Tag Archives: Transformation

Saying NO: A workshop for Nice People

Being able to set limits is especially challenging if you are attached to being a nice person. Others can manipulate your desire to be seen as good. 

Let’s start with boundaries. A good boundary helps you be an integrated person — to be your authentic self. It honors you as an individual, as you may hope to honor others.  But some people who have been overrun fight to make boundaries that sometimes seem sharp and inflexible.  Setting a rigid boundary can keep out sweetness. It can become brittle and shatter your defenses.

The answer is to learn to set appropriately permeable boundaries. Think of a cell in the body. It needs to let nutrition in. It needs to let waste out. If it has no cell wall, it lacks integrity and will be overrun or fall apart. If it has too impenetrable a boundary, it will starve or be poisoned by its own toxins. It does not function without the other cells. 

The first step to creating a useful boundary is a healthy self-regard. When this is very intact, there is no work needed — one regards transgressions as ridiculous: “You’ve got to be kidding me.” Engagement with something unhealthy for the self is not an option.

Include yourself as a being who deserves love and respect

Now this sense of self-worth is elusive to many people. So here is where you enlist the genuine part of your niceness — your empathy. You imagine the situation happening to someone you love. Is it OK with you? Probably not. So include yourself as a being who deserves love and respect “Just ’cause” we all do. Do not allow the transgressor to harm you — it is bad for them, too.

Some teachers from other cultures have been shocked at how much Westerners can disregard or even hate themselves. But “Love thy neighbor as thyself” imagines that we are able to love ourselves — or we can’t do a very good job for our neighbors. 

So go meet the part(s) inside that have believed mean things about you. If there are words that were internalized that are not useful, give them a cartoon voice. Elmer Fudd is particularly useful. 

Find where these feelings reside in your body. Breathe into them with compassion. Use the part of you that cares for others to care for yourself, too. You will find that it is easier to be genuinely kind to others if you start here. 

Be filled, then give from that abundance

The biblical injunction “Charity begins at home” means that love and compassion start with you, and the intimates around you. Charity, agape, signifies love, compassion, justice and from that, giving to others.

Don’t give away the self. Even a nice request that you don’t want to say yes to needs to be refused. You’ve perhaps heard the adage, “No is a complete sentence.” If we are “nice” rather than kind, we might fritter away our gifts fulfilling other people’s projects. If they are rowing in the direction you’re going, by all means have alliances. But being diverted can keep you from fulfilling what only you can offer. As a colleague’s Texas grandmother told her when she was a child, “Little girl, you can’t give from an empty basket.” Allow yourself to be filled, and then give from that abundance.

Here is the workshop information:

Sunday March 30, 2025.  10:30 am – 4:00 pm 

Do you ever hold your tongue, or stop bringing something up after the second mention, only to stew or later explode in frustration?

In this workshop we will:

  • Address inner barriers so you can ask for what you need
  • Transform energetic blockages so you can stand your ground
  • Find the courage to say what you mean
  • Relearn body language to supportcommunication
  • Change vocal habits for better self-expression
  • Practice using words that are unequivocal,clear, and kind

You will walk away with the confidence and clarity to deepen your kindness in all your relationships — including with yourself.

Katja Biesanz  LPC has been a psychotherapist for twenty years. She also employs tools from Yoga, Qigong, and other energy healing forms. As a movement coach and professional dancer she has helped countless people embody their authentic selves.

Sunday March 30, 2025.  10:30 am – 4:00 pm  1829 NE Alberta Suite 12 (top of the stairs). Portland, OR 
Early Registration $325. ends March 10.  Space is limited,    $375. thereafter

Contact: katjabiesanz@icloud.com. for registration instructions

We will have 2 small breaks and one longer one for lunch. There is a small fridge and microwave, and restaurants nearby. Light snacks provided. Wear comfortable clothing that allows for movement. You might want to bring a journal.

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Blooming in Adversity:

Building Resilience, Strength & Wholeness April 3-5, 2002

What are you called to in these times? How will we cultivate the inner resources to meet the challenges before us? What gifts do you carry and how can you find the courage to offer them? These are the questions of our time.

This experience will offer you the opportunity to explore your unique path. It will also strengthen your ability to create and be in sacred community. Through journaling, sharing our stories, and healing movement techniques, participants will deepen their practice of giving and receiving care, creating transformative connection while building personal resiliency.

With Vanessa Timmons & Katja Biesanz Vancouver, Washington (10 minutes from Portland) $300 To register, go to http://www.vanessatimmons.com, or email Vanessa at vanessa@vanessatimmons.org Light snacks and Vegan/Vegetarian lunch provided. Dress comfortably, in layers, for gentle movement practices

Vanessa Timmons combines the modern science of interpersonal neurobiology, the ancient healing art of storytelling, trauma informed mindfulness techniques, with the profound power of community. She has over 30 years of experience working with survivors of trauma, Vanessa provides each participant with a personal toolkit for success and resiliency.

Katja Biesanz, LPC, is dedicated to cultivating vibrant individuation together with healthy community. A psychotherapist, Qigong teacher, and writer, she has a deep dance background. She focuses on embodiment — truly being in your body — as a vehicle for authenticity and presence — a ground of both personal and global transformation.

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Qigong for Fall: Entering the Glittering Dark

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Sunday November 15, 2015

Opening to Life, 407 NE 12th @Flanders, studio upstairs

2-4:30 pm  $45.

Fall is a time of reflection, and of letting go. It can be of time of grief, and it can be the time of finding meaning in life’s experiences. It is the hard mining that reveals the inner jewel. It is the time to cut away what hinders, and to hone the core of who you are in this life. It is the Yin time for harvesting Wisdom.

The Metal Element in Traditional Chinese Medicine encompasses all this. Qigong is mindful movements that support integration of the full being, including the physical body, with the Cosmos.

Lung is the organ associated with the fall. These practices will support respiratory health.

Who will benefit:

  • Those with lung and breathing issues
  • Those processing grief
  • Those doing inner work
  • Those seeking transformation

MogaDao Qigong & More    

You will learn a six-move form: Zhenzan Dao’s Yijing form Summer to Fall: Yielding. You will also experience other Qigong and Yoga practices that support the lung , help you to enter the rich Yin of the season, and discover the inner work that leads to transcendence and freedom.

Katja Biesanz, LPC

I am a somatically based psychotherapist , a dancer and an herbalist. I’m certified as an Instructor and Guide in all MogaDao Qigong forms. I have taught people to feel their Qi (Chi) for forty years, and have focused on Qigong for the last ten. I live and practice on the North Coast of Oregon, and come to Portland to see clients once a week.

Opening to Life 407 NE 12th @ Flanders, studio upstairs

Info: Katja 503-703-1262

 

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