therapy
Focused on the relationship between doctor and patient. Therapy is the process of self-discovery.
Me, myself and Emetophobia.
Chunder and Chips Saturday night out on the town use to fill me full of fear. I would hate standing at the taxi ranks waiting for my potential vomit smelling back seat. What would make it even worse is seeing people in the taxi rank blow chunks everywhere as if nothing has happened and get on with their life and maybe even chug down a few more shots or kerbab. If that was me I would be utterly panic stricken.
By Paul Evans5 years ago in Psyche
The Story Nobody Cares About.
"You understand that you are going to have to be on medication for the rest of your life?" That's what Dr. Foxton was asking me as I sat on a cold, folding dark brown chair. It was a small room that was way too bright, and my newly assigned psychiatrist was looking down at a piece of paper as he asked me ridiculous questions from a computer screen. This was something he was clearly used to. He probably has another 50 patients after me just ready to sign off on a drug to fix them right up. Maybe if he just so happens to guess the right drug on the right patient, he might save a life or two. Who knows? Maybe he will save us all.
By Hayley Smith5 years ago in Psyche
SELF-DIAGNOSIS
Patient: What’s up Doc? Can you tell me what's wrong with me? Why do I feel this way? Why doesn’t it stop? Therapist: Q. Patient: Self loathing you say. I could of diagnosed that. I’m constantly bitching about my own problems. Hating myself. Paranoid everyones trying to take advantage of me. Especially my friends. Nobody loves me. I barely exist.
By The Rambling Dropout5 years ago in Psyche
Individual Counseling For Adults
When you're working your way out of your depression and addiction life then some professional Individual counseling for adults can be helpful so you could work on your improvement with guidance. Through counseling, an individual goes through a process where he/she discover a new perspective of life and some self-awareness so they can move on to a better purposeful life and make them quit their addiction. Mental illness is a real thing and it should be deal-professional guidance.
By James Charles5 years ago in Psyche
Cheers, To My Therapist
If the quote "expect the unexpected" was a year, it would be 2020. We went from "new year, new me" to where is my mask? Nine months into this pandemic, I am still unwilling to accept the term "new normal." Celebrating birthdays alone isn't normal; standing outside of a grocery store to buy eggs isn't normal. Reminding my three your old niece to place the mask over her nose isn't normal and visiting our grandparents through a screen door isn't normal. That term, to me, means we have given up. I can openly admit that I didn't complete one new year's resolution, and I'm ok with that. This year introduced a ton of surprises politically, socially, and economically. Days tended to run together, and celebrating birthdays was a task within itself. But, one person who stood the test of time and was with me every step of the way through my surgery, COVID anxiety, re-introducing myself, and continuously talking me off the ledge was my therapist.
By teisha leshea5 years ago in Psyche







