, that
if I believe that, I must be

crazy, you know. And I stopped,
I didn't, I stopped doing it. I

didn't hand in the paper, and so
on and so forth. So it was kind

of like that way madness lies
when you don't know the

difference between and what I
learned when I started working.

And what happens if when you
psychotic is you don't

distinguish between which things
are in the real world and which

things are, by your imagination,
some of which is not for the

reason people think, you know,
it's some of which is because

you've lost your assumptions
about how things work. So for

example, I was hearing, as I
said, to summon, the wall is

talking. Now that sounds crazy,
but she walked up to the wall

and saw that there was a radio
and the and the, and the

microphone was off the hook. So
the wall was talking, but a sane

person would have known was
Don't talk. But I thought it was

just as possible that was
talking down to you know, so

some of the reason is because I
have lost all the assumptions

about what was right and what
was wrong, what was real and

what wasn't real. But when I've
learned to work with the

imagery, what I learned was that
you have to hold it Two Worlds

separate and you can go into
the, into the, into the magical

image world. So I could say I'm
a tree, and I haven't got leaves

or fruit as I was saying
earlier, and I can absolutely be

that tree. But somewhere inside,
I know that there's a real world

going on outside me. And that if
anything happened, I could go

back, I could, in an instant, I
could leave the tree behind, and

go back into the real world. And
then if I want to go back into

the tree, I can also leave the
real world behind. But I know

that both are there. And I know,
moreover, that I am experiencing

this world, not for its own
sake. But for the sake. I mean,

it's a wonderful experience. But
that's not why I do it. I do it

in order to understand and
enrich my everyday life, you

know, my way of organising my
reality. So, if I just went, I

have this wonderful experience
of trees, you know, for example,

your your, your, your river,
wonderful experience being a

river, that it didn't stop
there, you knew that had a

meaning for you, and that you
were going to, and those

meanings that come from that
change people's lives? You know,

so, yeah,
it's so two things come up for

me there. One is a really strong
sense that it's purposeful. You

know, when we enter into that
world, it's purposeful. And

there's also all it feels like
there's something really

beautiful around the idea of
it's also about suspension of

disbelief, because that's part
of it, isn't it? Is this, the

trust, trust in what you're
seeing trust and experience. So

away was on top of your mind,
display, and simultaneously,

suspension of belief, in in, in
all this stuff that you've been

fed through your life and all
this stuff that goes on in the

material world,
material world is still there,

it's still
there. Tension suspension, of

belief in the stories in the
narrative that you might be

carrying? Yeah, so actually, and
actually, that, for me, feels

really feels like that it feels
like you are in this sort of

suspended place, or, you know,
that kind of liminal space

where, where it's possible to
see things differently. Yes.

And if you are willing to say I
want to give an example of

people not being willing to So,
for example, a very common image

people have. And we're talking
about images metaphor, there are

many other uses of imagery, but
the visioning and so on, but I'm

thinking of the man in honour
course, I was teaching at a

business who had this image of
being a lion in a cage, and it's

very common image. And always,
there's either the doors really

open or there's a key or it's a
little bit like in Barnard

people think they're trapped,
but they are in trapped. So

always, there's a way out of
that I have never experienced

anybody who's in a cage, and
they don't find a way out. But

this particular man was the only
person I ever saw, who asked the

lion went out of the cage, and
then fell asleep. So he didn't

want to explore that world. And
this man complained about me in

that business, I don't even know
what he said, but he complained

about me, because he thought I
was obviously thought I was

dangerous. And so he refused to
follow through. He didn't go

back into the cage, he just fell
asleep. So you know, we often

say to people don't go back to
sleep. And that means don't go

back into you chose the liberal
lack of awareness that you've

chosen, you know, and, and it's
also true that when you say

doing visioning of the future,
and you get an image of the

future, again, you need to as
you talk about this suspension

of disbelief, you need to forget
what you want. Because if you

and the way I do it, I have
people picture a positive future

and a negative future. Be
Because I'm wanting to see what

will take them down the pathway,
they don't want to go down and

what will it take, help them get
where they really want to be.

And and if you're stuck on
saying, I want to see this, you

know, I want to a future where I
have this boyfriend or I have

this amount of money or I have
this house or whatever, then you

haven't got the freedom to find
out what would really make you

happy. So again, when you're
going into the future, you need

to forget everything you want,
which part of you wants your

your conscious, rational mind
wants, and just say, let me see

what the rest of me has to say.

