A Soul's Prescription for Healing - Written By Mary Anne Costerella.

 

Glastonbury Life Publications

 

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2002 Article written by Nancy Thompson
Article written by Nancy Thompson in 2002 about Mary Anne Costerella's work. 

Most people know that the last five letters of “psychology” denote study or knowledge. But Mary Anne Costerella believes that far too few psychotherapists acknowledge that the first five letters of the word refer to the human soul.

Psychology is defined as the study of the psyche, which means “soul,” the long- time Glastonbury resident said. “Soul has been abandoned by scientific healers, causing the individual energy system, the human being, to lose power. Current treatment trends must take a proverbial page from history and begin to focus on reconnection to the authentic power source, the heart and soul,” she continued.

The importance of the connection of head and heart, of body and soul, is central to Ms. Costerella’s work as a psychotherapist. Teaching is also important.

“One of my passions is teaching,” she said. “My undergraduate degree is in secondary education, in English.” As a therapist, she said, she continues to teach but in a different way. “Life for me has been on big classroom, and I bring that to counseling,” she said. “My passion today is teaching myself and others about what life is, its meaning and why we are here.”

“Why we are here,” for Ms. Costerella, is to learn, and that is the spiritual piece of what she tries to share. The physical part is keeping our bodies well. “The body is the house for the mind, emotions and spirit,” she said, adding that facials, massage, manicures and yoga are among ways people can support healing for the exterior of their human houses.

Ms. Costerella said her own spiritual journey began about 10 years ago when she and her husband divorced. “I learned a lot about myself,” she said.

She lost both parents, her father to a heart attack and her mother two years later to breast cancer, when she was in high school. As an only child, she found herself completely alone after her mother’s death. “There was nobody to help me through this traumatic grief,” she said. “Life is about loss. We need to deal with our emotions; otherwise they become toxic.”

In her case, she said, those “toxic emotions” led her into two marriages that ultimately were unsuccessful attempts to deal with her own family issues and to surround herself with family.

Describing herself as a “wounded healer,” a term originated by the French theologian Henri Nouwen. Ms. Costerella said she returned to school for a master’s degree in counseling because she wanted to use her own experiences to help others.

Ultimately, she decided to specialize in addiction, including the treatment of dual diagnosis disorders, such as when an addiction to medication causes depression.

As she has been involved in working with addicts and others she has come to believe that people- patients as well as caregivers-are too focused on the quick fix and not willing enough to deal with the root of the problem.

“The system focuses on the problem, the illness, the symptom,” she said. “People are taught to bypass the emotional work, but they would be better off using tissues than pills.”

Ms. Costerella described addiction as a person’s best attempt to deal with unresolved losses. While most lay people think of chemicals when they hear the word “addiction,” she said process addictions such as gambling and shopping are equally dangerous.

And while drugs can be useful in certain circumstances, in most cases they act as a Band-Aid, covering the external wound rather than helping the interior wound heal.

“We’ve learned to avoid and to keep busy,” she said, adding that “the concept of being” is preferable to the “process of doing.”

Ms. Costerella said she also enjoys learning about the metaphysical sciences such as astrology, numerology and a discipline developed at Yale University known as personlogy.

“I believe we’re here for a purpose,” she said, relating a story in Plato’s “Republic” about a soldier who is given a choice of scenarios to be born into and then drinks from the River of Forgetfulness to forget what his purpose in life is.

“The soul knows, but the head doesn’t,” she said. “The further the disparity between our ‘soul purpose’ and what we’re actually doing, the more likely we are to experience dysfunction, depression and addiction.”

She herself has suffered from emotional problems, including co-dependency and relationship issues.

“I went into therapy and also 12-step work for co-dependency issues,” she said. “I started making connections about grief and loss. I learned that the dependency on men that was taught in the ‘50s and ‘60s wasn’t working.” She also found spirituality as her “wellspring for a sense of belief and hope in life. The depression was a form of spiritual bankruptcy.”

With a graduate degree in therapeutic counseling and a minor in pastoral counseling, Ms. Costerella has worked in drug and alcohol addiction programs in Manchester and at Nachaug Hospital in Storrs, at New Directions, a private out-patient facility in Enfield, and at the Mount Sinai campus of Saint Francis Care Behavioral Health, where she has run a program designed to prevent relapses into addiction.

