Beatrice Birch - Inner Fire and Soul Health
Mad in America: Rethinking Mental Health
Mad in America
4.7 • 212 Ratings
🗓️ 7 March 2020
⏱️ 65 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
This week on MIA Radio, we chat with Beatrice Birch who is the initiator of the residential healing community Inner Fire. For over 35 years, Beatrice worked as a Hauschka artistic therapist in integrative clinics and inspiring initiatives in England, Holland and the USA where the whole human being of body, soul and spirit was recognized and appreciated in the healing process. She has lectured and taught as far afield as Taiwan.
Her passionate belief in both the creative spirit within everyone and the importance of choice, along with her love and interest in the human being has taken her also into prisons where she has volunteered for many years offering soul support through Alternatives to Violence work and watercolor painting.
In this interview, we discuss how Inner Fire works to help the people that attend, and how a core principle of their healing work is that 'human being are creators, not victims'.
We discuss:
Beatrice's background and experiences as someone providing alternative help and support for mental and emotional challenges, including her time in the UK National Health Service (NHS) utilizing Hauschka artistic therapy and other artistic therapies alongside improving nutrition and connection to new skills.
How she came to be interested in the resilience of the human spirit, wanting to understand why some people cope and others do not.
That Beatrice worked for many years in prison settings, working with Alternatives to Violence (AVP) and providing artistic therapies to inmates before founding Inner Fire, based in Vermont.
Inner Fire is a proactive healing community officially recognised by the state of Vermont as a Therapeutic Community Residence (TCR) that has been operating as a 501(c)(3) non-profit for almost 6 years.
How Inner Fire provides a medication-free approach to recovery from debilitating or traumatic life experiences, helping people to reclaim their lives.
That Beatrice believes in the importance of allowing people to connect with their divine, creative selves and this leads to a core principle of Inner Fire which is that 'human being are creators, not victims'.
Inner Fire doesn't influence a person's choice to stay on or come off psychotropic drugs, but they will work with people who want to gradually taper either to a comfortable level or off completely.
Beatrice presented a paper to ISPS Rotterdam entitled: Suppose 'Mental Health' is a Reductionist Term for 'Soul Health'…
How Beatrice describes those that come for help as 'seekers' and those from Inner Fire that support them as 'guides'.
That the focus of Inner Fire is participation, connection and community achieved by learning new skills in a group environment, getting people out of their heads and into their limbs.
The importance of rhythm when following the Inner Fire programme and how it is key to the healing process.
Inner Fire has a staff psychiatrist who has an appreciation of the spiritual dimensions of our lives, allowing spiritual and biological aspects to coexist.
How Beatrice's experience is that while medications can be helpful for some for a time, typically one drug will lead to another and then another and ultimately to hospitalisation.
Where tapering is concerned, the seeker and the psychiatrist together decide on the tapering approach but that it is recognised that tapering must be slow and must adapt to the experience of the person trying to reduce.
That Beatrice wants to raise enough money to provide a space where people can freely express the emotion that often arises as they come off their psychotropic drugs.
Inner Fire is currently private pay and that people donating can therefore help seekers who want to attend but don't have the financial resources.
How Inner Fire is not a profit-motivated enterprise because the focus is on the individual's healing journey.
Bob Whitaker helped open the east wing of the Inner Fire home.
Love is for the world what the Sun is for outer life
No soul could live if love departed from the world
It is the moral Sun of the world
To spread love over the Earth to the greatest degree possible
To promote love
That alone is wisdom
- Rudolph Steiner, Love and its Mission in the World
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Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Welcome to the Mad in America podcast, your source for science, psychiatry and social justice. |
| 0:13.2 | Hello, this is James, and welcome to the Madden America podcast. |
| 0:17.9 | And this week we chat with Beatrice Birch, who is initiator of the residential healing |
| 0:23.2 | community in a fire. For over 35 years, Beatrice worked as a Hauschka artistic therapist in |
| 0:30.4 | integrative clinics and inspiring initiatives in England, Holland and the USA, where the whole |
| 0:36.3 | human being of body, soul and spirit was |
| 0:39.0 | recognised and appreciated in the healing process. She has lectured and taught as far afield as Taiwan. |
| 0:45.5 | Her passionate belief in both the creative spirit within everyone and the importance of choice, |
| 0:50.6 | along with her love and interest in the human being, has taken her also into prisons, |
| 0:55.2 | where she has volunteered for many years offering soul support through alternatives to violence |
| 1:00.3 | work and watercolour painting. In this interview, we discuss how inner fireworks to help the |
| 1:06.2 | people that attend, and how a core principle of their healing work is that human beings are creators not victims. |
| 1:13.9 | Beatrice, thank you so much for joining me today to talk about the work of inner fire. And to begin, |
| 1:20.7 | I wanted to ask a little bit about you and your background and what it was that led to your |
| 1:25.1 | interest in establishing a medication-free healing community. |
| 1:29.6 | Well, thank you, James. And I want to say that I have been so appreciative of all the work |
| 1:34.3 | you've been doing over these years and the work of Mad in America. And, of course, the catalyst |
| 1:39.5 | of that Robert Whitaker has created by his Mad in America and his anatomy of an epidemic. |
| 1:47.2 | So it's a pleasure to be part of this movement. |
| 1:51.6 | I suppose, you know, ever since a very young child, I suppose with my interest in people and |
| 1:58.9 | their lives, now as an older person, |
| 2:01.9 | I can say my interest has always been in the resilience of the human spirit |
... |
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