Rob Hunter

Psychotherapy | Mindfulness | Self development

Psychotherapy with Rob for individuals

My depth and breadth of experience in the mental health field, enables me to work across a wide spectrum of mental health problems with groups, individuals and couples.

Clients I have worked with find that they:

  • develop positive masculinity free from the corrosive effects of our current cultural attack on men
  • develop more mature, adult ways of relating to women and men that supports healthy, co-operative communication and the capacity to manage conflict more effectively
  • recognise unhealthy patterns of thinking and behaviours, and begin to make healthy changes that work for them, especially in relation to past trauma
  • overcome long standing destructive behaviors, and difficulties controlling and managing anger and other negative emotions.
  • identify their true values, a sense of integrity and meaningful direction in their lives

 

Working with couples

Dr Patte Randal and I have the pleasure of offering our combined skills and experience to help couples experiencing the inevitable ups and downs of life together, and who want to create an amicable resolutions for relationship issues. This can be a life changing path towards better self-awareness, communication and compassionate understanding.

 

Support for people experiencing extreme states

Dr Patte Randal and I bring our combined skills and experience to provide expert support for people experiencing extreme states, including psychosis, anxiety, depression etc

  • For Families supporting teens or young adults experiencing extreme states and  faced with extreme state disturbance within the family system, we offer a transformational process that will help each family member move from vicious cycles to victorious cycles of increasing autonomy, competence and relatedness.
  • We will also be offering Groups for teens, young adults, and older adults who have experienced extreme states to support increasing resilience, wellbeing, autonomy, competence and relatedness.

 

FAQs

Q Rob Hunter

- Registered Psychotherapist
- Graduate Diploma in Psychotherapy (AUT, Auckland)
- Master of Arts (Maori Studies, Auckland, University)
- Bachelor of Arts (Social Anthropology, Otago University)

I have extensive and varied training in psychodynamic and behavioural therapy approaches, Dialectical Behavioral Therapy (DBT), eastern meditation practices, and empirically supported mindfulness approaches for managing your emotions.  I am also As an experienced practitioner and instructor of Tai Chi.

I have worked as a psychotherapist at the Buchanan Rehabilitation Centre, a specialist mental health, recovery focused, rehabilitation service that provides assessment, treatment and intensive rehabilitation combined with a high level of clinical support. I have also worked clinically with refugees and asylum seekers from a wide range of ethnic groups, and have a lot of experience using interpreters, and working virtually.

Currently I work in private practice. I also deliver non-violence programs and counselling for men at Man Alive.

Q Dr Patte Randal

- LRCP MRCS DPhil

Patte trained in psychiatry and is now retired from clinical practice after working for over 30 years in the NZ mental health service. She was born in England, completed her doctorate in Psychology at the University of Sussex and later graduated as a medical doctor at the Middlesex Hospital Medical School, London, in 1980. After coming to New Zealand more than 40 years ago, she spent 2 enriching years working at a small rural hospital and outlying GP clinics. Her specialist interest was in working with people with so-called ‘treatment refractory psychotic illness’, a term with which she was never enamoured, always believing it was the medical approach that was refractory.

Along with Dr Josephine Stanton, she has published qualitative research based on talking with doctors who became patients of psychiatrists, their loved ones, and psychiatrists who have doctors as patients.

Patte has lived experience of recovery from psychosis, and has told her story publicly in many contexts, including her recently published book, "Finding Hope in the Lived Experience of Psychosis: Reflections on Trauma, Use of Power, and Revisioning Psychiatry" (Randal P & Stanton J, Routledge 2022).

She has also published research describing an effective multimodal psychotherapeutic approach developed to support people who experience extreme states. Her understanding of psychosis is partly informed by her personal experience. As a result of her research, she created a person-centred, recovery-focused training course for staff at Buchanan Rehabilitation Centre and was then invited to train clinicians in all mental health disciplines using this approach, including post-graduates at Auckland University of Technology and University of Auckland. She subsequently co-authored the ‘Re-covery Model’ (for links to Patte's publications see https://profiles.auckland.ac.nz/pran032/publications).

Following on from this The Gift Box emerged. This is a collaboratively created educational resource that can be used to help facilitate self-understanding, resilience, and wellbeing for all. It can be used with individuals, in groups, with families and couples. It was successfully field trialled in Waikato DHB, and a wider implementation project is underway. The University of Auckland computer science department is currently digitalising The Gift Box. Patte is passionate about making these valuable resources available as widely as possible.

Patte was a founding member of the New Zealand Christian Counsellors Association.

Patte continues to teach post-graduate clinicians. In a train-the-trainers role, she enjoys co-facilitating non-clinician lived-experience groups based on The Gift Box, and is available to work with couples, families and groups in collaboration with Rob Hunter, psychotherapist.

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