HEY THERE,
I’m Grace Quantock
I'm an anti-oppressive psychotherapeutic counsellor, writer and advocate. I help marginalised folks to live well with pain, illness and trauma without disembodiment, burnout or blame.
I’m here for folks with bodies that are deemed complex.
For lives and selves outside the binary.
For all of us who don’t fit the boxes.
For those living on the margins. For people with chronic illnesses and hurting bodies. For less-than-patient patients. For the neurospicy. For psychiatric patients and survivors. For the dismissed and disbelieved. For chronic illness patients who need pragmatism, not platitudes. For disabled people tired of inspirational tropes wanting to live well.
IF YOU ARE LOOKING FOR SUPPORT BECAUSE…
You’re sick and struggling and tired of being told to try yoga by people who’ve never had to manage big pain on too little medication.
Self-help books haven’t worked because they never seem to grasp all you have going on.
You want to talk about your relationships but therapists keep assuming you’re sad about being disabled.
…then you are in the right place. Because I am here for you.
I am here for inclusion, for access, for community, for co-production, for nothing about us without us, for all of us or none at all, for making it accessible or burning it down, for ancestors and descendants.
I help marginalised folks to live well with pain, illness and trauma without disembodiment, burnout or blame.
I’ve been featured in The Hay Literary Festival, The Times, The Guardian, The Huffington Post, New York Magazine, NPR and many more.
WHAT I CAN OFFER YOU
Across the last 15 years, I’ve provided therapeutic support, psychoeducation and advocacy to thousands of people with complex bodies and lives in workshops, courses, books and 1:1 therapeutic sessions.
I write a lot about the Bootstrap Wellness Narrative because I want us to resist the messages that demonise our bodies and our struggles under inequitable and failing systems.
The change that we can make when we are no longer blamed or burned out by our own healing journey allows us to make shifts in our communities and in those systems, which is also one of the goals of the creative, socially committed clients I work with. My clients want to live well in their own lives, personally, while also being part of the change and making a fairer world.
I have studied:
Psychodynamic and integrative psychotherapeutic counselling (I was one of a handful of students to graduate from my intensive training programme - we began with 26 folks and only 6 graduated with me - it took me 7 years to train and is taking more than that to decolonise my training).
Somatic bodywork (I have an MA with distinction in psychotherapy and counselling practice). My dissertation included some of the first research on online facilitated body psychotherapy.
Energy work including Usui Reiki, Spiritual Response Therapy and I’m trained as a Mindful Movement Facilitator (I couldn’t train as a yoga instructor as I couldn’t find a class that would accept me as a hypermobile wheelchair user, but I am so glad I found this body-inclusive training).
Gender and women’s medieval history (my first degree, which was really learning about ancestors and how to hear the hidden stories of marginalised bodies).
Art making and therapy, I’ve studied with Aviva Gold, Sophia McCloud, Flora Bowley and many more, (which led to me founding Creative Therapeutic Journalling for Wellbeing).
I studied workshop facilitation with Jennifer Louden and Michele Lisenbury (and I’ve taught workshops at universities, wellness centres, hospital beds and protests.)
All this means that I bring a wider understanding of systems and context to our work.
It’s all about you, but it’s not just us in the room.
I am building a body of work
I can speak to the complex societal, political and historical prejudices and privileges that intersect through our lives as well as the liminal aspects of our experiences.
I offer an alternative to the medical model and the individualistic self-help model, together we integrate the practices, tools and possibilities that fit you and find a new path to your potential.
As a therapist and writer, much of my work occurs in private. However, I strive to be transparent in my therapeutic practice, writing and research. This transparency is intended to contribute to directly overturning the long silence which has pervaded psychotherapy consulting rooms.
The psychotherapeutic blank slate I was trained to practice—Freud's blank slate - tabula rasa (Eng, 1980)—originally stabilised therapeutic boundaries.
But for many therapists outside default norms, our slates are already indelibly written, in my case as a visibly disabled woman.
Many of us with marginalised identities have experienced medical trauma and have had medical confidentiality weaponised against us to deny and dismiss our experiences and the harm caused. So while my therapeutic sessions are confidential (for my part, my clients are welcome to share whatever they like), I want to share how I work in the world, my thinking and approaches, so you can make an informed decision about who you work with.
My methodology
I call my approach Somatic Complexity Compassion Therapy (SCCT).
It rests on these pillars: Ground, Gather, Grow (Triple G) Process, which helps us make change compassionately and sustainably.
My training brings together psychotherapeutic counselling and activism to recognise our whole selves as we navigate systemically unjust and struggling systems. So we can make a life in the midst of it all.
My approach draws together psychodynamic principles and lived experience of disability, chronic pain and health inequity so that you can show up as yourself without needing to educate me on your day-to-day realities.
My work draws upon many traditions and teachers, including; Stefanie Lyn Kaufman Mthimkhulu, Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha, Dori Midnight, Marion Dunlea, Linda Kohanov, Dr Clarissa Pinkola Estes, Sins Invalid and Alice Wong.
