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March 2014
Unconscious Minds and Fairy Tales
A Helpful Unconscious Mind
About 
Mary Anne Lloyd
PhD, Registered Psychologist
 
Mary Anne Lloyd  
 

Mary Anne Lloyd has maintained a successful practice in North Vancouver and the Seattle area for 30 years. She earned her degree in 1976 and has worked at Lion's Gate Hospital and in substance abuse treatment. She has taught at the University level, presented workshops on Anxiety and Stress management, worked with children with Tourettes Syndrome, and most recently was a founding member of Kiara, an equine support therapy for those touched by cancer.

 
About Beverley Pugh

Bev Pugh

"Every joy is gain. And gain is gain, however small." 

- Robert Browning

 

Beverley has been a practicing counsellor for over 30 years. She has worked extensively in Canada, Australia, Japan, and Thailand. Beverley currently has a full-time practice on the North Shore. Beverley has a highly intuitive ability to help people uproot core issues that are holding them back from moving forward to where they want to be in terms of their own self-growth. She works extensively with couples and families and individuals with numerous presenting issues.

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Visit Beverley Pugh & Associates Counselling Services at
This month's article is written by Mary Anne Lloyd, one of our associates at Beverley Pugh and Associates Counselling Services.

Unconscious Minds and Fairy Tales

 

Risk I was perusing a poster in the office about Life, and one of the suggestions is to "become friends with uncertainty." So I began to ask people what they thought about that, and all but one had some sort of anxiety reaction to the mere thought of uncertainty! So I thought, "Where did that reaction come from, because I have to admit, I had the same initial reaction!

Why is it? When something happens that causes us uncertainty, human creatures usually opt for anxiety and the worst case scenario? Read more

A Helpful Unconscious Mind

 

moving forward in life Patricia had a very moving experience with her unconscious mind.  She was going about her work day when she was seized with a ferocious anxiety attack.  She felt she couldn't breathe and was lightheaded.  The anxious feeling was overwhelming and she felt that something was terribly wrong.  She imagined she must be having a heart attack.  Panicking, she went immediately to her supervisor and told him what was happening. They decided that she should leave work at that moment and seek help. Read More

Best wishes,
Bev 
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