
Creative embodied group supervision for therapists, clinicians and service providers
Professional support
7 - 8.30pm AEST
29 Apr 2026 - 9 Sept 2026

Professional support
Tuesday 12 - 1.30pm AEST OR Thursday 7 – 8:30 pm AEST
12 May 2026 - 14 May 2026
Zoom online
Online (Recording available for a limited time)
Free
It doesn't matter if it's PJ Harvey, Rachmaninov, Rosalia, or ACDC.
After a hard session, sometimes it doesn't matter how loud you blast the music. You'll still find yourself in the car with the client's story right there with you.
The session may be finished.
But you are still in it.
You lie awake replaying something you said. Or something you didn't.
You feel competent at what you do, and yet something is brewing that you cannot quite put your finger on.
You know the theory. You could write the self-care list in your sleep. And still.
This workshop is not about working harder at looking after yourself. It is about understanding why the work stays with you (something most of us were never shown how to manage), and why that gap matters more than any self-care strategy.
Because the systems you work in make it harder.
And there is something that actually helps.
"Thank you so much for normalising the experience of all of these challenges that come with caring work, and for reminding me of the joy that I also feel".
Research tells us that the struggles clinicians carry, the ones we talk about openly (burnout, vicarious trauma, wanting to scream in frustration) and the ones we whisper to ourselves (wondering how much longer we can keep doing work we love), are not personal vulnerabilities. They are occupational hazards of sustained relational work in challenging contexts.
Our training taught us to assess, respond, document, and hold. To stay present and attuned to the pain in front of us, session after session.
What most of us were never taught is how to notice what that work leaves behind in us, or what to do with it.
This workshop will introduce a clear, evidence-informed three-part framework for understanding clinical impact, along with a creative, embodied, and practical experience of what working with it can feel like.
This workshop is for clinicians who:

About Minky van der Walt
Hello and welcome!
I am Minky van der Walt, Registered Music Therapist, clinical supervisor and PACFA Clinical Member with 25+ years of clinical experience.
I designed this workshop, and the Flourish program it draws from, because what clinicians need has never been part of our professional training.
Not more self-care strategies.
Not more resilience.
But a structural understanding of what the work does to us, and a way to tend to it over time.
If this resonates, I would love to see you there.
Tuesday 12 May, 12:00 to 1:30pm
Thursday 14 May, 7:00 to 8:30pm
Places are limited to keep the session interactive.
By registering you are agreeing to join the Tempo newsletter. You can unsubscribe at any time.
Questions? minky@tempotherapy.com.au | 0466 149 430
Minky has a wonderful way of putting complex theory into easy-to-understand language.


Creative embodied group supervision for therapists, clinicians and service providers
Professional support
7 - 8.30pm AEST
29 Apr 2026 - 9 Sept 2026

Hobart Group Supervision Collective
Professional support
Please see our expression of interest form
Header image: Jason Hill