
Charlie Arthur
1.9K posts

Charlie Arthur
@Numinousviews
Jungian Psychology, C.G. Jung, and Fatherhood.










@NessaDeex Might’ve been written in small print when signing in for appointment etc. I think AI scribing should be embraced. Low risk, improved accuracy of documentation, allows doctor to focus on listening to you and frees up time to do more valuable work. Agree it should be clear to you

"One of Us" was ABBA's final parting single - so we've adapted it into a 🎶 parody we're calling "Exodus" to reflect on the urinary trickle of Tory departures to Reform UK, most notably two driplets from the bottom of the last government's barrel @RobertJenrick & @nadhimzahawi.

When I was five, I started school. I was bright eyed and bushy tailed. I had loved nursery and I was excited to learn about the wide world out there in Big School. Pretty soon, that changed. It turned out that the big wide world was a classroom, and that my role there was to sit on my bottom. It turned out that the other children hadn’t yet learnt to read, whilst I had, and so a lot of my time was spent watching them sitting on the carpet reading Roger Red Hat while I was sat at a table with a Words Folder to write stories. The carpet looked more fun. Then it turned out that one of the other children didn’t like the fact that I could already read, and she would pinch me when the teacher wasn’t looking. The playground was big and concrete and the hall was echoey and smelly. It turned out that my lunchbox was wrong too and so were my clothes. The oldest children seemed like grown ups to me, looming over me in the playground. I didn’t like it. I started saying so. I didn’t want to go to school. I wanted to go back to nursery where I had loved the teachers and all the activities on offer. That wasn’t an option. I was five-years-old now, far too big for nursery. I wasn’t alone. Thousands of children start school and then things start to go wrong. The problems are often subtle – but what happens next isn’t so subtle. Parents are told to make home less fun, so that their children choose school out of boredom. Or they’re told to force their children in, so they don’t get the idea that school is a choice. Both of these options can make things worse. When a child starts saying they don’t want to go to school, what happens next is crucial. That's what I'm talking about in my webinar on Monday Jan 26th. Please share if you know parents who might benefit. eventbrite.co.uk/e/my-child-isn…



We’re bringing the health service into the 21st century with NHS Online, starting with conditions with the longest waits for treatment. Getting healthcare will be as easy as ordering a cab or takeaway. How it should be in an NHS fit for the future. independent.co.uk/news/health/nh…







