The Therapy Guy
The Therapy Guy
Managing Our Mental Health
This is part two to the episode where I spoke about how mental health doesn't discriminate. Bad mental health can affect anyone, which is why its important that we know how we go about managing our mental health.
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#thetherapyguy
Hello, and welcome to the Therapy Guy.
It's great to have you listening and I
appreciate you spending the time with us today.
What I'm going to talk about is the
second part you that mental health doesn't discriminate.
A couple of episodes ago, I spoke about my own
mental health and I gave you a sort of brief
overview of how anyone, including therapists like ourselves, can experience
negative or mental health at times and how we can
all struggle in mental health doesn't discriminate? Yes.
Against anyone.
It doesn't matter whether you're rich or
poor, old or old or young yes.
It doesn't matter what job you have or anything else.
It can affect us all at different times.
One of the first things I would love
to say to you, really, I really appreciate
all the amazing feedback I got.
It was a really difficult episode for me to record and
I was quite nervous about how people would receive it.
But I've been amazed at your feedback and I really appreciate
you taking the time to listen to what I had to
say and for taking the time out to offer me some
support and sort of thank me, really for being honest.
I'm really pleased that it could help different people.
And my aim with all of these podcasts
is that it encourages people to open up
and have honest conversations about their mental health.
I'm hoping that will enable you to talk to
your friends, your colleagues, your family members, and obviously
learn for yourself about the services that are available,
but also to accept that we can have and
live with poor mental health.
We can exist, we can manage it in different ways.
Just because somebody has had a period in a
time when they've been struggling, it doesn't mean that
it has to affect the rest of their lives
or stop them from being who they are.
My mental health and what I
experienced, it didn't stop me.
I mean, obviously it did for a
while, yes, because it was quite overwhelming.
But if you look at where I am today and
it hasn't been easy, I appreciate it's taken a lot
of hard work and effort and it still does, but
it didn't stop me or define who I am.
If you've been given a diagnosis or a label from
a medical professional, it doesn't have to define you.
It doesn't have to stop you engaging in
what it is you want to do.
Obviously, your mental health can make things more
difficult, it can make things more challenging, it
can make some days seem long and tiresome.
But what I'd encourage us all to do, including myself,
is to try to find a way through that, try
to find a small step that we can do that
can help us at that particular moment, at that time.
I don't tend now to worry about what's going
to happen in five year or ten year plans.
People ask me quite often what my hopes
and dreams are for the future, where I
want to see my businesses going.
And I really struggle, as I
said before, to answer that question.
What I want to do and what I really
want to concentrate on is living, enjoying my friends
and family, my children, as much as I possibly
can and give them something back.
You got to remember that people don't really remember
what you give them, what you buy for them.
If you think of me, if I like it, do I remember
what I got for Christmas when I was ten years old?
Or do I remember the birthday
cards that people have given me?
Or the presence is I can't say that I do
quite a lot unless it's something obviously really big.
What I do remember is how people made me
feel and that is both positive and negative.
If you come into my life and you have a positive
effect and you make me feel some warmth and happiness and
love, then I'm going to remember that if you have a
negative impact on me and once again you'll remember that.
So please, for yourself, remember it's the feeling.
It's time.
I say to my children, and they do get
frustrated me at times when they ask what I
want for my birthday or for Father's Day for
Christmas, I never say I don't want anything.
Now that can be quite cliche and quite
classic appearance, but I really honestly mean it.
What I want and what I really want is just their time.
Yes.
So I don't want something that's going to cost
them any money or cost them to lose sleep
this night or thinking what to buy me.
I want to spend time with them, I want to
have that conversation, I want to have a coffee or
a walk, just something simple, something that we can remember
and something that I can make myself feel connected with
one of my children or all of my children and
friends and family at that time.
Things don't have to cost a
lot, those superficial things don't last.
The way you make people feel and the way
you feel about yourself, that lasts, that's what matters.
I still have days where I struggle and I
have to take care of myself and I'm just
a normal person, the same as you, me.
We all have good days and bad days.
What I try to do now, what I encourage you
all to do, is to keep talking, to keep communicating
with people in whatever way you can, to accept that
if you're having a bad day, it can be just
a bad day, just a bad morning or afternoon or
evening, whatever part of the day it is.
It doesn't have to define your day, your week.
Phrases I hear quite a lot in my practise
are it ruined my day, it ruined my week,
I've had a terrible week, et cetera, et cetera.
And when we start to dig a little bit more,
and I do do this myself, for myself, start to
actually break it down and say, how many days of
that week have you actually had ruined?
Yes, it's rarely all of them.
There's normally some times and moments when things haven't
been as bad, when that week hasn't been as
ruined, or you did sleep okay, or you managed
to speak or go to work on time.
That's what I ask you to look for.
I ask you to pay attention to.
That's what I do.
I look for different things that help me.
I look for the times that I see
the things that mean a lot to me.
So, for example, if I spend some time with my
daughter or my son or my grandchildren, if I go
for a walk with my wife, it means a lot.
It can help me just feel better.
One of my things that I rely on the most is
when I walk on the beach or next to the sea.
It's something that really rewards me.
There's just something about it.
It may seem quite corny or whatever, but
I can actually feel myself relaxing as I
walk along that water's edge for you.
I don't know what that is.
Finding it, looking after it, trying to do that
as much as possible, whether it's exercising, whether it's
watching TV or reading a book, doesn't matter.
