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Healing-Centred Transformation - by Kerry Tottingham
About this item
Highlights
- About the Author: Kerry Tottingham, co-director of A Brilliant Thing CIC, specializes in social change through creative coaching, co-production, and innovation practices, collaborating with national funders, NHS and nonprofits to drive systemic change.
- 248 Pages
- Business + Money Management, Business Ethics
Description
About the Book
If you've made it through difficult life experiences, you know what needs to change and why - but pain and injustice destroy your power. Healing-Centred Transformation nurtures potential and cultivates deep energy, so you can lead profound and positive change in your life, work and world.
From the Back Cover
Healing-Centred Design is a transformation framework, rooted in trauma-informed practice.
It blends systemic, creative and reflective approaches, helping future-makers to design lasting change.
You can,
- Evolve difficult life experiences into powerful leadership qualities
- Create replenishing work despite adversity
- Make brilliant things happen
Social change designer Kerry Tottingham lives with chronic pain but hates the idea of a limited life. So, with her sister-led company A Brilliant Thing CIC, she created Healing-Centred Design and uses it everyday to dismantle inequality and channel positive power, enabling everyone to do brilliant things.
'In a world that is increasingly individualistic it can be challenging to access a sense of safety and connection. This book creates a wonderfully accessible and reassuring framework that is truly inspiring, compassionate and much needed.' - Dr Sula Windgassen PhD MSc, Health Psychologist and Director of Mind Body Blossom Clinical Health Psychology practice
About the Author
Kerry Tottingham, co-director of A Brilliant Thing CIC, specializes in social change through creative coaching, co-production, and innovation practices, collaborating with national funders, NHS and nonprofits to drive systemic change. A certified leadership coach, Kerry drew on her own experience of chronic pain to develop the Healing-Centred Design framework, blending trauma-informed practice and systems thinking to promote social justice.