And then we find out that, for
example, if I'm running the be

running costs and thinking, what
I want is for people to learn as

much as possible. And then I
would say, Well, I would do the

exercise, because I do my own
exercise, that's really

important. And I say it's the
end of the group, and I feel

awful, what's the awful feeling,
I'm exhausted, and so is

everybody else, because we're
all trying to learn what we

everything there is to know, you
know. And then I say, well, the

past of the future, at the end
of the group, and I feel great,

what's the feeling, I feel so
relaxed, and we've connected to

each other. And that's how the
learning came. So the thing I

thought was, my goal would have
made me unhappy. And the thing

that I wasn't conscious of, was
when I needed the connection.

And that has also informed a lot
of my work with people because I

always start with the
connection. Because I realised

that if people are not in
connection, they're not going to

be able to go deep into them
into their, into their inner

life, they need to know that
people need to know their

Harold. So I can teach you 1000
things, it won't go deep. But if

I say to you, I'm here for you.

I've got your back. Would you
like to find out what's going on

for you, then something
different happens. And

in those words, speaks volumes
of compassion. Yeah. You know, I

think that you know, without
that, it's almost like the the

kind of, you know, the sort of
cradle that that holds us.

Without that, then it's very
hard for us to let go enough to

be able to allow change to
happen, because we're still

we're so sort of rigidly stuck.

Yeah. And I'd say the compassion
is also held in the connection,

I think the word connection is
very important. And I, for

example, I've just had a client,
who, when I had a sense of her,

I had this image of her standing
outside the room, which was a

real, it just came to me is what
I call tuning in, get a sense of

something that but it turned out
to really happen. A mother was

holding her sister. And both of
them are close to each other and

looking at her accusingly.

Because somehow it was her fault
that they felt the way they

felt. And she was left out and
accused. So she says when she

tries to connect to somebody,
and they close down, don't

connect, she hasn't got a way of
counteracting those awful

feelings she had at the time,
but the minute she feels a

connection, and that someone
knows who she is, then they melt

away. And so she's working on
finding a way not to be so

dependent on somebody who might
not be able to connect, you

know, but the point is that by
nature, the minute you connect

to someone and feel kinship,
everything is different.

And that that speaks to me of
that connection was self, you

know, with a capital S and, you
know, because when certainly in

my own journey, it was it was
that that I think saved me was

this realisation that inside me.

There is this sort of immense
well of love that I can draw on

forever and it will never, ever
A run dry, makes me quite

emotional saying that because
it's meaningful. But this in

this sense, that's
something everybody knows. I

would say most people don't know
that. No. And a lot of the

spiritual traditions are about
reminding people that, yeah, but

but that would have saved you. I
can imagine

it. I mean, it really did. It
really did. And, and my sense is

that, that's also possibly part
of what saved you, as well, was

this, this sense of that? That
deep inner connection with self?

Whenever I got stuck in having
just the external world, I went

a bit crazy. I sort of had to
have an inner world that made

sense of the outer world, I had
to have that. And when I lost

that connection, I got too
involved in the external world.

You know, for example,
something's going wrong. And I'm

gonna nuts do this goes on, and
that's good. And I'm never going

to find the answer out there.

But when I go back inside, and
maybe I get an image from

myself, or maybe I'll just
settle in myself or whatever.

And I trust that there is a way
through, I suddenly say, oh,

yeah, I have to do this or that.

But I can't do it. Just in the
external world, I think some

people can think some people are
better at that than me. But I

always have to go back inside.

Or have that possibility of
going inside. When things are

really troubling in the external
world, I have to find my way

through the meanings rather than
the, the external story.

And I think that's what it what
you're what you've created

through image work, and the way
it can be used and applied. is,

you know, is is the beauty
within it is that it is so

accessible, because often, what
we're talking about feels very

esoteric, it feels nebulous, it
feels Oh, that's for other

people. But I mean, even in, in
the short time that I've been,

like consciously using what I
now called Image work, as

opposed to sort of naturally
using some elements of it,

because they felt useful for me
before before I started sort of

studying with you. I see the
application of it across thanks.

I don't think I've got a client
that I haven't used some aspect

of image work with, because,
because it's because it's so

accessible.