My work grows out of disability and social justice, activism and advocacy.
My approach is grounded in interconnectivity, community and allyship with our land and world.
READY FOR THE NEXT STEP?
Let’s work together
I offer an alternative to the medical model and the individualistic self-help model, together we integrate the practices, tools and possibilities that fit you and find a new path to your potential.
Check out the options to work together below.
Author & Freelance Writer
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I’m a London Library Emerging Writer and winner of A Writing Chance Award from Michael Sheen and New Writing North.
I live in the valleys of South Wales where I work as a psychotherapeutic counsellor, advocate and writer supporting people with complex bodies and lives.
I support marginalised folks to live well with pain, illness and trauma without disembodiment, burnout or blame.
I was shortlisted for The Nan Shepherd Prize and the Writers and Artists Working-Class Writers’ Prize in 2021, I am currently working on my next book with Literature Wales’s Representing Wales Programme.
A recipient of the Curtis Brown Creative Breakthrough award, my writing has appeared in The Guardian, The Metro, The New Statesman and The Welsh Agenda; as well as appearing in The New Yorker Online, The Observer, The Times, NPR, Marie Claire and many more.
I am a contributor to An Open Door (Parthian, 2022) and A Women’s Wales (2024) and the author of the upcoming book Living Well with Chronic Illness: Write your roadmap to healing in tough times, (Orion Spring, September 2024).
I am represented by Abi Fellows of DHH Literary Agency.
I am available for freelance writing commissions, investigative and opinion pieces on mental health, inclusion advocacy and the wellness industry. Contact me here.
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I’m the author of the upcoming book Living Well with Chronic Illness: Write your roadmap to healing in tough times, (Orion Spring, September 2024), you can pre-order your copy here in hard copy, ebook and audio to help you create a Healing Roadmap that truly fits you, your body and your life. I will equip you with all the information and resources you need on your journey of finding a good life with chronic illness.
I write blogs, articles, essays and books because I believe words can help us understand ourselves, and our world and forge a way forward.
Pre-order my new book Living Well with Chronic Illness: Write your roadmap to healing in tough times. You can pre-order the hard copy here, ebook here or the audiobook is coming soon. Sign up to my newsletter to be notified when when this will be available to pre-order.
Pre-orders really help books by debut authors (especially disabled, neurodivergent, working-class authors like me, so your support is so appreciated).
Workshop Facilitator & Speaker
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I have facilitated hybrid workshops since 2011, run international conferences across multiple continents and I delight in working with new audiences.
You can check out my TEDx talk here and more details of my keynote offerings and how to bring me to your event here.
I only speak at events which are inclusive, diverse and accessible.
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Psychotherapeutic Counsellor & Coach
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I have credentials:
I’m a UK Council for Psychotherapy accredited psychotherapeutic counsellor.
I graduated with my MA in Psychotherapy and Counselling Practice at Bath Spa University with distinction.
I’m a faculty at the School of Life Sciences at the University of South Wales where I’m a visiting lecturer, where I teach on the Children and Adolescent Mental Health MA and the MA SEN/ALN (Autism).
I sat on the board of Body Soul Europe (supporting inclusion in Jungian somatic training) and on the Gestalt Centre Wales Council.
But I also have thousands of hours of experience with clients. I’ve been immersed in the fields of disability studies, disability justice, embodiment, somatics and many more.
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You can read more about my Somatic Complexity Compassion Psychotherapeutic Counselling here and my Onwards Together Coaching offerings here.
You can book a session with me here.
Check out my signature class Refuel & Resource, a course to help you build a life with illness that fits you and the future you dream of.
Why I could accompany you on the path to living well
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It started for me, like for many of us, with illness.
I became seriously ill at 18 when my underlying auto-immune condition relapsed.
I was thrown into a world of illness, of hospital waiting rooms, too few answers and too many blood draws. I brought my experiences from activism and academia to the task - experience had taught me with research and strategy, I could effect change.
As I learned how to navigate the struggling and systemically unjust health and social care systems, I learned just how difficult making change would be.
But through learning from other sick folks on message boards, in waiting rooms, and while queuing for accessible bathrooms,
I learned how to navigate this new world. I drew on my academic background to research my rights - we called it going to Healing University.
Somehow, word of our victories spread, and my phone became an informal crisis hotline…
How did you get that equipment from an occupational therapist?
Someone was being denied medical treatment?
An institution was refusing to make access adjustments?
My friend has been moved into a care home against their will and they’re scared, what can we do?
We called it Grace’s Crisis Hotline and calls came in at all hours, I began to realise the problem was bigger than I had ever imagined. But I didn’t know what I could do.
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One day, a chronically ill friend was visiting and I showed her my Healing University research folder (complete with colour-coded paper clips and reward stickers for completing tasks). I thought it was a sweet topic to show my love of stationery.
But she was furious.
She asked me why I had not shared this research and these resources.
“How dare you?” she challenged me. “Don’t you think someone like me could benefit from this?”