She also has earned licensing and special certification for addiction work and works in collaboration with two psychiatrists.

She has gained the respect of other therapists with whom she has worked. “Mary Anne is great,” said Karen DeFrancesco, a clinical social worker at Saint Francis who also has a private practice in Hartford. “Mary Anne is a very creative and talented therapist. Her expertise in chemical dependency, combined with her extensive knowledge of more holistic, nontraditional forms of therapy, will be a great asset to the Glastonbury community.”

Dr. Julie Gurner, a therapist who has worked with Ms. Costerella at the New Outlook Program sponsored by Saint Francis Care Behavioral Health, praised her for her “unique approach to therapy.”

“Mary Anne is approachable with a conversational style of interaction that places people at ease,” she said, adding that Ms. Costerella is especially sensitive to the needs of her clients. “Mary Anne uses herself in her work, joining with clients to examine the meaning of their life’s mosaic,” she continued. “She challenges traditional notions of psychotherapy by integrating clinical expertise with existential and holistic perspective.”

The mother of four children ranging in age from 14 to 27, Ms. Costerella recently opened her new private practice, “
Interiors: PsychoSpiritual Health Therapies, LLC” in Olde Turnpike Corners on Hubbard Street and continues to do on-call work for the Saint Francis program.

There she offers a variety of services, including assessment, consultations, crisis intervention, referrals and PsychoSpiritual integration and provides therapy for individuals, couples, families and groups as well as relapse prevention therapy for people recovering from addictions.

Anyone who wants more information about Ms. Costerella’s practice may call her at 657-1131.

2006 Article written by Brucie Izard
What’s in the cards reveal another way to a path of self-awareness and self-revelation

So who invented a deck of playing cards anyway? The Greeks has them, the Egyptians had them, and all major civilizations claim to have invented them.

Are we all just playing the hand we are dealt? Consider these connections between the calendar and a deck of cards: There are 52 weeks in a year and 52 cards in a deck.

Four season and four suits – spring, summer, winter, fall, corresponding with hearts, clubs, diamonds and spades.
Assigning a numeric value to each card, with aces, one and the twos equaling two, the threes, three and so on and the jack given the value of 11, the Queen, 12 and the King, 13.
The sum total is 364, and giving the joker card the value of 1½ the total is 365 and ½ days in the year which exactly equal the number of days in the year.
For every birthday there is a corresponding car, and with a deck of cards, the exact movements of the planets surrounding the sun can be calculated, as well as estimations of time and the movements of the earth.
Hmmmm… are we on to something more than just a good hand?
For Mary Anne Costerella, a Glastonbury resident and licensed psychotherapist with a practice in town, the knowledge and symbolism in reading the cards can help validate a person’s existence.
Playing the hand you’re dealt with means a lot more than Texas Hold ‘Em. And more importantly, every year on a birthday, and the alignment of the planets, it gives an individual a whole new hand to read and learn from.
“It is code. By identifying your birth card, it combines the essentials of astrology with numerology, and informs me who someone is,” said Ms. Costerella. “On the surface it’s simplistic, but mathematically it’s very complex.”
There is a verse in the Book of Revelations that refer to the Seven Thunders and a little book, which was revealed in 1893 by Olney Richmond, the grand master of the secret society, The Order of the Magi, to be a deck of playing cards.
He claimed in his book, “The Mystic Test Book,” that the passages in the Bible reveal that the secrets hidden from the common man in a deck of cards could only be learned when the time was right. (Reference Revelations 1-:4; the Seven Thunders, signifying the seven planets; Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune.)
As Robert Camp, the author of several books such as “Destiny Cards: Your Birth Card & What It Reveals About Your Past, Present and Future,” said, “It is clear to me that if we were to completely understand their numbers and meaning, we would have a tool that could easily give us specific information about almost any area of life or science.”
Like astrology where the location of the planets and the birth month ascribe certain characteristics or propensities to an individual, using a deck of cards as a map to an individual’s cosmological karmic agenda reveal his or her “architectural blueprint of life,” as Ms. Costrella describes it.
While some may scoff at the whole idea, for Ms. Costerella, it was almost as if a light went on in her head from the moment she picked up one of Robert Camp’s books at Barnes & Noble seven years ago.
He is regarded as the “guru” of this ancient system of divination and she has traveled to Asheville, North Carolina to study the knowledge of the cards with him.
Her commitment to enlighten people to the secret of the cards and doing card readings is but one way she seeks, as many of us do, to “have a purposeful existence. I think this knowledge validates people’s existence, informs them of the meaning, who they are, what they’re meant to do. It helps to order existence, understand there is a plan that you can tangibly connect with.”
Mr. Camp calls people who embrace the knowledge of the cards as “seekers of truth who are willing to look where others fear to tread. It has its roots in some of our oldest mystical orders, the information it provides can be a spiritual guide to help you better understand how and why you create your life the way you do.”
Ms. Costerella pointed out that in astrology and metaphysics the belief is that a soul chooses when to be born and to whom.
“It reinforces the fact that there is a beginning and an end. There is a certain amount of time to evolve and the curriculum is already set up from the moment we are born. Card readings or believing in the cards does not take away free will but addresses how to use or waste potential.”
“People walk around with a lot of questions. This might yield information about their path in life,” she said. It may impart information about their journey, make people less judgmental, and help them see where their energy source is emanating from. The cards truly have a scared purpose.”
Mr. Camp said “Watching Mary Anne do readings, I see the care and thoughtfulness of her work. She uses the cards in most every aspect of her life and knows how to impart their wisdom to others.”

