Latest published works: Episteme, Sept 2015

Episteme. An online peer reviewed, interdisciplinary, multidisciplinary and multicultural journal of Bharat College of Arts & Commerce, Badlapur.

http://www.episteme.net.in/index.php?option=com_phocadownload&view=category&id=100:short-story&Itemid=595

In the space between

Episteme: an online interdisciplinary, multidisciplinary & multi-cultural journal Bharat College of Arts and Commerce, Badlapur, MMR, India

Volume 4, Issue 2

Words before Words

September 2015

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IN THE SPACE BETWEEN  By Elizabeth McCardell

Episteme: an online interdisciplinary, multidisciplinary & multi-cultural journal Bharat College of Arts and Commerce, Badlapur, MMR, India

Volume 4, Issue 2 September 2015

Gaston Bachelard, French philosopher, mathematician, and dreamer of dreams, inspires me, for I too am philosopher and dreamer. Like him, I am enlivened by intersections, balances, confluences, and transformations. Jorge Luis Borges has also influenced me, not only for his take on magic realism but the conciseness of his thought and expression. Thus what I contribute here are sometimes not strictly poems, nor prose pieces, rather I am moved to write in the interstices of these. My feeling is in the processes of the kinesthete, of a geometry of shape, form and meaning. I am intrigued by the impulse to silence and words, the microcosm more than macro, the jewel in the grass carried there by some strange imaginary bird.

I am a psychotherapist and clinical hypnotherapist by profession and inclination. My work is untangling knots in the stories of others and thus bringing greater easefulness of mind. My training has been in literary theory, linguistics, psychology and philosophy and the tools learned there are implicit in all I write.

I offer these small pieces to play with, to allow a drift for dreamers, and an occasional query to stimulate creative outpouring and wondering.

Words before Words

I want to write about the dark inchoate space that is night.

I want to describe the beginning before the setting out without a plan, guided only occasionally by a snatch of moon and shiny patches of wet on the leafy ground.

I want to write of this before, before, before, because that’s how it feels right now, to write without a clear sense of what I’m writing about. I have only a feeling; nameless and wordless.

Words before words, before even concepts, before even a sense of direction, before the division of light into dark, before the Genesis of God himself, before before before… I saw the movie a Theory of Everything the other day, the movie about the life and work of Stephen Hawking. In the beginning was not even the word, the thought, nor time, nor a beginning shining in darkness, exploding in the night, just an inchoate nothing.

And yet, a mere dot in which all worlds, all words, spawned and into which all will retreat. There is a hum threading each precious bead of wordlessness to words to nothing once more. A snatch of light, a glistening of moon captured in grass, a stumbling, a bird call… and then the night.

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Episteme: an online interdisciplinary, multidisciplinary & multi-cultural journal Bharat College of Arts and Commerce, Badlapur, MMR, India

Volume 4, Issue 2 September 2015

Under the Water

You were brilliant under the water: caring, careful, aware of me learning the art of diving.

Out of the water, you bombarded me with your stories. Chatting, without listening, talking talking talking. You didn’t hear me. Your voice jostled the air that I was trying to breath.

Under the water you showed me the universe: Port Jackson sharks, giant rays the size of rooms, dolphins, head down, feeding on seaweed, wise eyes greeting us. You showed me coloured Chinese lamps and luminous light-twitching fish. You checked my gauge to make sure I had air enough.

Out of the water, you took away my breath with your chatter. I didn’t want to know you anymore; I craved silence and coolness in the head, and so I told you to go.

I see you sometimes around town with your current lady. I see your performances as a balloon-clown, blowing up these rubbery things for the delight of children. She paints their faces and they wear balloon hats.

I invented an underwater sign for “Wow!” The lexicon had “good,” “crayfish,” “shark,” “air low,” and concepts such as these. No, “Wow!” for the exuberance, the joy, the amazingness of the underwater world. Without you, I would’ve known these things only as a snorkeler. With you, I became a fully fledged diver.

I miss our dives, but I don’t miss you.