So which are the, if you think
about these different clients,

what are the different ways
you've used it? Because that's

quite interesting to hear. So
often,

it will be the simplicity of
noticing some of their language,

and then just say, okay, so what
image does that conjure up for

you and, and then kind of
exploring the image just sort of

in the moment in that way, but
also doing some of the longer

exercises, the various sort of
focused exercises. I think what

I've found, tends to come up
more than anything is other

relational ones. So whether that
is in a child or saying goodbye,

saying hello, sort of relational
ones, where people are actually

connecting with someone where
they've got difficulty and being

able to resolve that difficulty
with someone who's living or

dead. And also around where
people are stuck at crossroads,

you know, and so often it's that
language that comes up and it's

you know, people will literally
people use visual language all

the time as well my alertness to
that is so heightened now. And

you know, and how there's
something about your the way

that you have recognised that
it's okay to explore the

negative future or the negative,
past negative inverted commas.

And as well as the positive,
because in order to open up

people's awareness of what all
the options are, and to stop

people getting stuck in what
they think they should be doing,

that I've found to be really
helpful, particularly when

somebody is at the crossroads,
and they're, you know, exploring

kind of different options that
are open to them.

I'll tell the story at the
beginning of my most recent and

my last book. imager, which is
is teaching material to

practitioners, that how I came
to write that book was, it was

the, it was, it was COVID,
locked down. And I just didn't

know what I was going to do with
my life, it didn't feel like

anything made any sense anymore,
because everything I had

believed, we'd all believe was
normal. Was, was disrupted in

this in this surrealistic way.

And, and I couldn't imagine
writing a book I had thought

about reading before, but how
could you read a book who's

going to read a book, you know,
it's like, we're in this amazing

situation. And so I took my own
was actually a CD. And the CDs

are coming back again. And I
played this future exercise, and

I did the negative future. First
and the negative future, I found

myself unable to breathe,
because I was so ashamed. And

because I felt I'd wasted the
year I'd achieved nothing, I

created nothing, I had just
wasted my time. I suppose for

me, when I don't create
anything, you know, it feels

like a waste. And the positive
future. I was holding this book.

And the thing that that exercise
stayed with the positive future

told me what I wanted, but it
was the negative future that

frightened the hell out of me.

And made me realise that I
couldn't just sit around and do

nothing. Because the world had
changed, because I was gonna end

up unable to breathe. You know,
that was quite, it was actually

physically, I thought, I can't
breathe, you know, that was the

week how real the image was. And
so I started, I started on the

proposal the next day, and I
wrote that book. That year, I

was here in Italy, and it was
the year of COVID, and markdown.

And that's when I read the book,
because I knew I had to, because

I'd seen the two futures and
I've had only done the positive

future. I don't know whether
that would have been enough. I

think it wouldn't have been,
because yes, that's a good idea.

So what but yes, it's a good
idea, but if I don't, there'll

be hell to pay you know.

I ran just before Christmas, I
ran an event here at our farm in

Herefordshire. And we did the
space and timeship exercise so I

had 1010 people here, which was
the exercise I've done which is

the same exercise and and as you
end and as you say, sort of as a

practitioner you're also you're
doing the the exercise with the

people that you're working with
you're particularly thinking

that group environment and and
when we were talking about how

far ahead in the future are you
going to take your space and

time ship out of my mouth came
30 years 53 And I will say

that's a long way into the
future but okay, that's what

came up so and that negative
future image that is not

something I I want to be moving
towards so I very much

where you're gonna keep that.

Well. I was shuffling around
here I was at the farm shuffling

about the house had fallen into
complete disrepair. I was living

in the kitchen sort of on a kind
of pallet sleeping on a pallet

in front of the Argo, which
actually, to me sounds quite

nice, but you know, but it was
all really grubby and I mean

like completely fallen apart and
physically I was, I was dressed

in really grubby, like food
stained, dirty clothes. And, and

I was so lonely, I was so
lonely. There was, no one came,

no one came to see me. And, and
I shut everybody out. And in the

positive future, I was in this
room, this room, this is a

converted stable that we was a
wreck of a building when we

first moved here. And I was
sitting at a table just there

looking out of the window,
writing a book. And I had to,

there were two people here who
were kind of working with me in

some way, I wasn't quite sure
kind of what their jobs were.

And Tom was pushing a
wheelbarrow, somewhere up the

garden. And there was a big tent
in one of the fields with other

people running an image work,
exercise.

