The Therapy Guy
The Therapy Guy
Welcome back! Did you miss me?
Hi and welcome back I'm sorry I have been away, did you miss me? I bet you did really it ok we won't tell anyone?
I have finally allowed the Covid-19 situation to catch up with me and had to take some time off from working through the stress and anxiety the situation has caused me.
In this episode, I discuss the recent events and the effect this situation has had on me and what I hope to change in the future.
I hope you like it, it is the true first cut unedited version.
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Hello, and welcome back to the therapy Guy.
It's been a while since I've spoken with you and
I have to apologise for the people that do listen
regularly that I've been away just for a while. Today
I'd like to explain about what's been
happening over the past few weeks.
Why I haven't been updating or keeping you as
informed is what I'd hoped in the past, obviously
a few weeks in during this recent outbreak of
the COVID-19, there's lots been going on.
Initially I found the whole Covid 19 outbreak and
the lockdown process extremely stressful and it was coming
out of the blue for a lot of people,
a lot of businesses, and for myself, obviously.
I was really concerned about the welfare
of my staff and my colleagues and
the people that we help and support.
I found it really difficult that we couldn't continue
to see the people we support face to face,
help them in the way that they needed, as
I knew that there were quite a few people
in difficult situations that were using our service.
So initially there was a lot of anxiety in
myself trying to manage the thoughts about business, the
thoughts about finances, and obviously the responsibilities and the
pressure of that that I felt for other people.
I'm not trying to say that I've had it
worse than anybody else, there's lots of people who
experienced some terrible things, some loss in bereavement and
terrible times in hospital with a COVID-19 and all
the fantastic key workers have been working exceptionally hard.
So I'm not trying to compare myself to anybody.
All I'm trying to do here is relay maybe
some of the reasons why I haven't been obviously
with you for the past few weeks.
Now, it may seem strange that for the first
couple of months I was here week after week,
obviously giving you updates, giving you information.
And even during my last podcast about three weeks ago,
I was sort of giving you a rundown of the
things we had planned and coming up in the future
around mental health and well being, asking for your support
and feedback on what sort of information and what areas
you would like us to cover that you felt would
help you in the coming months.
I really appreciated all the people that took the
time out of their day to respond to us
and send us some great feedback and information.
And I always welcome people's comments, good and bad.
The bad comments help me improve and help
keep me on my toes and obviously we
all love receiving that great feedback.
So for the first sort of month I was really
swept up in the whole concept of trying to survive.
Like a lot of people, a lot of people were businesses.
We unfortunately had to furrow some people.
We had to unfortunately make some people redundant.
This is an area that I really struggled with.
These people had employed and used to build
the business and they were an integral part
of the business as we grew.
And here I was unfortunately in this position where I
didn't know if the business was viable and I was
going to have to let them go and obviously I
knew the impact that would have on them and their
families and possibly obviously their future employment given the situation.
So it was a really difficult time for me and
I really struggled and I had a lot of anxiety
and stress about how to do it, when to do
it, and in what way that I could do it.
That would ease the sort of burden for my colleagues.
Fortunately, my colleagues are as amazing as ever.
The people that I had to make
redundant understood and they thankfully worked with
me, which helped me through that period.
But it was a very difficult period and I think
it taught me a lot about myself and how I
handle those sort of things and how in the future
I want to deal with people and bring them into
the business and support them in different ways.
It's very easy to get tied up in
the anxiety and the stress, the situation.
The media, I feel, didn't help.
They were sensationalising.
Quite a lot of information, focusing obviously at
times, rightly so, on a lot of the
negative outcomes and statistics around, obviously the deaths
that we were experiencing during the outbreak.
But my own worries as well as the business was for
my family and not being able to see my family.
Like lots of you had a
really big impact on me initially.
As I said the first month or so, I was swept
up with keeping the businesses going, trying to plan what was
going to happen, the what ifs and maybe of the future.
I'm trying to deal with this unknown
sort of thing that was happening to
myself and everyone else, compounded with that.
