Kieran Megahey

Staying in control

As an emotional therapeutic counsellor I’ve recently found myself talking a lot about abusive relationships, mainly to people who don’t realise they’re in one. When I suggest it, they often say ‘Oh no, he never hits me’.  (Abusive relationships are more usually, but not exclusively, men abusing women; although I do know of some that are the other way around). The thing is that everyone recognises violence as abuse, but not necessarily anything else.  It comes as a surprise to many that abuse can fall into eight categories, and I often show this diagram to people to explain that. Now some of these behaviours can happen in perfectly healthy relationships where there’s no hint of abuse of any kind.  For example if one partner is happy to allow the other to make general decisions about where the shopping is done, how much is spent on it etc then that’s not abuse.  But if one partner is dictating to the other that they can only spend £20 a week on groceries and there are repercussions if they spend that in Tescos instead of Aldi, that is controlling and therefore abusive.  Telling you that arguments are always your fault or that you’re to blame if your partner drinks, takes drugs, loses their job or spends every night in the pub with their mates is controlling and therefore abusive. An abusive relationship may display all of these categories or only some of them, but the more abusive they are, the more categories will generally feature.  The overriding feature is that one partner is continually trying to control what the other does, and the controlled partner feels increasingly helpless and/or worthless.  Often the controlling partner will have convinced the other that they can’t possibly manage without them, usually because of some fundamental failure in them as a human. This is a horrible thing to do to someone and it’s normal to try to rationalise controlling and abusive behaviour as something else.  A lot of abused people genuinely believe it’s their fault, not only because they’re continually told so, but also because they can’t understand why else it would happen.  No kind, loving person would behave like that to someone unless they deserved it, would they? No they wouldn’t, but the key point is that abusers are not kind, loving people.  Maybe they were once, but they’re not now.  The reason for their controlling behaviour is a desire to control, and they know exactly what they’re doing.  Many are extremely good at it.  If you stand up to shouting, they’ll try crying instead.  If you dismiss crying, they’ll try emotional blackmail.  It’s all about what they want and nothing to do with what you want. Recently I was talking to someone who had been in a controlling relationship for decades. Their reason for staying was the children.  They didn’t want the children to come from a broken home, so they stayed and protected them as best they could.  Fortunately the controlling partner wasn’t interested in controlling the children as well, but that was just luck really.  If you’re thinking you can’t leave because of the children, you’re wrong (Sorry).  Not only that, but you’re setting them up for problems with relationships in later life. They may turn out mistrustful, or feeling unworthy, or even become controlling themselves.  You don’t stay because of the children; you leave because of them. Being in a relationship like this is not your fault.  Your partner may have tried controlling a dozen people before you, but you were the one their techniques worked on.  Maybe you were vulnerable or lacking confidence or felt unloved and responded to their initial charm. Abusers are very charming, otherwise nobody would have anything to do with them.  Since then you’ve been systematically and effectively trained to believe that the only place you can be is in that relationship.  But it’s not true.  However long you’ve been in abusive relationships, you can survive outside them. If you recognise your own partner in this description, you have two options.  Stay and continue being controlled, or leave.  You can’t fix them.  You can’t change your behaviour to be what they want you to be, unless of course you completely subject yourself to their control in every aspect of your life and character.  You can’t rekindle their love for you by being nice.  They probably won’t change, even if you threaten to leave them.  They might amend their behaviour for a while, but it will only be another form of control – another way to get what they want, which is for you to stay in the relationship.  They’ll fight back, perhaps using your children as leverage.  They’ll tell you that it will ruin their life, or they’ll kill themselves if you leave.  They won’t.  They’re doing whatever they think it will take to get you to abandon any thought of leaving them. If on the other hand you recognise yourself in the wheel and actually do want to change, that’s possible.  If you can work out why you’re controlling and what you get out of it, you can find other ways to get those things.  It’s hard on your own, but not impossible.  And a good counsellor like me is just as able to help an abuser as to help the objects of their abuse. Caeredwen is a counsellor, coach and physical therapist based in Coleford in the Forest of Dean. If you would like to contact her in confidence you can reach her at hands@magichandsbowen.co.uk or via her website at www.magichandscalmminds.com.

