Women’s Support Circle - New Group Starting Soon

The women’s circle is designed to be a safe and supportive place for women to meet and share their current situation. The group is moderated and guided by psychologist Jenny Jones however it is the women within the group who chose the main topic of conversation. It is a place where you can obtain support, learn from each other and share your experiences.

The circle goes for one hour and has a maximum of five places available. The meeting time is chosen based on availability of the majority of the people who apply. If the time chosen isn’t suitable to you then you may chose to join the next group.

Cost: $10 per person with a Medicare referral, or $50 privately.

Tea, coffee and biscuits provided

Therapeutic 4 Day Retreat 7th - 10th of March

Therapeutic 4 Day Retreat

2 people in a room, $15550 (note: people sharing a room can be a couple, friends, relatives, etc)

1 person in a room, $8950

Tuesday 7th - Friday 10th of March (with options to stay on for the weekend after the retreat ends)

We have a lovely private therapeutic retreat for individuals or couples who want a psychologist to help them focus on applying relationship changes that will be continued on an ongoing basis once they return home.

Over the four days, each day starts with a relaxed breakfast and then an optional meditation class.

The first morning sessions are group sessions on the following topics:

  • understanding and managing conflict and differences in relationship styles

  • relationship communication - having a system that works

  • connection and intimacy - building your relationship

  • understanding and managing relationship needs and desires

The second morning session is a group session where you can ask any questions.

A restaurant lunch is provided. Please let us know of any dietary requirements when you book.

Afternoon sessions include an individual session or couples session each day with the psychologist, as well as opportunities to have a massage, take a yoga class, a creative writing class, art class, play golf, billiards, or relax at the hotel pool.

Restaurant dinner is provided.

Free time after dinner to either relax in your hotel room, by the pool, watch a movie, play billiards, or go out exploring the surrounding areas.

Price includes accommodation and all meals. Bar drinks are purchased separately.

Please email or call us to book.

The retreat location is in Western Australia and can be provided on request.

Limited to 15 people. All session attendees must be over 15 years of age.

Please note, these retreats fill up quickly so don’t delay your enquiry or booking. If you miss this retreat and wish to go on the waiting list for the next time one is available, then please get in touch at any time of the year. Those on the waiting list are offered places just prior to the next retreat being announced. For this reason, most retreats are already filling up by the time they are advertised.

Better Health Psychology
Kindness Can Have Unexpectedly Positive Consequences

Scientific American Article By Amit Kumar on December 12, 2022:

Scientists who study happiness know that being kind to others can improve well-being. Acts as simple as buying a cup of coffee for someone can boost a person’s mood, for example. Everyday life affords many opportunities for such actions, yet people do not always take advantage of them.

In a set of studies published online in the Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, Nick Epley, a behavioral scientist at the University of Chicago Booth School of Business, and I examined a possible explanation. We found that people who perform random acts of kindness do not always realize how much of an impact they are having on another individual. People consistently and systematically underestimate how others value these acts.

Across multiple experiments involving approximately 1,000 participants, people performed a random act of kindness—that is, an action done with the primary intention of making someone else (who isn’t expecting the gesture) feel good. Those who perform such actions expect nothing in return.

From one procedure to the next, the specific acts of kindness varied. For instance, in one experiment, people wrote notes to friends and family “just because.” In another, they gave cupcakes away. Across these experiments, we asked both the person performing a kind act and the one receiving it to fill out questionnaires. We asked the person who had acted with kindness to report their own experience and predict their recipient’s response. We wanted to understand how valuable people perceived these acts to be, so both the performer and recipient had to rate how “big” the act seemed. In some cases, we also inquired about the actual or perceived cost in time, money or effort. In all cases, we compared the performer’s expectations of the recipient’s mood with the recipient’s actual experience.

Across our investigations, several robust patterns emerged. For one, both performers and recipients of the acts of kindness were in more positive moods than normal after these exchanges. For another, it was clear that performers undervalued their impact: recipients felt significantly better than the kind actors expected. The recipients also reliably rated these acts as “bigger” than the people performing them did.

We initially studied acts of kindness done for familiar people, such as friends, classmates or family. But we found that participants underestimated their positive impact on strangers as well. In one experiment, participants at an ice-skating rink in a public park gave away hot chocolate on a cold winter’s day. Again the experience was more positive than the givers anticipated for the recipients, who were people that just happened to be nearby. While the people giving the hot chocolate saw the act as relatively inconsequential, it really mattered to the recipients.

Our research also revealed one reason that people may underestimate their action’s impact. When we asked one set of participants to estimate how much someone would like getting a cupcake simply for participating in a study, for example, their predictions were well-calibrated with recipient reactions. But when people received cupcakes through a random act of kindness, the cupcake givers underestimated how positive their recipients would feel. Recipients of these unexpected actions tend to focus more on warmth than performers do.

Our work suggests that simply being part of a positive, prosocial interaction is meaningful beyond whatever it is a person receives. People understand that cupcakes can make folks feel good, to be sure, but it turns out that cupcakes given in kindness can make them feel surprisingly good. When someone is thinking primarily about the tasty treat they are giving away, they may not realize that the warmth of that gesture is an extra ingredient that can make the cupcake even sweeter.

Missing the importance of warmth may stand in the way of being kinder in daily life. People generally want to perform kind actions—in fact, many of our participants noted that they’d like to do so more often. But our data suggest that underestimating the impact of one’s actions may reduce the likelihood of kindness. If people undervalue this impact, they might not bother to carry out these warm, prosocial behaviors.

Furthermore, the consequences of these acts may go beyond a single recipient: kindness can be contagious. In another experiment, we had people play an economic game that allowed us to examine what are sometimes called “pay it forward” effects. In this game, participants allocated money between themselves and a person whom they would never meet. People who had just been on the receiving end of a kind act gave substantially more to an anonymous person than those who had not. Meanwhile the person who performed the initial act did not recognize that their generosity would spill over in these downstream interactions.

These findings suggest that what might seem small when we are deciding whether or not to do something nice for someone else could matter a great deal to the person we do it for. Given that these warm gestures can enhance our own mood and brighten the day of another person, why not choose kindness when we can?

Better Health Psychology