What works for you works for you.
And I've got quite good now at trying to
separate out my feelings with other people's feelings.
It's really difficult to start with, but I found
that I used to soak up other people's feelings.
I had to try to make them happy.
I had to be perfect.
And it's really difficult to be perfect all the time.
It's really difficult to keep everybody
else happy all the time.
It's a huge pressure on yourself.
And so slowly, over time, your own
in my own mental health was suffering.
Now I try to be realistic and rational.
I don't set out to hurt anyone
or deliberately try to upset them.
That's different.
But what I do is if I say something
inadvertently or I do something unintentionally that upsets someone,
I've sort of realised that isn't my problem. Really.
For them, that's their problem.
At that time, I didn't do
anything intentionally and it's relieved me.
This pressure, this understanding that I now
have, that I can't make everyone happy.
I can't make everybody like me.
Not everybody will like what I do, what I say.
Some people will hate these podcasts.
Some people will really enjoy them.
Of course, we'd all rather that people like us
we know rather than that we could make everybody
happy and that everyone would love these podcasts.
I would love that.
But again, being rational and realistic, understanding
that it can't always be that way,
can have quite a liberating effect.
I used to work really hard at trying to
impress someone who was really close to me.
I spent years and years trying to seek their
approval, looking for them to say, you know what?
I'm proud of you. Well done.
To this day, I don't feel that I've really got it.
But now, for the past maybe five, six
years or so, I haven't needed it.
When I recognised that what it really mattered, what was
really important to me was that I was proud of
myself and I thought that I was okay myself.
It meant a lot and it relieved me a quite
a lot of pressure that I was putting on myself
to chase after this external approval from other people.
How do you get your approval?
Who gives it to you?
Do you really give it to yourself enough?
That's why I ask you.
Something that happened to me, and I can
discuss here, is that when I was training,
I took a great deal of effort.
I had to pass, I had to be the best I could be.
I had to try and get top marks because
I had a low self esteem at that time.
I was quite negative about me and
who I was as a person.
I had almost to prove to other
people that I was good enough.
And it tied into what I was saying earlier.
I really wanted certain people in my
life to sort of say, well done. Yes.
So all the way through my training, I got a
huge amount of pressure on myself to get it right.
You ask my wife, who was supporting me
all the way through, my children that were
supporting me all the way through my training.
I would spend days, weekends after weekend, just locked away,
trying to get that assignment perfect, trying to get that
information down on paper, to get that mark that I
needed to be the best I could.
Now, again, it took a huge effect.
It had a huge punishment.
Imagine the energy and the effort that
me and yourselves are putting into this.
What happened?
Well, at the end of the course, coming
right at the very end, I failed.
So I totally messed up.
My assignments, the exams,
everything weren't good enough.
I still remember to the point now where
I got that information, to where I stood.
How I felt at that time had a huge effect
on me and it reiterated how rubbish I was.
Everyone else was right and
obviously it reinforced this fact.
That why the person that I was trying to impress
the most, why should they be proud of me?
Why should they say, well done when I'm rubbish, right?
I can't even pass an exam.
I can't pass this course.
It's going to be no good.
I know.
And I can tell you guys that I
spent quite a few days feeling really low
in myself and it was a painful experience.
I can look back and it seems a bit strange now.
I can look back and I can say it's
one of the best experiences of my life too.
I learned a huge amount about myself during that time.
I was feeling as low as I could and beating myself up.
But when I come out to the side, I really
realised that I didn't have to impress anybody else.
I was trying too hard to get this piece of paper
to actually prove to other people that I was good enough.
No one needs to do that.
What I really wanted to do was
get that piece of paper for myself.
I needed it.
I wanted to do this course.
I wanted to be trained as a therapist, because I
knew that and I know that I'm good at my
job and I give everyone who comes into my Practise
the best possible service I can give them.
So I retook all everything I needed.
I resubmitted all of my assignments that I needed to, and
I got my piece of paper, that piece of paper, lots
of people hanging on the wall and everything else.
For me, I didn't need to.
I felt quite liberated, quite free.
I didn't need to prove it.
That piece of paper is to prove
to other people I'm good enough.
I don't need it to prove to myself, so
I don't need to hang it on my wall.
I often say, if you need me to prove that
I'm good enough as a therapist, I'll come around your
house and I'll hang it on your wall for you.
Just have to think about why you
do some of the things you do.
Is there a different way you could do it?
Who are you trying to keep happy?
It sounds very corny and very cliche, I appreciate.
But without your own internal happiness, without you
doing stuff for yourself, how are we ever
going to make anybody else happy?
It's always going to end badly.
So, for you guys, I hope this helps in some way.
Try to look at what makes you happy, what
support, who does give you the support you need?
We sometimes overlook them too.
We often notice the people that are saying
things about us, giving us negative feedback.
We don't tend to notice the ones
that are there through thick and thin.
I appreciate that you've got that.
And you can also trust yourself.
You are good enough.
You can do this for yourself.
You do deserve to be happy and you
deserve to feel relaxed in who you are.
I hope you've enjoyed this podcast and I may do a
part three at some point in the next future episodes.
But for now, as always, if you've got
any questions or feedback, please let me know.
I'm more than happy to listen and talk
to you individually, but that's it for today.
Take care of yourselves.
I'm going to sign off for now and talk to you later.
Thanks for listening. The therapy guy.