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Fear Explained

By Linda John. – www.therapystratforduponavon.co.uk Fear is at the basis of most disfunctions, it is at the route of all phobias and it creates the anxious state of an individual’s being. At its worse, fear can imprison us to the point of agoraphobia and compulsive urges to perform rituals, obsessions with tidiness and black and white concepts are a signpost to a deep routed fear. We do such things to comfort ourselves as a way of supressing the feelings that we cannot cope with.Emotional Therapy is there to help clients to feel the fear and address the pain of that moment when the emotions are released. The emotional therapeutic purpose is to support individuals by helping them to realise that because they are frightened it does not mean that they are ‘no good’ and that it is ok to admit to being frightened. The author Susan Jeffers who wrote the book ‘Feel the fear and do it anyway’ believes that there are three levels of fear. Level one defines the events that happen to us of which we have little or no control. Examples of this could be children leaving home, accidents, war, and retirement. Level one could also be situation where action is required that may stir up personal fears such as interviews, public speaking, making friends, losing weight, or changing careers. Level two takes it one step further and these fears touch every part of our everyday life. Fears such as rejection, failure, vulnerable, being conned, loss of image, etc. Such fears come from within us and indicate the state of mind and how we view ourselves and the world. In order to protect ourselves to avoid the fear feelings of rejection and so on, we draw on our survival tactics which we learned at a very young age during early childhood from events, people that have affected us. We pick up fears from our carers and this can often come in very innocent form for instance, when a mother tells her child walking into the school gates to ‘be a good girl’ or don’t be silly today, don’t do this, don’t do that. As we grow into adulthood the fears, we carry with us can sometimes inhibit the way we would like our lives to be and becomes a very negative aspect in our life. When an individual goes to an Emotional Therapist it is a cry out for that person to find their inner strength and power to enable them to deal with these negative feelings that are affecting their very soul.When you put the words ‘I can’t handle it’ in front of every fear you then have level three. The mother calling ‘be careful’ to the child at the school gates is what makes us believe that we will not be able to cope if something happens. Most often, the anticipation of something going wrong is far greater than the reality. When things do go wrong, we more often cope better than we thought. Wasting time and energy on things that may never happen is described as fearing the fear. If we face the fear the chances are that we will be able to handle it. Whereas if we turn our back on the fear, it can overwhelm us. Emotional Therapy supports the client through facing their fears, acknowledging that the fear is immensely powerful and accepting it. It is not the Emotional Therapists role to rationalise the clients out of their fears. The Emotional Therapy process is there to help the client to eventually support themselves by learning to sooth their inner child by treating the source, therefore eliminating the symptom.

