New scientific discoveries have recently revealed how the human body responds to the hormones that cause anxiety and stress - such as the fight and flight response. I have long been aware in my research how neuroscience can help provide sources of evidence and methodology into my counselling practice. At Enduringmind, Counselling in Twickenham I have many clients who are suffering with deeply ingrained patterns of anxiety – including generalised anxiety disorder, Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, panic attacks, phobias and Obsessive Compulsive Disorder. I firmly believe that these conditions have their roots in our evolutionary past, our childhood development and the physiological responses to stress. Now it turns out that we know more and more about how anxiety and stress is transmitted from brain to body and vice versa, not only in terms of how stress hormones – such as adrenalin and cortisol – are transmitted through our neuronal network from the limbic system, but right down to the molecular level through microscopic cells....
13 Oct 2012
10 Oct 2012
World Mental Health Day
Today
is the 20th annual World Mental Health Day and it is no accident that the theme is
"Depression: A Global Crisis."
Again
this acts as a stark reminder that Mental Health is not an issue we can hope to
wish away simply because it remains an invisible blight; locked away in the
minds of millions suffering from mental ill health. It is also a timely
reminder that a divided society and broken economy has an ever increasing
destructive impact on the quality of all our lives – old and young, rich and
poor and a diverse number of ethnic and social backgrounds.
‘According to the World Health
Organisation (WHO), depression affects more than 350 million people of all
ages, in all communities, and is a significant contributor to the global burden
of disease. Although there are known effective treatments for depression,
access to treatment is a problem in most countries and in some countries fewer
than 10% of those who need it receive such treatment.’
The point of Mental Health Day
is that it is designed to raise public awareness about mental health issues across
the globe. The day is about promoting an open discussion/debate about mental disorders,
improvements in prevention, promotion and treatment in mental health services.
‘UK insurance firm Aviva has
found from its Health
of the Workplace 2012 report,
published on Monday, that while employees are generally feeling less stigma in
the workplace, a third still feel that mental health remains a 'taboo'
subject that is seldom talked about. Over half of employees think that physical
illness will always carry less stigma than mental health.’
‘The report also found that of
those who feel stigma has decreased, around half (48%) of employees attribute
this to a better understanding of mental health among peers and colleagues.
Over a third of employees say that TV and press campaigns, such as Mind's
'Time to Change' campaign, have helped remove the stigma associated with mental
health problems.’
That does not mean that the
stigma of mental health has gone away – it still causes pain, isolation, loneliness
and fear – for those who suffer from it and their immediate family. Over a
quarter of people believe that celebrities talking openly about their mental health
has created an increasing awareness and understanding of the problem, while under
a quarter of employees believe that the Government's mental health strategy has
helped. But has it. It would seem that when government pulls out funding for
mental health services in the NHS, charities, counselling agencies, GP funding
for mental health and IAPT (improving access to psychological therapies)
Dr Wright, medical director
for Aviva, UK Health, said: ‘Mental health is high on the agenda for both
employees and employers in the UK. Employers have a vital role in helping to
support those who are suffering from depression, anxiety or other psychiatric
conditions.’
Kevin Friery, clinical director
of workplace wellness at UK recruitment firm, Right Management, said: ‘The
relationship between mental health and work has come into the spotlight of late
for a number of reasons. Not only are businesses beginning to gain a better
understanding of the positive benefits of engaging in employee wellness but
Government is moving more firmly to promote a shift from welfare to work, and
this inevitably means more people who may have been absent from work because of
mental ill-health will be encouraged to re-enter the workplace’.
Ultimately this means that the
government is determined to measure the costs-benefits ratio before funding any
mental health services that it regards as beneficial. Again, government ministers
allow themselves to be swayed by consultation with powerful lobby groups, NICE,
business leaders and mental health charities, including the people investing so
much research in the ‘quick-fix’ cure, lauded by CBT mental health
professionals. Surely, the standard has to be – does it work. Not does it have verifiable
research carried out by organisations with vested interests in winning tax
payers money for their services. And if it does work; who should decide. Well
surely it must be the patient, or the client seeking therapy. This is why I believe
we must use more self-report surveys with individual counsellors from all
backgrounds, therapies and theories on a national register who get paid by
results, judged on the basis of patient/client feedback, not the best most
popular representations and research carried out by organisations with vested
interests, winning government contracts.
