You became a therapist because you wanted to understand people. Because you believed that understanding could lead to healing — for your clients, and somewhere underneath that, for yourself.
So you trained. You read. You went into therapy yourself. You sat with your process in supervision, in peer groups, in the quiet after long clinical days. You have done more inner work than most people will ever attempt.
And still.
Something cycles back. A different trigger, a different context — but the same weight. The same root pain you have been circling for years, returning in a new form, just when you thought you had finally moved past it.
This is not a failure of effort or intelligence. It is a signal that the process you are using is not reaching the place where the cycling begins.
Most therapeutic approaches — including many you have trained in and used with clients — work at the level of insight, narrative, and symptom management. They are genuinely useful. For many trained therapists, they are not enough.
What is missing is a process that goes to the root. That finds the original pain — not the story about it, not the pattern it created, but the pain itself — and works with it directly until it is resolved.
That is what this programme is designed to do.
The Healing Experience is a year-long monthly programme — join at any time — for therapists and practitioners who are ready to stop managing their pain and start understanding it at its root.
It is led by Shauna Quigley, a psychotherapist with fifteen years of clinical practice and the founder of the InCorr Method — a structured, body-centred framework for resolving the primary pain of trauma.
Inside the programme, you will not collect more information about yourself. You will move through a guided process — experiential, embodied, and precisely structured — that takes you to the place where the cycling originates and supports you to work with it directly.
By ninety days, most members report the same thing: not that the pain is gone, but that they finally understand why it was there. They have a map. They know what they are working with, where it began, and what the path through it looks like. The cycling hasn’t disappeared — but it has stopped feeling inevitable.
In your first month you receive immediate access to three things:
A growing library of recorded InCorr practice sessions, and a therapist-only community where you do not need to explain yourself or perform competence. Access begins the moment you join.
A structured self-assessment process that names the pattern you are working with — your protective responses, stress architecture, and the shape of your cycling — so your healing is targeted from the start, not vague.
Not an introduction call. Not an onboarding session. A live experiential call where the work begins — where you are met as a person, not a professional, and the process starts in real time.
You do not need to do everything. You need to do what creates traction.
Not immediately. Not all at once. But consistently, over months of honest engagement with the process:
Not because they are managing it better. Because they understand it differently. The root has been named and they are working with it directly.
The voice that says I should be past this loses its grip when you have a precise understanding of why you are not past it yet. Understanding dissolves the shame insight alone never could.
Not through technique or effortful regulation, but through their own healing. Clinical work becomes less depleting. Capacity increases.
The specific loneliness of being the one who holds everyone else — who cannot easily be the one in need — softens in a space built explicitly around that experience.
Not the kind that loops back. The kind that holds.
“What makes InCorr exceptional is the precision, depth, and emphasis of phenomenological interoception. Rather than working at the level of symptom management or insight alone, it engages directly with the internal architecture of the self.”
“InCorr goes beneath symptoms and stories, into the roots of experience where real change happens. It is profoundly supportive — you are never pushed beyond what you can integrate. This balance between depth and safety makes the work both powerful and deeply humane.”
A single hour of therapy costs more. One CPD day costs four times more. Monthly supervision rarely offers community, a resource library, live experiential work, and a structured healing pathway in the same place.
The Healing Experience brings all of that together for less than two cups of coffee a day.
No lock-in. Cancel any time. Join any time.
Billed annually. Save the equivalent of two months.
This is not for you if you are looking for information, insight, or another framework to understand yourself intellectually. This is experiential, embodied work — and it requires your honest presence.
No. This is a therapist-focused healing and experiential container. It is trauma-informed and experiential, but it is not a substitute for individual psychotherapy. InCorr-trained therapists are available to members at discounted rates if one-to-one support is needed alongside the programme.
No. This is not a qualification, certification, or professional training pathway. While you will learn through experience, the purpose of this programme is your own healing — not your professional development. If you are interested in InCorr practitioner training, the membership offers a natural and grounded foundation for that.
All live sessions are recorded and available in the library. Consistent small engagement creates more change than occasional intensive bursts followed by absence. The programme is designed to work with a busy clinical schedule.
No. You can participate privately and still benefit deeply from the sessions and library. Sharing in the community is always invitational, never required.
Monthly membership is billed on the same day each month and renews automatically. You can cancel at any time with no penalty — you retain access until the end of your current billing period. The annual plan offers a 20% saving; annual subscriptions are non-refundable.