I love my family, I love seeing
my children, I love seeing my grandchildren.
And I found that really difficult being isolated away
and told that I couldn't see them, I couldn't
actually experience them visiting us or me visiting them.
I appreciate, as I said, lots, thousands and hundreds of
thousands of people were in the same situation and I'm
sure you'd all be saying the same thing.
I think for me it was one of the
most difficult areas outside of the business side of
things that I've had to deal with.
It's really made me think about the importance of
what I'm actually doing, why I'm working so hard
in the business, why I'm pushing as much as
I do and the hours that I do now.
I've had time where I've had this forced stop and
for me it was been a useful learning experience.
Although I've had a bit of a delayed
reaction, which hence the reason why I've had
the past few weeks off, really.
I focused quite heavily initially on just trying to
manage everything, trying to do what I could.
I was trying to sort the business out, get
everything up to where I wanted it to be
and I didn't really give enough time, I just
tried to keep myself busy as a distraction technique.
Now I've done almost to my to do list.
Otherwise, like everybody else's, that's never ending.
It's really gives me time to sit
down and focus on the why.
What am I doing this for?
What is the reason I started my own business?
What is the effect that it's having on
myself and my family who are around me?
Like a lot of people, I love and adore my family,
it was one of the reasons that I started the business
was because I wanted to work when I wanted to, I
wanted to spend more time with my family and I suppose
most small business owners like myself will tell you the same
thing, it really works out that way.
So having this time where I've been sort of
cut off from the majority of my family and
forced to actually think about the reasons and what
reasons why we're doing what we do.
I think it's been a difficult but really useful experience
and I hope some of you have found a similar
experience and had similar situations going on where you've learnt
a little bit about yourself and maybe hopefully going to
start doing things differently in the future.
I know my aim in the future is going
to try to spend more of that quality time.
Now, before I am definitely a culprit of this.
It was very much, very quick, sort of dropping,
see people dash off, focus on what was important,
going places, doing things, sort of having an entertainment,
but always with a cost, where I think the
advantage of this situation that we've been in has
forced me to realise that, as I always knew,
that the best things really don't cost anything.
Spending time with my loved ones, seeing my
family, my children, my grandchildren and my lovely
wife, spending time just being with them, talking,
walking, being outside, that is invaluable to me
and I can't really put a cost on
it, although it's really been a delayed reaction.
Yes, it took me a couple of months to catch
up because of that distraction I had at the start
and the panic I felt about my businesses surviving.
I think it's been a really useful thing
I had to go through that process.
My personal way of coping with stress
and anxiety is to keep myself busy.
I've suddenly become super active to try
but work my way through it.
Now, you might find that strange that a therapist is actually saying
that the first thing I do is not talk about it, not
deal with it, but it is my way of managing.
I cope with it better that way.
It gives me time almost to work it out for
myself so that I can then sit and speak with
people, I can then make sense of it.
I just give myself enough time to deal with things.
So what I'd encourage yourself to do is do the
same, is when something happens, when a situation happens, try
to give yourself some time to actually think about the
impact, think in a rational way if possible.
Again, that sometimes takes a little bit of
time to get to that rational point.
I know for me it did at the start of this,
but it helps to have that moment away, that quiet reflection,
and it helps to give you this new balanced approach.
My life has been a bit of a
roller coaster at times and there's lots that's
happened in my life, both good and bad.
And again, I'm not saying mine is
any worse or better than anybody else's.
We each have our own things going on.
But I do know even more as I get older, as
I become to appreciate the people that are around me more,
start to value things differently, start to realise how lucky I
do have it at times, to have that family around me
now who I can rely on and the friends that I
have and my colleagues who I can rely on.
It's vitally important and I want to make sure that another
thing that I'm going to do is make sure they know
how grateful I am and how thankful I am for what
they do for me in the way that they support me
as we move forward into the future.
My new mindset, obviously, like I would say, a lot of
people, is to try to get this work life balance.
We hear all these cliche comments,
but what does that really mean?
What is that for you?