And could you see because one of
the important things about this

is to see the difference. What
got you What did you have to do?

Or what attitude was was it that
brought you to the negative

future and what brought you to
self belief brought me to the

positive face actually face
facing what we're creating. And

the negative future when the
negative future was I gave up

hope. So you gave
her Pokemon hope deserted? You

can give it up without giving
you up? I suppose. So you know

what? You have to do them? Yeah.

Yeah, keep the faith. Ah, Dana
Zophar.

done so hard, because I was my
birth name. And it means shining

light. And it's the main book of
the Kabbalah, which is the book

of esoteric wisdom. But I was
given that at birth, and I was

never called that because I
thought it was, it seemed to be

such a weird name. My middle
name was Diane. And then that

got translated into Hebrew form,
which was Deena and I was called

Gina most of my life. And my
books are all under the name

Gina. But at about age 67, I
have to go back to my birth

name, which is actually very
confusing, because, you know, if

you have everybody singing You
Happy Birthday. They say your

name and it's just a hodgepodge.

What when I send an email, I
don't know what, uh, you know,

so I've started saying, so gene,
but anyway, uh, you know, me

Zoho now but you originally know
me. And my books are under the

name, Gina glauben. Name, and my
website. And yeah, I will, I

will share, I'll share links.

And I think the other thing as
well, just to say is that you

are running the diploma again,
next year. So the course that

I've been studying with you?

Yes, yes, yes. And I'm looking
forward to anyone who's a

practitioner, who, who would
like to learn about how to use

imagery in their work, which, as
you have said, is invaluable.

And if you go onto my website,
which is very simply Jean

berman.com, and look under the
courses, you'll find that

diploma course and everything
you need to know. So if any of

you listening, are inspired,
please just look at my website

and see how it sounds to you.

And, you know, from my
experience, I think it's

invaluable in for practitioners
in terms of deepening the

support and Brett and adding
Brett's I suppose to their

toolkit in the way that they can
support clients and, and

themselves as well, because, you
know, gosh, I have been on a bit

of a journey, as you know,
through this process.

Yes. I think that's the part of
this compassion thing, I think

is that as I say that people
don't use exercises you haven't

tried on yourself first, because
otherwise you will see them kind

of a little bit at one removed
like you're a little bit

superior. But once you've been
through how yourself you know,

maybe, but once you've been
through the experience, then

you're then you've got that
kinship with them as they go

through it. And I'm sure you
have that with your clients this

feeling, you know, we're all in
this together.

And gosh, I mean, what a lovely
phrase to close on, actually,

because we just, we're all in
this together.

It's been wonderful. I have to
have to give a plug for you,

Henny, because it's been really
wonderful working with you. And

what sticks in my mind is every
time anybody says, oh, less is

more, you say no more is more. I
want more. And is that

passionate? More? That is so
wonderful. Because it's its

appetite for learning and for
living?

Yes. Appetite for learning and
living? I think that is that is

very Yeah, learning.

Loving and loving. Let's let's
add all the ELLs. All right, I'm

so glad that you could join me.

Gorgeous,
thank you for inviting me, it's

been great experience.

What a gorgeous way to spend an
hour of time being with Dina and

I don't know if you could tell.

But you know, there was
something about the quality of

the way Dena thinks and works,
which really challenges you to

get your own mind working in a
more explorative and creative

way. So I feel I feel really
stimulated after that

conversation. And, and I hope
you've really enjoyed listening

to her as well. And I want to
share that, obviously, as Dina

says the diploma is running
again next year. So if you're a

practitioner, a counsellor, a
therapist, and you want to use

image work in your work with
your clients, with your

patients, then do take a look at
the website and all the links

are in the notes. And then the
other thing is that I've

actually got an event coming up
on June the 17th, which is a

morning of exploring an image
work exercise. It's called

wisdom from within. And it's an
invitation to meet with an inner

guide. We all have multiple
inner guides in our imagination,

and through a guided practice
with me to go and explore having

an interaction with your own
inner guide or that connection

that Deena talks about. So I've
there's a link in the notes. If

you're on the mailing list, then
I'll include a link in the email

that I send out or have a search
for me on Eventbrite. And just

look for Henny Flynn and you
should be able to see the event

on the 17th of June. So I will
leave you here and as ever, I

send you so much love and I look
forward to being with you again

next week. All right,
take care, my darlings. I send

you a hug and a wave