I was stunned, but I saw her point.
“We aren’t all like you, Grace,” she went on. “You have an academic background, you got to go to university. When you ring experts up to interview them, they speak to you. Why don’t you share this?”
I agreed I would, but I had no idea what that could look like.
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The next month, when I was 22 years old, my doctors told me they suspected I had extensive bone cancer, throughout my body.
I didn’t know if I could cope with chemo. Who does? It’s not something any of us can choose.
On the day I was due to get the results, I came out of hydrotherapy and waited for the call under a beech tree on the grounds.
I started to make a list on my phone of what I needed to do if I didn’t have to dedicate my energy to chemo and ensuring survival.
Living bigger felt impossible when most days I struggled to take my pills and eat.
But I wanted to be able to move forward, alongside my fear. I realised my life needed meaning beyond a focus on my survival.
I moved from Ground into Gather.
I made my list:
I want to wear more earrings and dare to have a style beyond ‘looking disabled’ and wearing the most accessible clothes.
I want to camp in the Forest of Dean and see the stars again.
I want to share all we’ve learned in Healing University with others.
I got the call that I had severe osteoporosis (not cancer).
I spent the next six months researching bone-strengthening treatments and fighting to get permission to work without losing my benefits.
When permission came through, I sent my friends and family an email entitled “I’m Legal, Celebrate With Me”.
I asked them to recommend my coaching sessions to people they knew who were struggling with illness.
My coaching sessions and seminars got booked out over a year in advance.
My Healing University research and Grace’s Crisis Hotline work became a blog, a business, a viral TEDx talk, a thriving coaching and later, after years of training, psychotherapeutic counselling practice.
I graduated with distinction in my psychotherapy and counselling practice MA.
I won multiple research fellowships, working with universities, and exploring how to support people with complex trauma and illness.
I watched the ascendence of a dangerous president through the experiences of marginalised folks deeply at risk from him.
When he was elected, I asked myself, it such a thing were to happen in the UK, what I would wish I had already done.
Then I set out to do it.
I researched academics and activists experienced in resisting anti-democratic regimes.
I decided to pick something important to me and guard it. If we all did this, I thought, we might make it through.
So, I chose social care and the National Health Service (NHS) and got a seat at the board tables. I became the youngest disabled woman NHS Non-Executive Director, (to the best of our knowledge). I sit on boards across health and social care.
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I’m still sick, still not cured, but I found more possibility and space to live when I stopped trying to have a life designed by someone else, for bodies not like mine.
But my work is not about teaching you my path or trying to make you like me.
I intimately understand that the charity model of disability doesn’t work.
Not only is it patronising - I don’t need pity - but it’s inaccurate as for most of us, we aren’t a singular sick person surrounded by well-resourced non-disabled people with plentiful time, money and energy to support us and our goals.
We heal in community and we may be both responsible for/to others and living in relationship with people, communities, landscapes and lineages.
This means we don’t heal alone, even when we feel alone.
We have to account for our lived relational experience when we are thinking about change.
The Bootstrap Wellness Narrative tells us we can do it all ourselves if we try hard enough. I don’t think that’s what it is to be human.
I’m working with you to find your own way, what fits your body and life.
What this means for you is that my work emerges directly from lived and community experience and is intersectional.
I’m not going to impose my experience on you, try to teach you to be like me or assume your body or life is anything like mine.
I’m going to believe your experiences and help you navigate them and strategies to live well, in the midst of it all - whatever that looks like for you.
4 FACTS
I was the smallest baby born in Wales (1lb and 13 oz) - which means I know intimately what it’s like to grow up with physical differences, in a vulnerable and othered body.
1
I have 3 rescue dogs, Doris, Peregrine and Wilfred. When we put in the application to re-home Wilfred, the phone rang less than 30 seconds after we submitted it. Best call of my life.
2
I co-wrote the British Association of Counselling and Psychotherapy’s guide to counselling disabled people. And I’m not officially listed as a co-author in protest of the lack of consultation and co-production.
3
I’ve been an activist for climate, animal and land justice. I’ve been arrested more times than I can count. Yes, with everything that entails; protests, banners, placards, courtrooms and a prosecution. I’ve known how it feels to hold newly rescued, and now wholly-free animals in my arms. However, I also learned tenacity, courage, negotiation, how to write a press release, how to design a leaflet, working with the media, photography, and a whole host of other useful skills which I didn’t realise at the time. I am now gracefully retired (at the advice of my solicitors). It’s no big secret but it’s one of the many aspects of the remarkable life which I am blessed to live.
4
↓ Emerging light on my favourite wheelchair-walk.
↑ Wilfie & Peregrine, BFFs
↑ Doris snuggled in her nest.
↑ ↓ Grace riding Sora. I know I’m not wearing a helmet here but I ride in a helmet and back protector, always wear the protection you need.
I love vintage cameras, especially my Polaroid 600 and Land Camera SX-70.
Let’s Connect
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03/ CHECK OUT THE LIBERATING WELLNESS BLOG
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