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Heart2Herts-Counselling

counselling and psychotherapy

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counselling

Anxiety and Depression

30/03/2013 By ang

Counselling for depression, stress and anxiety  can be extremely effective.

I believe depression can mask feelings we’re having difficulty expressing. For example, suppressed anger can lead us to feel resentful. Resentment is like drinking poison and expecting someone else to die. Ultimately it only harms us. Depression can be about suppressed sadness too.  

If you feel many of these things the chances are you could be suffering from depression:-

 Do you feel upset, numb, guilty or sad for much of the time? 

 Have you lost interest in things you previously enjoyed ? 

Are you weepy for what seems like no apparent reason? 

Do you feel there’s little point to carrying on? 

Do you feel alone even when you’re with others? 

Do you feel on edge and irritated easily? 

Do you feel easily tired? 

Are you having difficulty sleeping? 

Do you wake in the morning and your only desire is to go back to sleep and stay there?

Have you lost your appetite or find yourself eating more? 

Are you losing your self-esteem?

Worrying what people think of you? 

Are you having negative thoughts and fearing the worst all the time? 

Does the future seem bleak?

Does everything seem like a tremendous effort?

Do you put off simple tasks? 

It may be an idea to seek help from your GP and a counsellor if you feel you can identify with the above check list. 

pete

Anxiety can be a crippling thing to experience. 

Do you feel stressed, unable to relax, have difficulty sleeping yet feel very tired? This can be the result of prolonged stress. Counselling can help you to see if it is actually anxiety you’re suffering from and give you better ways to cope with it. It will also show you how you are perhaps unknowingly perpetuating it. 

It’s natural to find some degree of anxiety; for example before sitting an exam or going for a job interview, it’s when the levels get out of control that it can be very uncomfortable. People suffering from anxiety can have what’s known as “panic attacks.” These can be terrifying for some and even lead to the sufferer thinking they may be having a heart attack or that they going to pass out. 

Anxiety sufferers often have health anxiety, believing they have illnesses and disorders that they really don’t have. This is often unhelpfully labelled as hypochondria when in fact it’s something that can be very frightening and feels extremely real to the person experiencing it. 

Counselling can help you get things into perspective once again and work through the underlying fears. 

STRESS CHECK

Do you feel worried, stressed, tense, anxious, restless, frightened, have a general feeling of dread?

Does your heart pound/miss a beat?

Does your chest feel tight? 

Do you get “butterflies” in your stomach?

Do you feel giddy and like you’re going to pass out? 

Do your fingers or toes feel numb or have pins and needles? 

Have difficulty concentrating? 

Do you start projects and not complete them? 

Do you feel like your losing control? 

Do your legs feel like jelly sometimes? 

Do you avoid certain places/social situations?

Is this causing you to have time off work?

Do you smoke/drink more because of these feelings? 

Are you eating less/more because of this? 

Do you have problems getting off to sleep/staying asleep, or wake early and have trouble getting back to sleep? 

If you experience some or all of these problems, the chances are you are suffering from anxiety and could benefit from counselling.

Health Anxiety

Some patients that come to see me are suffering from health anxiety. Often unhelpfully referred to as “Hypochondria” this can be a very debilitating, scary feeling.  It often links back to a childhood experience. Counselling can help explore the causes and change this awful way of thinking. 

  

As with all physical ailments please do consult your GP in the first instance

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: anxiety, counselling, depression, heart pounding, migraines, palpitations, panic attacks, stress

Low Self Esteem

29/03/2013 By ang

Having low self esteem affects every area of our lives, both personally and professionally. Counselling can help give you the tools to understand yourself and help you value who you are more. It also helps you become more assertive; something that goes hand on hand with self-esteem.

 

Group therapy is often a useful tool to help overcome this crippling issue

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: assertiveness, confidence, confrontation, counselling, shy, therapy

Relationship Counselling

29/03/2013 By ang

 

Relationships can suffer for many reasons but the common denominator is a break down in communication. This can be caused by many things. Often by the time a couple gets to counselling the communication has become very dysfunctional. I can help you learn to speak to each other again and how to listen. Therapy will help you to see where things went wrong and find a solution. 

An outsider can often spot things that people in the relationship can’t. You may find it helps to talk to someone completely uninvolved who is trained to help.

You invested a lot into this relationship, why not give it another try and come and have an introductory session. You have nothing to lose. 

Clients found therapy a huge benefit to their relationship. Please read my reviews from other clients here.

https://www.freeindex.co.uk/profile(heart-2-herts-counselling)_437002.htm

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: arguing, arguments, children, counselling, divorce, fighting, mediation, relationship, tension

Supervision

29/03/2013 By ang

Supervision is a crucial part of our client work. I specialise in supervising trainees and newly qualified people or those setting up in Private Practice. I am a firm believer that the less experienced you are, the more experienced you need your supervisor to be.  I offer a FREE 30 minute, introductory supervision session to counsellors, supervisors and those in emotionally demanding jobs.

Although supervision is a requirement of a counsellor’s ongoing professional development and required as part of a counsellor’s membership to the British Association of Counselling and Psychotherapy and other organisations, Barristers, Social Workers, Solicitors and Doctors have also found it very useful.

Finding the right supervisor is crucial and trainees can feel vulnerable starting to see clients for the first time. I provide an opportunity for you to meet me and perhaps present a case. This enables you to see how you feel I work before you decide if you would like to work with me on a permanent basis. You can sometimes extend the 30 minutes once you are here if we both have the time but that would be chargeable. 

I also run group supervision sessions at an affordable price. This makes them ideal for trainees.

Reductions are available during the day for trainee therapists needing counselling in line with course requirements and on low income. Finding the right supervisor is crucial and trainees can feel vulnerable starting to see clients for the first time. 

Fees for supervision are £55 per 45 minute session.

Filed Under: Services I Offer Tagged With: barristers, counselling, stressful jobs, supervisor, trainees

Stress

26/03/2013 By ang

Stress

Stress causes more long-term absence in the workplace than repetitive strain injury and medical conditions such as cancer. Employees say this is down to increased workloads and management styles, according to the survey by the Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development (CIPD) and healthcare provider Simplyhealth.

Although stress itself is not an illness, if it increases or goes on for too long it can result in physical illness.

A certain amount of pressure can be motivating. It helps us acheieve in life and improves our performance.  Stress is a natural reaction when this pressure becomes excessive.

Peter’s story:

I felt more and more pressure as my company made people redundant and increased my work load. I’m usually a conscientious employee but ended up having to take time off work.

The stress affected my relationship with my wife. I slept badly, started drinking and felt generally worn down the whole time.  I had no idea this was stress. My GP was good. He explained things to me and recommended counselling which I feel really helped. I couldn’t change what happened in my job but I could change how I dealt with it.

 

 

 

 

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: absence, cancer, counselling, employee, health, injury, performance, repetitive, strain, stress, workplace

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www.heart2herts-counselling.org 2017