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Tag Archives: medicalisation of human experience
The descent experience: metaphor for serious illness – Sheila Joshi
The descent experience: metaphor for serious illness Click on the link above to visit Monica Cassani’s wonderful, resource-rich site, http://www.beyondmeds.com, for this piece by Sheila, exploring descent myths in the context of serious illness or distress. ‘In the Fall of 2010, … Continue reading →
Posted in acceptance, actualizing tendency, awakening, consciousness, cultural questions, emotions, empowerment, encounter, fear, identity, immanence, Joseph Campbell, Jung, loss, meaning, metaphor & dream, Monica Cassani, power and powerlessness, presence, psychiatric drugs, psychiatry, psychosis, sacred illness, sadness & pain, schizophrenia, self, spirituality, surrender, transformation
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Tagged affordable counselling exeter, annihilation, archetypes, ascending soul, biochemical model, breakthrough experiences, Carl Jung, contribution to the world, counselling exeter, counsellor Exeter, counsellors Exeter, dark night of the soul, death and rebirth, death metaphor, death myths, Demeter, descent experience, descent myths, descent narratives, disembodiment, dismantling of identity, dismantling of self, economic factors in health, Enki, enlightenment, evolving soul, expanding understanding, experience of suffering, experiencing darkness, facing darkness, falling apart, fear as gateway to enlightenment, finding illumination, finding wholeness, giving your gifts, Hero with a 100 Faces, Hero with a Thousand Faces, hero’s journey, holistic being, human psychology, human suffering, illness and metaphor, Inanna, initiation, invisible world, Ishtar, Jack Kornfield, Joseph Campbell, journey myths, journey to otherworld, letting go, letting go of attachments, letting go of old habits, letting go of the old, listening to yourself, longing for the Divine, low cost counselling exeter, magical reality, meaning of suffering, medicalisation of distress, medicalisation of emotion, medicalisation of feeling, medicalisation of human experience, medicalisation of sadness, medicalising distress, medicalization of distress, medicalization of emotion, medicalization of feeling, medicalization of human experience, medicalization of sadness, medicalizing distress, meeting darkness, metamorphosis, metaphor and myth, metaphysical reality, Monica Cassani, mystic experience, mystical, myth and metaphor, neurological rewiring, occult help, otherworld journey, Palace Gate Counselling Service, Palace Gate Counselling Service Exeter, perceiving the Divine, Persephone, person centred counselling exeter, personal darkness, personal shadow, political factors in health, presence, psych med neuro damage, psych recovery, psychotropic drugs, psychotropic toxins, purging, purification, re-embodiment, Red Book, Red Book Dialogues, releasing old habits, response to misfortune, sacred illness, shamanic initiation, Sheila Joshi, social conditioning, soul passage, soul searching, spirits of the dead, spiritual insight, spiritual reality, St John of the Cross, staying present, surrender, transformation, transitional experiences, transpersonal experience, trials and ordeals, trusting the desert, underlying reality, what is illness, what is sickness, what is suffering, www.beyondmeds.com, www.palacegatecounselling.org.uk, yearning for the Divine
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What Chester Bennington’s death tells us about mental health awareness
https://doctorgoatblog.wordpress.com/2017/07/22/what-chester-benningtons-death-tells-us-about-mental-health-awareness/ Click on the link above for this wise, heartful post by an anonymous blogger who identifies as Dr Goat. This expresses much of how we make sense of human distress at this service. There is (for example) no evidence … Continue reading →
Posted in anti-depressants, anti-psychotics, borderline personality disorder, CBT, childhood abuse, community, cultural questions, cultural taboos, diagnoses of bipolar, Disconnection, DSM, emotions, empowerment, ethics, external locus, healing, hearing voices, interconnection & belonging, medical model, non-directive counselling, Palace Gate Counselling Service, paradigm shift, perception, political, psychiatric abuse, psychiatric drugs, psychiatry, psychosis, relationship, sadness & pain, schizophrenia, self concept, self esteem, shame, shaming, therapeutic growth, therapeutic relationship, trauma, values & principles, violence, vulnerability, working with clients
