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Balancing Body & Mind – Kum Nye Tibetan Yoga & Meditation with Matt Padwick

Balancing Body & Mind – Kum Nye Tibetan Yoga & Meditation with Matt Padwick

★ Due to the positive interest we are repeating this one-day workshop! ★

When: Saturday 25th of May, 2019, 10am – 4pm
Where: Lhasa Meditation Room, Killarney, Co. Kerry, V93W5P6

Based on traditional Tibetan healing practices, and suitable for all ages and fitness levels, Kum Nye’s movement and breathing exercises restore the body’s natural rhythms and calm the mind, making it a very effective gateway, and support to meditation practice.

In this one-day workshop we will combine simple movement and breathing exercises with the stillness of meditation to experience a way of being that is both deeply relaxing and fully energised.

Testimonials

“This effected me more than any other workshop I have done. I have never felt so in touch with myself.” – Alice, April 2019

“I loved learning something new – a skill I can bring in to my day-to-life.” – Corina, April 2019

About Matt Padwick
Matt has been practising Kum Nye and meditation at Dzogchen Beara Retreat Centre in West Cork since 1998. He has completed two years of closed retreat and was centre manager from 2003-2013. Matt currently manages the on-site cafe/ bookshop and teaches Kum Nye and meditation retreats at Dzogchen Beara.

 

Booking Information

When: Saturday 25th of May, 2019, 10am – 4pm
Where: Lhasa Meditation Room, Killarney, Co. Kerry, V93W5P6
Cost: €75 (includes Tea/Coffee & Light Lunch)

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Self-Care Training Day

Self-Care Training Day

From Inner Critic to Inner Kindness: An Introduction to Self-Compassion

with Christine Longaker

 When: May 12th , 2018, 9.30am – 5.30pm
Where: Lhasa Meditation Room, Killarney, Co. Kerry

Christine Longaker
Christine Longaker

How do we treat our self in difficult situations, when something goes wrong, or after making a mistake? Research shows that being self-critical results in a sense of isolation, tension, and suffering, whereas self-compassion builds confidence, ease, and genuine connection. We can learn to be a good friend to our self by acknowledging our imperfections with understanding, warmth, and kindness.

Christine Longaker, author of Facing Death and Finding Hope, and international Palliative Care trainer for 40 years, is writing a book and online course on self-compassion.
http://www.christinelongaker.com.

Price: 60 euros, including coffee, teas and light lunch. Registration 9.30am-5.30pm.

Click here to contact Katie to secure booking.

Spaces limited!

Questions & Answers

Questions & Answers

The following interview was conducted by Shaun Doherty from Highland Radio, Donegal
prior to presenting a training/reflection day on Advanced Healthcare Directives and Living
Wills in a beautiful setting called Cuan Ri in Donegal.

 

What is an End of Life Care Trainer & Educator?

Since I was sixteen years old, and working as a care-assistant, I have been committed to understanding and alleviating suffering for all those experiencing ill health and for the dying and their families. I then went on to become a nurse, a trainer, a complimentary therapist and a spiritual care educator. I worked for many years as a Clinical Nurse Specialist with a Community Palliative Care Team delivering holistic palliative care to those with life-limiting illnesses, the dying and their families in Dublin. I also began providing End-of Life-Care (EOLC) trainings on the Principles, Philosophy and Practice of Palliative Care nationally. I am fully committed to raising awareness around EOLC issues including the need for the delivery of non-denominational Spiritual Care. My motivation for ongoing education is an aspiration to share one's knowledge, skills and attitudinal competencies in order to up-skill multi-skilled health care professionals and the public, through increasing their capacity to facilitate a good dying process for all.

It is relatively new to talk about living wills in Ireland?

It is. It is hot off the press at the moment because there is an assisted decision capacity bill only passed by the Oireachtas in 2015.Within this act then there is a new provision to legislate for advanced care directives & they are also called living wills, they actually mean the same thing. The really big thing here in Ireland with the passing of this bill because it replaces a victorian era looney regulation bill going back to the early 1870s, and actually at that stage we were referring to individuals with intellectual disabilities as idiots & lunatics and unsound mind. So finally we have replaced this outdated law now with this modern human rights compliant mental capacity legislation. It is exciting times.

Your passion Katie, comes from the fact that you have worked  in the area of Palliative Care. So you are working with people in their end of life journey. So what struck you as a problem for people in that particular journey of their life, when they told their diagnosis, prognosis was not good?

That’s a really good question, and I could bring a lot in, but actually one of the things that I would say more than anything is that people are not prepared. They’re not prepared, and even about outlining our wishes and preferences are, and what gives meaning to our life. We do not plan ahead, we are alway procrastinate. For us to even let anyone know for what we want relating to our health care. This isn’t only about end of life care, it’s about our health care wishes. It is the wrong time to do an end of life care directive in an A&E department. We are very hesitate in having these conversations & discussions & reflecting around these issues and speaking to our family around them.

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