Saturday, March 21. 1 pm- 4 pm.
With Dixie Clark and Susan Guthrie.
Our lives are guided by our soul’s purpose as it seeks learning, expansion, and wholeness. Therefore, all situations and people in our lives are brought forward to help us in this process. Our ego often interprets deeply challenging and disturbing situations as harmful or dangerous, and we go into a place of separation and negative self-judgement. We may form negative beliefs about ourselves and life from this place of separation out of our need for protection and making sense of the world. So, our ego adapts to these limiting beliefs, while our soul continues to seek expansion and transformation.
An important piece of our evolution and personal growth is understanding the Soul’s intention through our hardest life experiences. We then move from a place of survival or adaption to one of mastery and transformation. One powerful method to help us bridge the gap between our ego beliefs to aligning with our Soul’s energy is through self-forgiveness. This workshop teaches the power of self forgiveness to assist us in meeting the challenges of this world, while centering in Soul.
$50 general public; $40 Caritas members.
Dixie Clark, MS, DSS has 28 years experience in mind/body therapies, combining spirituality, psychology and energy healing to help people release emotional blocks, heal past trauma and change limiting beliefs to open to their soul’s expression. She is a psychotherapist and ordained minister with a master’s degree in counseling and a doctorate in spiritual science. Her work assists people in moving through anxiety, depression and major life transitions in order to open to a sense of purpose in their lives.
Dr. Susan Guthrie is a licensed marriage and family therapist working in private practice in Boulder for the past 22 years. She is trained grief therapist and has volunteered as a group facilitator for TRU Community Care on and off since 1993. She has taught at Naropa University and is currently on the faculty of University of Santa Monica in their graduate psychology department.