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Tagged 1 in 4, accessing support, accumulated distress, ACES, addiction, addressing past trauma, Adverse Childhood Exeperiences, adverse circumstances, adverse events, affordable counselling exeter, anxiety, anxiety and depression, art and trauma, being functional, bereaved by suicide, Big Phama, biomedical intervention, biomedical reductionism, building community, bullying, CBT, CBT as temporary fix, changing behaviour without addressing causes, chemical imbalance theory, Chester Bennington, childhood trauma, cognitive behavioural therapy, collective responsibility to each other, continuing adversity, counselling exeter, counsellor Exeter, counsellors Exeter, coward’s way out, cuts to health and social care, dealing with abuse, dealing with neglect, dealing with violence, death by suicide, depression, depression as brain disorder, depression as disease, depression as illness, do mental health problems go away, DSM5, economic productivity as measure of worth, effect of bereavement, effect of trauma on health, effect of trauma on well being, emotional states, empathy, enhancing community, enhancing mental health, enhancing relationship, enhancing well being, equating medical with valid, expanded diagnostic criteria, expanding diagnostic criteria, expressing grief, expressing sadness, expressing sorrow, feeling ashamed, feeling embarrassed, feeling shame, fight flight freeze, grief process, grieving process, impact of bereavement, impact of trauma, impact of traumatic experience, individual pathology, interbeing, interconnection, interdependence, invalidating distress, judgemental, Linkin Park, loneliness, long term recovery, low cost counselling exeter, manifestations of mental distress, medical pathology, medical validation of distress, medicalisation of distress, medicalisation of emotion, medicalisation of feeling, medicalisation of human experience, medicalisation of sadness, medicalization of distress, medicalization of emotion, medicalization of feeling, medicalization of human experience, medicalization of sadness, mental distress, mental health awareness, mental health problems, mental health recovery, mental health stigma, mental health support, natural human reactions, need for recovery time, need for rest, need for time to adjust, normal emotions, not functioning, ongoing adversity, over medicalisation, Palace Gate Counselling Service, Palace Gate Counselling Service Exeter, parity of esteem, past trauma, person centred counselling exeter, person’s context, post traumatic stress, promoting mental health, promoting well being, psychiatric reductionism, public grief, pull yourself together, reactions to suicide, reductionism in biomedical model, relationship breakdown, relationship failure, responding to distress, sexual abuse, shame, social causes of mental distress, social causes of mental health problems, suicide is selfish, suicide narrative, underlying issues, understanding mental health, unresolved distress, vulnerability, whole person, www.palacegatecounselling.org.uk
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‘Is mental illness real?’ Jay Watts
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2017/apr/12/is-mental-illness-real-google-answer?CMP=share_btn_tw Click on the above link for this interesting and important piece in the Guardian’s ‘Comment is free’ section, showing how these perceptions are gradually making it into the mainstream media…which is encouraging. For the writer, Jay still speaks in … Continue reading →
Posted in anti-depressants, anti-psychotics, autonomy, bullying, civil rights, compassion, cultural questions, diagnoses of bipolar, emotions, empathy, equality, ethics, external locus, family systems, generational trauma, healing, hearing voices, internal locus of evaluation, kindness & compassion, medical model, paradigm shift, perception, political, power, power and powerlessness, psychiatric abuse, psychiatric drugs, psychiatry, psychosis, research evidence, risk, sadness & pain, schizophrenia, shadow, trauma, violence, vulnerability
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Tagged adverse childhood events, adverse childhood experience, Adverse Childhood Experience studies, adverse social conditions, affordable counselling exeter, alienation, anxiety, biased research outcomes in mental health, biased research outcomes in psychiatry, Big Pharma, biomedical intervention, biomedical model, biomedical reductionism, bipolar affective disorder, bullying, chemical imbalance myth, childhood adversity, childhood adversity and mental health, childhood experience, childhood sexual abuse, childhood trauma, cognitive dissonance, competitive culture, conceptualising distress as an illness, conceptualizing distress as an illness, counselling exeter, counsellor Exeter, counsellors Exeter, CSA, dangers of antipsychotics, denying people’s truth, depression, disease and disorder model, displacement, distress and inflammation, distress and trauma, early separation, embodied response, emotional abuse, emotional neglect, environmental causes of distress, family interventions, family systems, hyper alert, hyper vigilance, inner world, invalidation, Is mental illness real, Jay Watts, just like any other illness narrative, Lived Experience, low cost counselling exeter, making sense of human suffering, making sense of suffering, medical reductionism, medicalisation of distress, medicalisation of emotion, medicalisation of feeling, medicalisation of human experience, medicalisation of sadness, medicalising childhood, medicalising distress, medicalization, medicalization of distress, medicalization of