Details Price Qty
Regular ticketshow details + $350.00 USD   Sold Out
Reduced Feeshow details + $250.00 USD   Sold Out

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  • Live Interviews: Our Multi-Storied Bodies Wednesday Consultation Group
     November 6, 2024 - January 22, 2025
     2:30 pm - 4:00 pm

    with Poh Lin Lee

    6 Bi-weekly Wednesday Consultation Group:  

    November 6 & 20, 2024
     December 4 & 18, 2024
    January 8 & 22, 2025

    2:30 - 4:00 pm EST (*please note 1 hr time change starting November 3rd for EST)

    These dates are aligned with the 'sweet spot' that happens at this time of the year for many time zones to have the possibility to meet!

    • 2.30pm EST
    • 6.30am Melbourne (Thursday)
    • 8.30pm France
    • 7.30pm UK
    • 11.30am LA
    What happens when we shift from viewing our bodies as a single entity to experiencing them as a community of diverse members, each with their own experience, position, and stories? This consultation group is for people who are interested in centering post-structural, narrative practice, intersectional feminisms, and community ideas in accompanying individuals, couples, families, and communities in conversations that are inclusive of bodies. Following many requests, Poh will offer a consultation group in a slightly different format. Six bi-weekly sessions will feature a live conversation with Poh and a group member centering multi-storied bodies practices/ideas. Fellow group members will be invited into particular witnessing exercises/positions, drawing on multi-storied body ideas. The hope is to stitch together some of the many exercises and ideas we have explored in previous groups and workshops and consider together what it means to grapple and move in dedicated co-research within an unfolding conversation.

    Layout of each session

    • 45min conversation between group member and Poh
    • 30min group discussion

    Padlet will be available as a pin-up board for noting and sharing any emerging ideas, questions, observations, or associations sparked by the consultation group and staying connected between consultations. 

    Sessions will only be recorded when requested by the group member who is being interviewed. 

    In preparation, please review:
    Lee, P.L. (2023) Our bodies as multi-storied communities: ethics & practices. Journal of Systemic Therapies

    Co-researching agreement (short video exercise): https://vimeo.com/930048872/7afd8c2449 

    Fee:  $350 USD, with one space at a reduced $250 rate. 


  • Regular Ticket
     November 6, 2024 - January 22, 2025
     5:15 am - 5:00 pm
     Zoom (Link TBA)

Live Interviews: Our Multi-Storied Bodies Consultation Group Wednesday Group

with Poh Lin Lee

6 Bi-weekly Wednesday Consultation Group: 

November 6 & 20, 2024  December 4 & 18, 2024 January 8 & 22, 2025

2:30 – 4:00 pm EST (*please note 1 hr time change starting November 3rd for EST)

One Space Left!

What happens when we shift from viewing our bodies as a single entity to experiencing them as a community of diverse members, each with their own experience, position, and stories? This consultation group is for people who are interested in centering post-structural, narrative practice, intersectional feminisms, and community ideas in accompanying individuals, couples, families, and communities in conversations that are inclusive of bodies.

Following many requests, Poh will offer this Wednesday consultation group in a slightly different format. Six bi-weekly sessions will feature a live conversation with Poh and a group member centering multi-storied bodies practices/ideas. Fellow group members will be invited into particular witnessing exercises/positions, drawing on multi-storied body ideas. The hope is to stitch together some of the many exercises and ideas we have explored in previous groups and workshops and consider together what it means to grapple and move in dedicated co-research within an unfolding conversation.

Nerissa Jana Stoop will join the consultation group as a special guest, facilitating the discussion and unpacking of the live interviews.

This is one of two 6-session groups (Monday or Wednesday), each with a maximum of six spaces.

Layout of each session

  • 10min arrival
  • 45min conversation between group member and Poh
  • 30min group discussion

A Padlet will be available as a pin-up board for noting and sharing any emerging ideas, questions, observations, or associations sparked by the consultation group and staying connected between consultations.

Sessions will only be recorded when requested by the group member who is being interviewed.

In preparation, please review

Fee:  $350 USD, with one space at a reduced $250 rate.

Introducing Poh and Nerissa

Poh Lin Lee

Poh Lin Lee is a Chinese Malaysian Australian woman who comes to her practice through multiple experiences and relationships as a narrative therapy practitioner, social worker, co-researcher of trauma/displacement, writer, teacher, film protagonist and creative consultant.

Since 2004 Poh has been engaged in therapeutic co-research with people and communities responding to themes of experience such as family and state violence, displacement (from rights, land, home, body, identity, relationships), liminality and reclaiming practices of staying with experience and preference. Creative and therapeutic fields intersected for Poh whilst working with people seeking asylum within a film project with director Gabrielle Brady, Island of the Hungry Ghosts (2018).

Nerissa Jana Stoop

Nerissa Jana Stoop

Nerissa Jana Stoop is a Belgian woman born on an island in the Caribbean whose practice as a clinical psychologist, narrative therapy practitioner, and humanitarian worker is shaped by working alongside people and communities affected by war, conflict, and displacement across diverse places, including the Democratic Republic of Congo, South Sudan, Senegal, Palestine, Lebanon, Iraq, Ukraine, and Venezuela. Her work is rooted in bearing witness to the displacement, grief, disconnection, and state violence that people experience while exploring the intersections of political violence, systemic injustice, and collective resistance. Nerissa is deeply curious about how neoliberalism has influenced the medicalization and individualization of mental health and well-being, alongside the popularization of self-care. In response, she is passionate about highlighting local, culturally resonant forms of resistance, mutual care, and solidarity that emerge from within the communities she engages with.

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