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Being A Counsellor

By Caeredwen Gregson-Barnes. – https://www.magichandscalmminds.co.uk/ People often ask me how I do this job.  ‘Don’t you feel exhausted listening to people’s problems all day?’ they ask.  Or ‘How do you avoid getting frustrated with your clients?’ The truth is that it can be hard.  Not everyone can do it.  But it’s not as hard as you might think, and I’ve been trained to do it.  Basically, a big chunk of counselling training is about learning how and why people think, feel and act as they do.  Some of my clients have ways of looking at things, and do things, that you might say are weird or stupid; but I don’t think they’re stupid or weird.  Most of the time I can see exactly why they do those things and if I’d followed the same path through life they have, I’d probably do them too. Some people could never be counsellors, but then some people could never be weightlifters or ballet dancers or project managers so that’s ok.  Part of the training – or at least at the Academy of Emotional Therapeutic Counselling, where I trained – is about whether you’re the kind of person who can do it.  And during the course I changed a lot.   I used to be the most judgemental person alive, and yet now my whole ‘thing’ is that I’m non-judgemental.  It’s easy to say but not so easy to do.  A lot of people who say it really mean ‘I’m non-judgemental of people I like and agree with’.  That’s not difficult at all.  Genuinely not judging people who are doing things totally contrary to the way you think the world should work, that’s difficult. A lot of counsellors think it’s enough to just appear non-judgemental, but I don’t think that’s enough.  Clients tell me things that they’re deeply ashamed of, that they’ve never told anyone before, and the fear of someone judging them is the reason they haven’t told anyone else.   Just saying you don’t judge isn’t enough, you have to prove you don’t.  And you can’t prove you don’t do something if you are actually doing it. I’m not saying I’m in any way special in doing this.  I’m human just like everyone else, and I’ll rant about people driving like idiots or hoarding toilet paper like everyone else does.  But when I’m working, I go into a special mindset where I really don’t judge – and I learned how to do that during the training to become an Emotional Therapeutic Counsellor. A lot of the other things I learned while I was training to be a counsellor were about myself.  All the tools and techniques you learn to use on other people, you practice on yourself and your fellow students; so the course isn’t just learning, it’s self-development as well.  A lot of people, me included, start the course because we’ve been in the dark places and now we’re all better we want to help other people.  And very quickly in the course I realised that I wasn’t all better at all.  That’s deliberate.  You can’t be a good counsellor if you haven’t dealt with at least most of your own stuff.  It’s also true that the best way of telling someone how effective a particular technique is, is to use it on them so they see – and feel – it for themselves. So, this isn’t a job that anyone can do.  But it’s not as hard as people think.  In fact, it’s the most rewarding, satisfying, joyous thing I’ve ever done.   People tell me their problems all day long, but then I help them feel better about them, so it’s not depressing at all.  I feel blessed being able to do this work. If you are a good listener and enjoy helping others, you too could train to become a counsellor. For more information go to www.aetc.org.uk to find out more. Caeredwen is a counsellor, coach and physical therapist based in Coleford in the Forest of Dean. If you would like to contact her in confidence you can reach her at hands@magichandsbowen.co.uk or via her website at www.magichandscalmminds.com.

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Emotional Therapy

By Linda John. – www.therapystratforduponavon.co.uk Emotional Therapy is about hearing, expressing, and validating our feelings. Understanding that the head is for thinking and the body for feeling. Emotional Therapy is about feelings and how the head suppresses them, eventually the head cannot cope with our life’s unspoken feelings and something gives as our feelings erupt over the top causing us health problems and coping problems. Understanding why we feel a certain way and where that feeling derives from helps the healing process. Naming the emotion is of vital importance in our childhood as if we know the feeling i.e. fear, excitement, we can learn to cope from an early age, and this will allow us to be more centred adults. Emotional Therapy is a means of helping people who are in turmoil or crisis. Emotional and spiritually drained and unable to be the way they would like to be. Our emotions stop us or steer us in a way that we don’t want. Difficulties are caused by how we feel about ourselves, each other, and the world. When we are born, we have only two feelings, love and fear and as we grow, we learn from our parents how to deal with the feelings that arise and then we use the mind to deal with the feelings. The way in which our emotions are developed as children flavours our view of ourselves and others. If our emotions are supressed and unrecognised, they become our pain and discomfort which can ultimately lead to our illnesses such as depression, eating disorders and psychological distress. Research shows that emotional traumatising events in our lives affect our health and it is at such times that our bodies produce more white blood cells. Our mood affects the chemistry of the brain and the chemistry of the brain affects the mood we are in. In simplicity, this is well explained when you take into account that a baby is not born with depression. Sometimes drugs are taken to alter the chemistry in the brain which help to eliminate the symptoms. These drugs, however, don’t help the cause of the symptoms. Emotional Therapy helps the cause by way of healing the emotional wounds through a therapeutic process rather than a mind process using counselling techniques. Emotional Therapy helps to promote healing the original wounds by working through feelings and re energising the spirit. Through Emotional Therapy the individual can begin to understand why something is not right by exploring the emotional route rather than the analytical route. Ultimately, the individual is seeking to achieve wholeness. Emotional Therapy aims to develop a greater knowledge and strength so that we can cope with obstacles that are in the way, thus enriching our lives with more purpose.

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