emotion, medicalization of feeling, medicalization of human experience, medicalization of sadness, medicalizing childhood, medicalizing distress, mental health, mental health constructs, mental health policy, mental health stigma, mental illness, mental illness constructs, neurobiological paradigm, over prescription of psychotropic drugs, overprescription of antidepressants, Palace Gate Counselling Service, Palace Gate Counselling Service Exeter, paradigm shift, patriarchal model, patriarchy, person centred counselling exeter, person-centered, person-centred, pharmaceutical industry, physical abuse, politics of oppression, power relationships, privileging the biological, psychiatric model, psychiatric reductionism, psychosocial model, Recovery in the Bin, reductionism, reductionism in biomedical model, reductionism in psychiatry, reductive neurobiological paradigm, reductive paradigm, schizophrenia, scientific reductionism, separation, serotonin imbalance myth, sexual abuse in childhood, social effects of inequality, social effects of poverty, social exclusion, social factors in human distress, social inequalities, social norms, social problems, structural inequalities, structural oppressions, talking about mental health, toxic families, toxic injustice, toxic stress, unconscious bias, unequal power relationships, us and them, vulnerability, working with borderline, working with BPD, working with psychosis, working with schizophrenia, www.palacegatecounselling.org.uk
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‘Let’s talk about how we address mental health’ Dainius Pūras
http://www.ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=21480&LangID=E Click on the above link to visit this U.N. site, for this address by Dainius Pūras on World Health Day. He is a psychiatrist, and representative of the United Nations Human Rights Office of the High Commissioner. If you are … Continue reading →
Posted in anti-depressants, anti-psychotics, autonomy, borderline personality disorder, civil rights, client as 'expert', community, compassion, cultural questions, diagnoses of bipolar, Disconnection, DSM, emotions, empowerment, ethics, external locus, Gender & culture, healing, hearing voices, interconnection & belonging, medical model, objectification, paradigm shift, perception, political, power, psychiatric abuse, psychiatric drugs, psychiatry, psychosis, research evidence, sadness & pain, scapegoating, schizophrenia, shadow, shame, shaming, therapeutic growth, therapeutic relationship, trauma, vulnerability, working with clients
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Tagged adverse childhood events, adverse childhood experience, adverse social conditions, affordable counselling exeter, biased research outcomes in mental health, biased research outcomes in psychiatry, Big Pharma, biomedical intervention, biomedical model, biomedical reductionism, childhood adversity, childhood adversity and mental health, childhood experience, childhood sexual abuse, coercive drug treatment, coercive psychiatric treatment, counselling exeter, counsellor Exeter, counsellors Exeter, CSA, Dainius Pūras, disease and disorder model, emotional abuse, forcible drug treatment, forcible psychiatric treatment, gender inequality, low cost counselling exeter, making sense of human suffering, making sense of suffering, medical reductionism, medicalisation of distress, medicalisation of emotion, medicalisation of feeling, medicalisation of human experience, medicalisation of sadness, medicalising childhood, medicalising distress, medicalization, medicalization of distress, medicalization of emotion, medicalization of feeling, medicalization of human experience, medicalization of sadness, medicalizing childhood, medicalizing distress, mental health policy, neurobiological paradigm, over prescription of psychotropic drugs, Palace Gate Counselling Service, Palace Gate Counselling Service Exeter, paradigm shift, patriarchal model, patriarchy, person centred counselling exeter, person-centered, person-centred, pharmaceutical industry, physical abuse, politics of oppression, power relationships, psychiatric model, psychiatric reductionism, psychosocial model, reductionism, reductionism in biomedical model, reductionism in psychiatry, reductive neurobiological paradigm, reductive paradigm, scientific reductionism, sexual abuse in childhood, social effects of inequality, social effects of poverty, social exclusion, social inequalities, social norms, social problems, talking about mental health, toxic stress, unequal power relationships, vulnerability, working with borderline, working with BPD, working with psychosis, working with schizophrenia, www.palacegatecounselling.org.uk
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Contracting & suicidal thoughts, a person-centred perspective
This is the text of a recent email to our therapists on these themes. We are aware of the very different way in which these issues are addressed within the NHS/similar medicalized contexts in health and social care – and the extent to which … Continue reading →
