MBACP, DPS Counselling

Counselling in Bristol

This is your space. There is no limit to what you may bring.

Whatever brings you to counselling, I can offer you an opportunity to be in a confidential, safe relationship with a non-judgmental, supportive and objective other who will have no agenda but to listen to you, and to be with you in your process.

  • Attachment disorder
  • Bereavement
  • Abuse
  • Trauma
  • Domestic violence
  • Relationship issues
  • Anger
  • Anxiety

Contact Nichola:

Tel: 07913 649 850

Email:  nichola.gascoigne@bristolcounselling.net

Location

Appointments are in Central Bristol.

We can discuss details of location via email or on the phone.

Fees

Sessions last for 50 minutes and are charged at £45

Initial assessment sessions are charged at £25

Background and practice

​I am a qualified counsellor and a registered Member of the British Association of Counselling and Psychotherapy (MBACP), and adhere to the BACP Ethical Framework for Good Practice in Counselling.  This includes a requirement to receive regular and thorough supervision of my practice, and also to undertake regular continuing professional development (CPD). 

I am an integrative counsellor and offer a warmly relational stance, allowing the relationship between us to guide our work together.  My approach is informed by psychoanalytic and attachment theory as well as by current neuroscience, and I have a wide scope of study and integration of practice and techniques including Somatic Trauma Therapy, Transactional Analysis, Gestalt therapy, Mindfulness practice and the Human Givens approach.  


I have over 20 years professional experience of working one-to-one with people from all walks of life.  This has included massage therapy, NHS maternity care, and counselling; both privately and within a registered charity. 

As well as my general counselling practice, I am a Founding Director of a Social Enterprise, The Birth & Wellbeing Partnership, and its counterpart Charity, The Birth & Wellbeing Fund, offering specialist support to women, partners and maternity staff who are struggling with issues around pregnancy, birth, pregnancy loss and stillbirth, and early parenthood.  Please email us at contact@birthandwellbeing.co.uk for more details.

What you are reading now is a text block the most basic block of all. The text block has its own controls to be moved freely around the post…

… like this one, which is right aligned.

Headings are separate blocks as well, which helps with the outline and organization of your content.

A Picture is Worth a Thousand Words

Handling images and media with the utmost care is a primary focus of the new editor. Hopefully, you’ll find aspects of adding captions or going full-width with your pictures much easier and robust than before.

Beautiful landscape
If your theme supports it, you’ll see the “wide” button on the image toolbar. Give it a try.

Try selecting and removing or editing the caption, now you don’t have to be careful about selecting the image or other text by mistake and ruining the presentation.

The Inserter Tool

Imagine everything that WordPress can do is available to you quickly and in the same place on the interface. No need to figure out HTML tags, classes, or remember complicated shortcode syntax. That’s the spirit behind the inserter—the (+) button you’ll see around the editor—which allows you to browse all available content blocks and add them into your post. Plugins and themes are able to register their own, opening up all sort of possibilities for rich editing and publishing.

Go give it a try, you may discover things WordPress can already add into your posts that you didn’t know about. Here’s a short list of what you can currently find there:

  • Text & Headings
  • Images & Videos
  • Galleries
  • Embeds, like YouTube, Tweets, or other WordPress posts.
  • Layout blocks, like Buttons, Hero Images, Separators, etc.
  • And Lists like this one of course 🙂

Visual Editing

A huge benefit of blocks is that you can edit them in place and manipulate your content directly. Instead of having fields for editing things like the source of a quote, or the text of a button, you can directly change the content. Try editing the following quote:

The editor will endeavor to create a new page and post building experience that makes writing rich posts effortless, and has “blocks” to make it easy what today might take shortcodes, custom HTML, or “mystery meat” embed discovery.

Matt Mullenweg, 2017

The information corresponding to the source of the quote is a separate text field, similar to captions under images, so the structure of the quote is protected even if you select, modify, or remove the source. It’s always easy to add it back.

Blocks can be anything you need. For instance, you may want to add a subdued quote as part of the composition of your text, or you may prefer to display a giant stylized one. All of these options are available in the inserter.

You can change the amount of columns in your galleries by dragging a slider in the block inspector in the sidebar.

Media Rich

If you combine the new wide and full-wide alignments with galleries, you can create a very media rich layout, very quickly:

Accessibility is important — don’t forget image alt attribute

Sure, the full-wide image can be pretty big. But sometimes the image is worth it.

The above is a gallery with just two images. It’s an easier way to create visually appealing layouts, without having to deal with floats. You can also easily convert the gallery back to individual images again, by using the block switcher.

Any block can opt into these alignments. The embed block has them also, and is responsive out of the box:

You can build any block you like, static or dynamic, decorative or plain. Here’s a pullquote block:

Code is Poetry

The WordPress community

If you want to learn more about how to build additional blocks, or if you are interested in helping with the project, head over to the GitHub repository.


Thanks for testing Gutenberg!

?

Nichola Gascoigne

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