Seasons of a soul

Depending on what suit a person’s birthday reveals them to be, the suits, like the seasons follow a pattern in reading playing cards.
The four suits, like the four seasons, also represent the four elements of water, air, earth and fire and the seasons of a person’s life.
A person’s birth card suit can reveal energies and show patterns that can help us better understand ourselves.
Hearts, the suit of love, symbolize the season of spring which denotes an early time, a time of rebirth and awakening of love and relationships.
People born under hearts are considered “the children” of the deck with clubs representing the “adolescents” of the deck.
Clubs, or the summer of a karmic life, and corresponding with the earth element, are the most common birth dates.
People who are clubs work with ideas, points of view and the ability to communicate. Diamonds represent the “adults” of the deck, the time of life when financial rewards and hard work reap their riches, when the accumulation of property and wealth is at its pinnacle.
The suit of diamonds showing up in a reading naturally denotes money but more importantly what it is that a person values most.
Spades are the winter of life, the elements of fire, and the “old people” of the deck, often showing maturity and wisdom at an early age. In a card reading spade cards signify changes in work or health.
The ace of spades is a card of illumination, representing The Order of Magi, and has been used in film and literature as a harbinger of secrets, and what they have the potential to reveal.
It is symbolically representative of the whole card system but it can also be the death card, but again in the ancient art of card reading, death can also mean a transformation.
“Think of it as a system similar to driving with headlights on,” said Ms. Costerella, the mother of four with her youngest child just starting college this year.
“It allows you to see obstacles, and may help with challenges ahead, or decisions to make, like getting married or starting business. It’s a way to illuminate the way your year is going to be like.”
Ms. Costerella is organizing a weekly esoteric group of people wanting to explore and learn more about the art of reading the cards beginning January 13 at 1 p.m. at here office at 377 Hubbard Street.
Each group is 90 minutes; the class will run for 6 weeks and the cost is $200 including materials. To register for the group, contact Ms. Costerella by email at MaryAnne@PsychoSpiritualtherapies.com or by phone 918-3949 or 657-1131. Participants will learn how to do their own card readings, which involves tracking the planets, where the cards fall, and requires knowledgeable interpretation of their meanings and their symbolism.
Also, Ms. Costerella is in the process of creating her own website that explains a bit more about the secret knowledge within the cards and that website is www.PsychoSpiritualtherapies.com.

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interiors: PsychoSpiritual Health Therapies LLC | 377 Hubbard Street | Glastonbury, CT 06033
Tel (860) 657-1131 | Fax (860) 657-2795 |
MaryAnne@PsychoSpiritualtherapies.com
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