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Episteme: an online interdisciplinary, multidisciplinary & multi-cultural journal Bharat College of Arts and Commerce, Badlapur, MMR, India

Volume 4, Issue 2 September 2015

Easter Eggs

This Easter I painted eggs that I’d dyed as I’ve done every Easter since childhood. My mother and I prepared these eggs in the beginning. Some we boiled in food colouring and painted and some we wrapped in onion skins tied up in a piece of stocking and string. There was always industry here, in the making of beautiful eggs, and it had a special sense of holiness, if I may put it that way. I cannot imagine not making eggs.

I get my friends involved as much as possible. Perhaps it is just wanting to share delight in the process of creation, perhaps I have a mission. A mission, you ask? I do feel a certain fervour for the camaraderie that this task sets in place and somehow want a tradition of shared creating to continue with me, and beyond me, into generations and generations after my time on earth. It was my mother’s gift to me, and this I give to you; this sort of thing.

We sit together, with paints and paint brushes, and a little container of gold colour for buffing onto an egg, a roll of kitchen paper, and two glass jars of water, one for the reds and one for the blues, and we talk, reminisce, joke, laugh, drink coffee, eat cake, and paint. One day of the year we paint together, sharing a tradition of the ages of Russian Orthodox Christendom (for my mother was Russian), but beyond that, beyond that, to a mystery beyond that, to an inchoate knowing, hardly formed flocculant sense of birth and rebirth, just beginning and mysteriously just ending. How can I say what I mean? I do not have the words for it. So I just paint.

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Episteme: an online interdisciplinary, multidisciplinary & multi-cultural journal Bharat College of Arts and Commerce, Badlapur, MMR, India

Volume 4, Issue 2 September 2015 In the Cracks Between the Ordinary and Imaginary

My mother used to tell me to write about stuff I knew. She’d found me writing about the imaginary. She said the ordinary was already rich enough.

But, but, what about Swift’s houyhnhnms, what of busy rabbits with watches waiting for tea?

She showed me the brilliance of leaves, the luminance of grains of sand, the smell of earth…

What though of the elementals in lava flows? What of the Dreamtime serpent lifting the asphalt under our feet? What of talking horses?

Her world at night was scattered with stars, hurtling meteors, and worm holes. Mine had goddesses, wild boar, and boats coursing the Milk Way. Her days shone with sunlight glancing off dew on the mulberry tree, mine moved to the cracks between worlds.

I can hear them both, see them both, for my imaginary horse has whinnied-away the veils between this and that.

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Wolf

I was twenty three when I studied at the Jung Institute of Analytical Psychology in Zurich, Switzerland for the second time. I stayed with nuns around the corner and up the road a bit.

Each lecture day I walked past winter gardens, smelled coffee, apples, and hot chocolate and each Sunday rode the train to some sweet sounding village.

And I drank in the silence from the mountain springs
And I watched puppets in the medieval towns with babies in bonnets And I ate strawberries soaked in kirsch with clotted cream

And I’d walk miles upon miles. I’d walk in the hills, past garden allotments, into the wilderness.

I’d walk alone.

One time I saw a wolf padding around the fields. She was very beautiful, fierce and elegant.

This was my Switzerland. It changed everything for me, and I’ve never been the same. I tried to return to my life in Perth in Australia. I tried to fit in. I tried the life of wife, I tried employee, but the call of the wolf is the call I listen to.

I tread a path that is solitary, and it suits me. I enjoy the pack, it is true, but then at the end of the day, I pad back to my lair, lick my fur, eat my food, contemplate the hours that have past and go to sleep.

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The Tao of Acknowledgements

I have in hand a book of poems written by my old friend and teacher, Peter. From his hand, my sense of the poem was nurtured, like breath upon a little fire burning in a solitary place.

I am a voice in a line of voices, flowing like the Tao down generations after generation, connecting us from then to now, to now, to now.

Poetry is the language of connection, the language of connective patterning, of words evocative of much,
and yet bringing a gentle silence into the space between.

Poetry is the language of the heart, the language wrought by the mind, and settled like smoke in the hollows of the soul.
It rests,
I rest,

glad to have been a part.