1 Oct 2012
PTSD - enduringmind - Counselling in Twickenham
I was just reading the article about George Michael cancelling his tour of Australia after finally realising how much of a traumatic experience his illness had had on him, with the doctors diagnosing a form of PTSD. In case you're not aware, george Michael had a bout of life-threatening pneumonia and had been left emotionally scarred and traumatised by the incident. Trauma is described as:
a unique overwhelming experience of an event or enduring conditions, in which:
- The individual's ability to integrate his/her emotional experience is overwhelmed, or
- The individual experiences (subjectively) a threat to life, bodily integrity, or sanity.
This definition of trauma includes responses to powerful incidents like accidents, natural disasters, crimes, surgeries, deaths, and other violent events. It also includes responses to chronic or repetitive experiences such as child abuse, neglect, combat, urban violence, concentration camps, battering relationships, and enduring deprivation.
The statement by George Michael in the article said: "I have today announced the cancellation of the shows in Australia which breaks my heart. By way of explanation all I can say at this time is that since last year's illness I have tried in vain to work my way through the trauma that the doctors who saved my life warned me I would experience.
"They recommended complete rest and the type of post traumatic counselling which is available in cases like mine but I'm afraid I believed (wrongly) that making music and getting out there to perform for the audiences that bring me such joy would be therapy enough in itself."
To my mind many people try to ignore the symptoms in the form of panic attacks, hyper-arousal, flashbacks, avoidance behaviours, angry outbursts and dissociative states. These symptoms are often successful disguised by the person suffering anxiety/PTSD; who finds coping mechanisms but suffers with the impact for years afterwards. I remember my own experience of a life-threatening illness in Africa, when I contracted malaria.
I was very lucky to survive in many respects. I had stopped taking the preventative medicine after hearing rumours that it can make the symptoms of malaria incurable if contracted. I was also fortunate to receive Fansidar treatment only after a week or so of contracting malaria. But, I have to say it really obliterated me. I suffered constant aching, flu-like symptoms in my joints, sickness, diarrhoea, powerful headaches, hot and cold sweats and bouts of delirium I was lucky to make it back from Senegal alive after having to trek back to The Gambia 2000 km in a non-English speaking country, whilst effectively spending half my time in a dissociative state.
In the end the medicine cure was almost as bad as the illness itself. I lost 2-3 stone in weight and was barely able to keep solid food down. Thanks to my African friends, who gently and patiently nursed me back to health, I did survive. I had all kinds of fearful experiences after my recovery: nightmares, anxiety and a sense of panic. But again fortunately the traumatic symptoms did not last. I also have a number of family members who suffer partially with trauma and I worked with survivors at Portsmouth Area rape crisis Service; veterans and psychotic patients in a psychiatric hospital and clients with serious mental disorders at MIND. I love the work and I quickly specialised in psychological trauma of all-kinds.
As an psychotherapist, counsellor and anthropologist I am also fascinated by how different cultures/societies deal with collective trauma during war, persecution, migration and natural disasters. i have for example studied shamans, spirit mediums and faith healers who provide their communities with the means to heal their wounds. I would like to hear from anyone who could add to library of knowledge about the issue from anyone suffering/healing trauma from their own perspective. In the meantime, I run a counselling practice at Endurinmind, Counselling in Twickenham.
30 Sept 2012
Suicide Prevention - Enduringmind - Counselling in Twickenham
Bearing in mind we have just past the WHO World Suicide Prevention Day I wonder if there are any counsellors or clients for that matter who have recently experienced despair in themselves or others who wish to end their lives.
I have also been reflecting on the man, Tony Nicklinson, who had 'locked-in syndrome' who recently lost his court case but just gave up living recently. I wonder if we have the right as human beings to end our lives (sacred as they are), or indeed do we have the right to insist that those who suffer keep on living (given the sacred right to freewill).