Posted in accountability, actualizing tendency, autonomy, client as 'expert', clients' perspective, consent, core conditions, cultural questions, empowerment, encounter, ethics, fear, internal locus of evaluation, medical model, non-conforming, non-directive counselling, Palace Gate Counselling Service, paradigm shift, perception, person centred, person centred theory, political, power, power and powerlessness, presence, relationship, risk, suicide, supervision, therapeutic relationship, trauma, trust, values & principles, vulnerability, working with clients
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Tagged actualising, actualizing, affordable counselling exeter, being with difficult, being with uncomfortable feeling, breaking confidentiality, Brian Thorne, client autonomy, client confidentiality, coercion in counselling, coercion in mental health, coercion in therapy, confidentiality, congruence, contracting in counselling, core conditions, counselling confidentiality, counselling contracts, counselling exeter, counselling supervision, counselling training, counsellor Exeter, counsellors Exeter, counter cultural therapy, creating trust, directivity, disease and disorder model, encounter, external locus, incongruence in therapy, internal locus, low cost counselling exeter, medicalisation of distress, medicalisation of emotion, medicalisation of feeling, medicalisation of human experience, medicalising distress, medicalization of distress, medicalization of emotion, medicalization of feeling, medicalization of human experience, medicalizing distress, Palace Gate Counselling Service, Palace Gate Counselling Service Exeter, person centered contracting, person centred contracting, person centred counselling exeter, person-centered, person-centred, personhood, psychotherapy supervision, safe space, self-determination, self-direction, suicidal clients, suicidal ideation, suicidal ideation and person centered, suicidal ideation and person centred, suicidal thoughts, supporting a suicidal client, therapeutic relationship, therapy supervision, therapy training, trusting the client, what to do if client talks about suicide, written contracting, www.palacegatecounselling.org.uk
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Brian Thorne on power in person-centred therapy
In this passage, Brian is looking at a 1986 paper by Jerold Bozarth and Barbara Temaner Brodley, exploring what they saw as supporting assertions implicit in Carl Rogers’ 19 propositions – and which may therefore be included in a person … Continue reading →
Posted in Brian Thorne, client as 'expert', cultural questions, empowerment, encounter, equality, ethics, external locus, internal locus of evaluation, medical model, non-directive counselling, person centred, person centred theory, political, power, power and powerlessness, psychiatry, relationship, therapeutic growth, therapeutic relationship, values & principles, working with clients
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Tagged 19 Propositions, abdicating control, abdicating power, abdication of control, abdication of power, affordable counselling exeter, Barbara Temaner Brodley, Brian Thorne, Carl Rogers, controlling, counselling exeter, counsellor Exeter, counsellors Exeter, directiveness in therapy, empowering, equalising, equalising in therapy, equalising power, equalizing, equalizing in therapy, equalizing power, Jerold Bozarth, low cost counselling exeter, medicalisation of distress, medicalisation of emotion, medicalisation of human experience, medicalization of distress, medicalization of feeling, medicalization of human experience, mutuality, mutuality in counselling, mutuality in therapy, non directive, non-directive therapy, Palace Gate Counselling Service, Palace Gate Counselling Service Exeter, person centred counselling exeter, person-centered, person-centred, power imbalance, power in therapy, power seeking, pursuit of control, sharing power, therapeutic alliance, therapeutic process, therapeutic relationship, www.palacegatecounselling.org.uk
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This Is What A Suicidal Crisis Looks Like From The Inside – Alaina Mabaso
http://www.depressionarmy.com/ourblog/2015/8/2/this-is-what-a-suicidal-crisis-looks-like-from-the-inside Very powerful piece by Alaina, for which many thanks. I know this landscape of bleak despair, and the urge to die. Since I was a teenager, I have visited it from time to time. During my training as a … Continue reading →
Posted in blaming, Carl Rogers, communication, compassion, conditions of worth, congruence, consciousness, core conditions, cultural questions, cultural taboos, Disconnection, dying, emotions, empathy, encounter, external locus, fear, friendship, grief, growth, human condition, kindness & compassion, loneliness, organismic experiencing, power and powerlessness, presence, psychiatry, relationship, sadness & pain, shadow, suicide, therapeutic relationship, trauma, violence, vulnerability