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Brief bio by author:

Latest published works: Episteme, Sept 2015

CV Dr Elizabeth McCardell

Elizabeth McCardell, BA, BA (Hons), M. Couns., PhD, Dip CH

Lismore, New South Wales, Australia

email: dr_mccardell@yahoo.com

http://drmccardell.wixsite.com/dasgestell

http://transformativepsych.blogspot.com.au/

61 02 66243704

mob: 0429 199021

Counsellor/Psychotherapist/Clinical Hypnotherapist

Researcher/Writer/Editor

University & Adult Education:

2012-13 Diploma of Clinical Hypnotherapy, Australian Institute of Clinical Hypnotherapy, Sydney

2011 Career Transition Coaching Certificate, Lifeworks, Steve Gunther, September.

2009-2011 Gestalt therapy training, Northern Rivers Gestalt Institute, Lismore, NSW.

2007 Certificate, Circle of Security: Building on Attachment Theory, Kent Hoffman (co-founder,”Circle of Security Project”, Marycliff Institute, Spokane, Washington), at the University of Adelaide, SA, August.

Training in Narrative Therapy, Trauma Counselling, Psychosexual Counselling. University of Notre Dame Australia, 2006

2008 Master of Counselling, The University of Notre Dame Australia, Fremantle Campus, Western Australia. Dissertation title: ‘Exploring the reciprocal relationship of personal therapy and counselling others through counsellors’ experiences’

2002 Doctor of Philosophy (Philosophy) Murdoch University, WAust.

Thesis Title: ‘Catching the Ball: Constructing the reciprocity of embodiment’

1995 Tertiary Teaching Certificate, Murdoch University.

Certificate, TCM Massage, Chinese Medical Foundation of WA, 1997

Certificate, Acupotomy (Special Acupuncture), Nanjing University of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Nanjing, China, 1997

Palliative Care Counselling, Silver Chain, Osborne Park, WA 1996

Physiotherapy Assistant (voluntary), Cottage Hospice, Shenton Park, WA 1996

1993-1996 Volunteer Carer, Cottage Hospice, Shenton Park, WA

1992 Bachelor of Arts (Hons) Communication Studies, Murdoch University, WAust. Thesis Title: “The Tresilian Affair, the semiotics of newspaper reports on disability 1974-76”

1973; 1976-77 Training with the Jung Institute of Zurich, Switzerland, and the Australian Institute of Analytical Psychology, Australia

1977-79 BA Psychology, Murdoch University

1975 Bachelor of Arts (English Literature) Curtin University (formerly, WA Institute of Technology), WAust.

Scholarships:

99 Research and Conference Award, MU

97 Research Student Travel Award, MU

96-97 Murdoch University Studentship Award

73-74 Commonwealth Scholarship

Presentations & Publications:

2009- the present Regular column in The Nimbin Good Times Newspaper, writing on the art, craft, philosophy, and process of psychotherapy.

2002 ‘Understanding Alzheimers’ Skill in a Mundane Setting’ in section ‘Independence Matters’ International Federation on Ageing, 6th Global Conference Maturity Matters, 28 October.

2001 & 2002 ‘Understanding Theory and Practice by way of the moebius strip’, lecture to masters and doctoral students, ‘The Postgraduate Survival Course’ (co-ordinated by Elizabeth McCardell, Pam Nichols and Elizabeth Lindsay, Murdoch University).

1999 ‘Catching the Ball: embodied conversation’ Paper presented as part of a 3 person symposium titled, ‘Conversing – the space between: talking embodiment’, The Murdoch Symposium on Talk-in-Interaction hosted by the School of Psychology and the Centre for Research on Culture and Communication, Sept. 23-24.

99 ‘Catching the Ball: being in time’ (on embodied accounts of time, will and empathy). Presented as part of 5 person symposium titled, ‘Subjectivities of Embodiment’ Millennium World Conference in Critical Psychology, hosted by the Centre for Critical Psychology, University of Western Sydney, Nepean, Parramatta campus, NSW, 30 April to 2 May.

97 ‘The Relation Between the Movement of Massage and Self Awareness in the Treatment of the Aged and Patients with Mobility Problems’ (translated into Mandarin). Conference for the Health of the Aged in the 21 Century, hosted by the Domestic and Overseas Institute for Traditional Chinese Medicine & Nanjing University of TCM, Nanjing, China, 4 Nov. to 7 Nov.

97 ‘Writing English with your non-dominant hand: an experiment in experiencing the dilemmas of Chinese writers attempting English script for the first time’ Teaching development presentation, English Language Intensive Course for Overseas Students, TAFE, January.

