Psicología

Centro MENADEL PSICOLOGÍA Clínica y Tradicional

Psicoterapia Clínica cognitivo-conductual (una revisión vital, herramientas para el cambio y ayuda en la toma de consciencia de los mecanismos de nuestro ego) y Tradicional (una aproximación a la Espiritualidad desde una concepción de la psicología que contempla al ser humano en su visión ternaria Tradicional: cuerpo, alma y Espíritu).

“La psicología tradicional y sagrada da por establecido que la vida es un medio hacia un fin más allá de sí misma, no que haya de ser vivida a toda costa. La psicología tradicional no se basa en la observación; es una ciencia de la experiencia subjetiva. Su verdad no es del tipo susceptible de demostración estadística; es una verdad que solo puede ser verificada por el contemplativo experto. En otras palabras, su verdad solo puede ser verificada por aquellos que adoptan el procedimiento prescrito por sus proponedores, y que se llama una ‘Vía’.” (Ananda K Coomaraswamy)

La Psicoterapia es un proceso de superación que, a través de la observación, análisis, control y transformación del pensamiento y modificación de hábitos de conducta te ayudará a vencer:

Depresión / Melancolía
Neurosis - Estrés
Ansiedad / Angustia
Miedos / Fobias
Adicciones / Dependencias (Drogas, Juego, Sexo...)
Obsesiones Problemas Familiares y de Pareja e Hijos
Trastornos de Personalidad...

La Psicología no trata únicamente patologías. ¿Qué sentido tiene mi vida?: el Autoconocimiento, el desarrollo interior es una necesidad de interés creciente en una sociedad de prisas, consumo compulsivo, incertidumbre, soledad y vacío. Conocerte a Ti mismo como clave para encontrar la verdadera felicidad.

Estudio de las estructuras subyacentes de Personalidad
Técnicas de Relajación
Visualización Creativa
Concentración
Cambio de Hábitos
Desbloqueo Emocional
Exploración de la Consciencia

Desde la Psicología Cognitivo-Conductual hasta la Psicología Tradicional, adaptándonos a la naturaleza, necesidades y condiciones de nuestros pacientes desde 1992.

miércoles, 1 de febrero de 2023

Rome’s Rebel: QUEEN ZENOBIA

Dear Classical Wisdom Member, What makes a rebel? We think of those who fight against oppression, dictators, empires, governments and leaders. Sometimes they are freedom fighters, other times vain glory seekers. But those who rebelled against Rome had one thing in common...they were Roman....and there were plenty of them! While some were more successful than others, all had the courage and audacity to oppose the greatest empire the world had known... and some even managed to humble, even for a moment, Rome herself. So today we will look at one such rebel, one that certainly captures the imagination: Queen Zenobia. Becoming ruler at the young age of 27, she was, “according to the often unreliable Historiae Augustae, an incredible beauty, with swarthy skin, black eyes, and teeth as white as pearls. She was an outdoors girl who had enjoyed hunting as a child, and was given an excellent education once she married the much older Odaenathus at the age of fourteen, so that by the time power came into her hands she was fluent in Palmyran, Greek, Latin, and Egyptian.” She also had big designs in Syria... but how far did her rebellion go? Read on below to enjoy this special guest column by none other than Stephen Dando-Collins, which is an exclusively released extract from his newest book, “Rebels Against Rome: 400 Years of Rebellion against Rome.” Enjoy! All the best, Anya Leonard Founder and Director Classical Wisdom and Classical Wisdom Kids QUEEN ZENOBIA Senator’s Wife, Conqueror of the Roman East. Syria and Egypt, AD By Stephen Dando-Collins With the Roman East in chaos in the 260s, King Odaenathus of the rich Silk Road city-state of Palmyra in Syria, a Roman client kingdom, had combined his own army of heavy cavalry and mounted archers with Roman infantry to defeat Persian forces and regain Roman assets in the East. This had earned him the gratitude of the Roman emperor Gallienus, who was fighting a tide of barbarian invasions across the Danube and contending with the so-called Empire of Gaul created by the rebel governor Postumus. Rome’s Senate was so grateful to Odaenathus for his efforts on its behalf in the East that it awarded him the title of Reformer and Commander of the Entire East. It also granted him imperium, making him superior to the governors of Rome’s eastern provinces. In 267, the king and his adult son by his first marriage, Septimius Herodianus—his Palmyran name was Hairan—were assassinated in Bithynia while returning from a military campaign. Who was behind this assassination is unclear. The actual assassin was said to be Odaenathus’s cousin Maeonius, who immediately declared himself king, only to be killed himself within twenty-four hours of his declaration. Some writers suspect the assassination was engineered by Odaenathus’s young second wife, Queen Zenobia, to elevate her own son to the throne. The theory is that Zenobia put Maeonius up to it, only to have him immediately executed as a traitor. Certainly, the day following Odaenathus’s death, his younger son and Hairan’s half-brother, the eight-year-old Vaballathus, was declared king by the army. Zenobia, who had apparently, and unusually, accompanied her husband on campaign, was simultaneously handed the powers of regent, to rule in her son’s name until he came of age. The queen’s full Roman name was Zenobia Septimia. In Palmyran, a dialect of Aramaic, she was Bat-Zabbai, or Daughter of Zabbai. Just twenty-seven years of age on becoming unofficial ruler of Palmyra, Zenobia was, according to the often unreliable Historiae Augustae, an incredible beauty, with swarthy skin, black eyes, and teeth as white as pearls. She was an outdoors girl who had enjoyed hunting as a child, and was given an excellent education once she married the much older Odaenathus at the age of fourteen, so that by the time power came into her hands she was fluent in Palmyran, Greek, Latin, and Egyptian. Zenobia was also very smart, and with her young son’s elevation to the throne and inheritance of his father’s Roman titles and powers, she exercised those powers with care, in the name of both her son Vaballathus and Rome. Over the next three years, Zenobia strengthened Roman fortresses along the Euphrates River, the border between Syria and Persia, and kept the Persians at bay. But with chaos in the West, which included five Roman emperors in ten years, ongoing rebellion in Gaul, and constant barbarian threats, Zenobia began to think about taking the East for herself. She would later claim that Cassius Longinus, her Syrian-born tutor in Greek, who later became her chief adviser, encouraged her to create a Palmyran Empire. Queen Zenobia's Last Look upon Palmyra by Herbert Gustave Schmalz (1888) When the Roman emperor Claudius II, or Claudius Gothicus, died from disease in January AD 270 at Sirmium, in the Balkans, and with his successor, Aurelian, hard-pressed fighting German invasions of Italy, Zenobia saw her chance. Read more Artículo*: Classical Wisdom Más info en frasco@menadelpsicologia.com / Tfno. & WA 607725547 Centro MENADEL (Frasco Martín) Psicología Clínica y Tradicional en Mijas Pueblo #Psicologia #MenadelPsicologia #Clinica #Tradicional #MijasPueblo *No suscribimos necesariamente las opiniones o artículos aquí compartidos. No todo es lo que parece.
Senator’s Wife & Conqueror of the Roman East

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Más info en frasco@menadelpsicologia.com / Tfno. & WA 607725547 Centro MENADEL (Frasco Martín) Psicología Clínica y Tradicional en Mijas Pueblo #Psicologia #MenadelPsicologia #Clinica #Tradicional #MijasPueblo

*No suscribimos necesariamente las opiniones o artículos aquí compartidos. No todo es lo que parece.

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