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Tagged affordable counselling exeter, Alaina Mabaso, authenticity, being there, blame, Carl Rogers, Come Out of The Dark, counselling exeter, counsellor Exeter, counsellors Exeter, crying, depression, depressive episode, discrimination, disease model, disorder model, distress, empathy, extreme emotion, extreme psychological states, fear, friendship, grief, Helplessness, insomnia, isolating, isolation, Johns Hopkins, Jonathan Rottenberg, judgment, kindness, loneliness, loss, loss of interest, low cost counselling exeter, medicalisation of distress, medicalisation of human experience, medicalization of distress, medicalization of human experience, mental illness, mood disorder, numbing, numbing psychological pain, oversensitive, pain, Palace Gate Counselling Service, Palace Gate Counselling Service Exeter, person centred counselling exeter, person-centered, person-centred, powerlessness, psychiatric hospitalisation, psychiatric paradigm, Psychiatry, psychological pain, realness, risk, selfish, severe depression, shame, stigma, suicidal crisis, suicidal thoughts, suicide, suicide as escape, survival, terror, unhappiness, withdrawal, www.palacegatecounselling.org.uk
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Irvin Yalom on dangerous labels, and becoming a therapist
“What? ‘Borderline patients play games’? That what you said? Ernest, you’ll never be a real therapist if you think like that. That’s exactly what I meant earlier when I talked about the dangers of diagnosis. There are borderlines and there … Continue reading →
Posted in core conditions, empathy, empowerment, encounter, equality, ethics, external locus, person centred theory, presence, therapeutic growth, therapeutic relationship, working with clients, Yalom
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Tagged affordable counselling exeter, becoming a therapist, borderline personality disorder, BPD, core conditions, counselling exeter, counsellor Exeter, counsellors Exeter, diagnosis and disorder model, diagnosis model, disease model, Irvin Yalom, judgment in therapist, judgment in therapy, labelling clients, labelling people, labels in therapy, low cost counselling exeter, Lying on the Couch, medicalisation of distress, medicalisation of human experience, medicalization of distress, medicalization of human experience, Palace Gate Counselling Service, Palace Gate Counselling Service Exeter, person centred counselling exeter, personhood, therapist development, working with clients, www.palacegatecounselling.org.uk
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The Council for Evidence-Based Psychiatry
http://cepuk.org/ Follow the link to the website for CEP. In the writer’s view, anyone working in the therapeutic/allied world has an ethical responsibility to be aware of, and evaluate, these arguments. CEP has some seriously intelligent, aware and informed people … Continue reading →
Posted in abuse, accountability, anti-depressants, anti-psychotics, CEP, consent, core conditions, cultural questions, diagnoses of bipolar, DSM, empathy, encounter, ethics, external locus, growth, healing, iatrogenic illness, Joanna Moncrieff, medical model, MHRA, neuroscience, non-directive counselling, Palace Gate Counselling Service, paradigm shift, perception, person centred, political, power and powerlessness, presence, psychiatric abuse, psychiatric drugs, psychiatry, psychosis, regulation, research evidence, Robert Whitaker, schizophrenia, suicide, therapeutic growth, therapeutic relationship, transformation, values & principles, violence, working with clients
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Tagged affordable counselling exeter, antidepressants, antidepressants and placebo, antidepressants research, Big Pharma, burying of psychiatric drug trial data, CEP, CEPUK, challenging DSM, chemical imbalance myth, chemical imbalance theory of depression, core conditions, Council for Evidence Based Psychiatry, counselling exeter, counsellor Exeter, counsellors Exeter, depression, DSM, DSM utility, DSM validity, ICD chapter 5, lack of scientific basis for psychiatry, lack of scientific basis in psychiatry, low cost counselling exeter, Manipulation of psychiatric drug trial data, medicalisation of distress, medicalisation of emotion, medicalisation of feeling, medicalisation of human experience, medicalization of distress, medicalization of emotion, medicalization of feeling, medicalization of human experience, medicating children, mental health disorders, MHRA, MHRA and conflicts of interest, misdiagnoses in psychiatry, misdiagnosis in psychiatry, over prescription of psychiatric drugs, Palace Gate Counselling Service, Palace Gate Counselling Service Exeter, person centred counselling exeter, person-centered, person-centred, personality change, prescribing psychiatric drugs to children, psychiatric diagnosis, psychiatric disorders, psychiatric drug outcomes, psychiatric drug research, psychiatric drug withdrawal, psychiatric drugs and suicide, psychiatric drugs and violence, psychiatric drugs side effects, psychotropic drug withdrawal, psychotropic drugs, therapeutic process, therapeutic relationship, validity of psychiatric diagnostic system, www.palacegatecounselling.org.uk
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