Publications:

‘Thinking Consciousness, Embodiment and the All-Intergrating Field, through Rob Harle’s Academic Papers and Book Reviews,’ Chapter in Catching Spring: Renaissance Man, Rob Harle – A Study of His Artistic Universe, edited by Sunil Sharma & Sangeeta Sharma, New Delhi, 2015

‘Wolfe Mays’, ‘Edo Pivcevic’, ‘Guy Robinson’, ‘Hans Peter Rickman’, ‘Alan Lacey’, entries in “Dictionary of Twentieth Century British Philosophers” [Editor Stuart Brown], Thoemmes Continuum Press, UK, published June 2005

‘James Mill’, ‘Alfred Marshall’, entries in “Dictionary of Nineteenth Century British Scientists”, [Editor, Bernard Lightman] Thoemmes Continuum Press, UK, published 2004,

http://www.thoemmes.com/dictionaries/science_dic.htm

‘The Body, Medicine, Health and Disease’ “Encyclopaedia of 19th Century Thought” [Editor, Greg Claeys], Routledge, UK, published 2003

‘Understanding Alzheimers’ Skills in a Mundane Setting’, Australasian Journal on Ageing (AJA), Vol. 21.4 Supplement – Dec. 2002

‘The Retirement Village: a community or an institution’, AJA, Vol. 21.4 Supplement – Dec. 2002 (primary author Jacinth Watson)

‘The Relation Between the Movement of Massage and Self Awareness in the Treatment of the Aged and Patients with Mobility Problems’ (translated into Mandarin). Conference for the Health of the Aged in the 21 Century, hosted by the Domestic and Overseas Institute for Traditional Chinese Medicine & Nanjing University of TCM, Nanjing, China, 4 Nov. to 7 Nov. 1997

Academic Book Reviews in

“Leonardo Review” http://leonardo.info

Leonardo Reviews is the work of an international panel of scholars and professionals invited from a wide range of disciplines to review books, exhibitions, CD-ROMs, Web sites, and conferences. Collectively they represent an intellectual commitment to engaging with the emergent debates and manifestations that are the consequences of the convergence of the arts, science and technology.

“Metapsychology” http://mentalhelp.net/books/

“Human Nature Review” http://human-nature.com/

“Janus Head” http://www.janushead.org/

Book Reviews also in

The quarterly journal of the Children’s Book Council of Australia (8 years of reviews).

The WA Historical Society’s Readings Newsletter.

and various other publications.

Films, Interviews, Talks:

2002 ‘Paths to Meditation’ (film), Community Television, Access 31.

96 ‘Children’s Books Reviews’ Radio presentation, 6NR

97 ‘Violence on television’ Radio interview, 6NR

94 ‘The effect of TV violence on children’, Radio interview, 6NR

88 ‘The Abolition of Christmas’, Christmas dinner speech, Rostrum Public Speaking Forum.

Other relevant activities:

Owner & Moderator, e-list: Philosophy of Embodiment http://au.groups.yahoo.com/group/philosembodiment/

Moderator, e-lists: Critical Psychology announcements and Critical Psychology network.http://groups.yahoo.com/group/crit-psych-announce/

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/crit-psych-net

Co-Moderator, e-forum: Sexuality in society (2002-2011)

Community Interviewer, potential medicine and dentistry students, Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry, University of Western Australia, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2007. [All med/dent students are interviewed by a faculty member and a community member as part of their selection process for consideration as students in either university training programme. The other considerations are aptitude and academic results.]

Research, etc:

2003 Research Assistant, Dementia Carers Project, Dept of Gerontology, University of Western Australia Faculty of Medicine and Dentisty, Fremantle Hospital.

2001-2002 Research Associate, Division of Social Science, Humanities and Education, Murdoch University.

1990, 92, 2001-03, 2007 Thesis proof reader, 12 doctoral and masters dissertations, Murdoch University. All submitted theses were passed without need for further editing by candidates.

92-01 Doctoral research.

90 Editor of interview transcripts, oral history, JS Battye Library of WA History in conjunction with the Dept of the Parliamentary Library, Canberra.

 

CV Dr Elizabeth McCardell