What is your work life balance?
For a lot of us, we are unable to get that
balance without working and acquiring the money and trying to do
things to provide even the essentials for a family.
For me, I think what I'm going to do is
mostly not my hours of work isn't going to change.
I really enjoy the work that I
do, I enjoy the client work.
I know my colleagues here love working with clients.
I also enjoy running my business, I
enjoy the challenges that it brings.
It can be stressful at times, but I
think I'm starting to thrive on that challenge
now as I see things differently.
So for me, the work life balance comes
from the time off I do take.
I want to make it as special as possible.
I want to start concentrating on what I want to do
just as much as what other people want to do.
I want to spend it with more people who are
supporting and encouraging me, rather than the people that take
things from me and ask things of me.
I wonder how many of you have maybe gone through
a bit of a process like this and I want
to change things and change the people around all the
things that you do from now on.
I'm really interested in hearing some of your
feedback, some of the comments that you have
on how this whole situation has changed you,
either for the good or the worst. Yes.
It doesn't make no difference.
I definitely have been affected, like a lot of
other people, even though I haven't been directly affected
by the cold with, thankfully, and I know I've
been myself and my family have been extremely lucky
not to have been affected by this.
My thoughts always go out to the people
that obviously have lost relatives, have been through
really difficult times, people have lost their jobs
and lost their livelihoods through the circumstances.
Our thoughts obviously also go out to the
people who have had to keep working.
The key workers in the NHS, the police and
the fire service who were always there, who didn't
have a choice but to keep working.
I thank them every day and I know that I
will do whatever I can to help those key workers
as much as possible as we move forward.
I seem to be saying that
a lot tonight that move forward.
It's a bit of a statement that I try not to
use, but I think I've used about three times tonight so far.
So what I'm trying to say today is, like a
lot of other people, we tend to get wrapped up
in our lives, we tend to focus on our bubble.
And although this situation has been extreme, I would
like to think it's opened my eyes and people
around us to what is really important, what is
going on with other people too, how we can
support and encourage each other.
We don't always have to put other people down.
We're very quick to undermine
and criticise other people.
What about supporting people?
I've seen lots of great businesses, lots of fantastic
people out in society offering their help and support.
What about if we kept that going?
Just how different would society be if we stepped
away from the materialistic, cash driven side of things
and look towards helping each other just to be
happy and enjoying the time with our friends and
family, enjoying helping out our neighbours and the people
around us, the people who are there for us?
I wanted to say tonight that I apologise
for leaving you for a few weeks.
Over the next few podcasts.
I'm sort of going to put on pause my planned projects.
The planned topics I had.
And I want to share with you a bit more of
my personal journey through life and the effect that it has
when I deal with clients and some of their stories of
the people that I've been seeing and how we can all
help each other a little bit better and how we can
help each other through difficult times when people are experiencing mental
health just by supporting each other.
Not actually having to do very much.
Just being by the end of the phone.
Having those conversations that we
all suddenly have been doing. Bringing up.
Texting people instead of working every day.
Being busy.
We've made time during this situation.
Why can't we carry on with that?
How are you going to carry on with it?
I know I'm asking the same for myself and I hope
that I'm going to I'm going to work incredibly hard at
keeping those contacts going, keeping the changes that I've made to
myself and what I think about the future.
And I hope you do too.
So next time when I speak to you, I'm going to
be talking to you about my new mindset, about how I've
come to that, some of the things I'm doing differently, some
of the things I'm going to be doing differently from now
on, and how I feel that's going to impact on myself
and the people that are around me.
I really hope you're going to find it interesting and
I hope you listen in for the next episode.
I'm going to be recording it quite soon and
as usual, we're going to try to start getting
these out a bit more regularly, just so that
all you fantastic guys you do listening can hear
the sound of my lovely Janner tones.
As usual.
And just for tonight, I really want you to take
care of yourselves, go and do something nice for each
other and I hope to speak to you soon, but
for today, I'm going to sign off.
Thanks for listening.
The therapy guy.
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