And what does this say about those people who appear at our clinics who are 'at risk' of suicide. Must we be motivated to save them, or assist them in their act of ultimate withdrawal and freedom. if you wish to contribute to this comment here or on my website at:
I have also been reflecting on the man, Tony Nicklinson, who had 'locked-in syndrome' who recently lost his court case but just gave up living recently. I wonder if we have the right as human beings to end our lives (sacred as they are), or indeed do we have the right to insist that those who suffer keep on living (given the sacred right to freewill).
And what does this say about those people who appear at our clinics who are 'at risk' of suicide. Must we be motivated to save them, or assist them in their act of ultimate withdrawal and freedom. if you wish to contribute to this comment here or on my website at:
29 Sept 2012
Dirty Little
Savages
We were little children then.
Innocent as
newborn lambs, wild with mischief and giddy as the day is long. Our days spent
roaming the secret hinterlands of childhood. Catching a glance of sun on our
backs, as if we might flare up in moments. Such delicate, flimsy creatures and
ripe for the picking like the scorched red berries of autumn.
Our youth
so fleeting, it hurt.
By the end of summer we were gone
in a blaze of fury and ephemeral colour.
Back then, was a time of tall tales
and high spirits.
We were
drunk on thin air – shrill as skylarks soaring above the clouds; trapped in a
buzz of heady excitement. Newly liberated by the school vacations, we stripped bare
to the waist; exposing our pale, unblemished bodies to the fierce sun. Wandering
over moor and meadow: thrashing through the corn stalks, tramping over the scorched
earth and the knot of withered heather.
We were
masters of our own fate; rambling far and wide without a care in the world. It
was 1976: the middle of a heat wave. Temperatures soared to 39˚ C. On
those listless sultry days we would canals. We thought nothing of the risks to
life and limb. Until that is, the girl with the blood-spattered dress stumbled
into town.
She took us by surprise, alighting without
warning. Her jagged mouth in a silent scream; face streaked with terror. All
eyes turned on the intruder, as if she were a trick of the light or an
apparition that just walked out of the heat haze.
And
then as she passed down the cobbled-stone streets between the rows of terraced
houses and derelict mills, they dismissed her as if she had never existed. Children
went dashing in and out of the burst standpipes as the sun stood over us in
blinding miasma. Water penumbras obscuring our view under a spray of
multi-coloured rainbows. For awhile, no one dared move, until some kid bowled
into her, screaming blue murder.
His shriek shattering
those halcyon days of summer forever.
There would
be no peace in our rural idyll again. No façade of childlike innocence. Only
the fleeting memory of her skulking through the screaming wake of children;
dressed in a white linen smock. She had a fine fleece of hair, crisp blue eyes
and pale lush lips. But most folk only saw the blood and simply stood there
staring. Until she wandered over the brim of Ribbelsthwaite Hill and slipped
out of sight.
Not long
after she was taken into care. Abandoned into the fostering embrace of Elsie
Branning the old spinster who took up residence near Gartside’s Mill. At first,
knowledge of the girl set tongues aflame in the village. Then, she attracted a
whirlwind of notoriety throughout the Dales. And without fuss or fanfare we
marched on down to her shop, hands and faces pressed up to the windows, purveying
the odd collection of dressmaker’s dolls and naked oriental mannequins. Each one
with an eerie resemblance to a wax-dipped woman that chilled me to the bone.
I recall we
spent our afternoons crowding into the hidden recesses of her shop, captivated by
the lure of the waxen-faced doll. And then there was the woman herself – a rare
oddity – this middle-class spinster, regally attired in her ornate turban and silk
kimono. Made all the more exotic, by her eccentric mannerisms and brooding
charm.
Old Elsie
Branning and her guest soon became talk
of the town.
On days when business was slow, she
retired into her dressmaker’s workshop to make the same dress she had been
working for twenty years – a white-lace wedding dress she would never wear,
having lost her husband to-be in the War.
Counselling in Twickenham - enduringmind
If I could go through life as if it were a path of self-discovery I'd be a happy man. I'm a father now and most of my delight and pleasure comes from seeing the world through the eyes of my twin boys - Gabriel and Castor. The world from their perspective is one that was familiar to me as a child - filled with a sense of awe, mystery and wonder.
As a counsellor I am often looking for inspiration from my children to discover a new way of communicating, reflecting or seeing the world.
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