The Therapy Guy
The Therapy Guy
Communication In A Relationship
A personal reflection of a relationship breaking down and how we could communicate better with ourselves and others.
We can all struggle to communicate, discuss and open up to others about how we are feeling and our emotions for fear of upsetting other people and those we care about.
Understanding that our feelings and emotions are valuable and an important part of our health and wellbeing. How we think and feel can affect each part of our lives and how we interact with others.
By taking responsibility for how we think and how we express ourselves we can learn to interact and communicate with others in a more positive and constructive way.
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Thanks for listening.
Hello and welcome.
Today, some of you anyway, you'll get
to see the face behind the Therapy Guy.
I'm going to do something different today.
I'm going to step out of my comfort zone
and I'm going to put this on YouTube as
well, so that people can see who I am.
People can see that this is just about me
talking to you, talking to you and explaining things
have happened, whether that's in my therapy room, whether
that's with clients, personally, all these things that can
affect my life and everything else.
You also might be aware of that
I've taken a bit of a break and at different times
I take a break, I sort of stop putting these out
and other times I can do them quite consistently.
There's several different reasons for that.
The biggest reason at the moment is
things are changing and things are happening
in my personal life that I've been
really struggling with, I've been finding difficult.
And all the training, all the experience I've
had, all those sorts of things that I've
learned and help people with throughout the years,
when they all come crashing on yourself, even
with all that experience, all that knowledge, it
can still be difficult, we can still struggle.
I've struggled.
I've recently been going through some difficulties in
my personal relationship with my partner and it's
been really tough to have difficult conversations.
It's really surprised me how having those conversations with
somebody who may not be on the same page
as you, with somebody who doesn't want the same
thing or doesn't feel the same way as you,
can be really difficult to start to have and
then to experience, process and understand
lately. I try to help the couples I
see, I try to help people communicate.
But no matter what we do, when we
rely on communication, we rely on two people
communicating in a way that's right for them.
We rely on two people feeling and hearing and understanding
each other in a way that's right for them.
Just recently I found this
really difficult, even for myself.
I've had to take a step back from some of the
work that I do just so that I can ensure that
I'm looking after my clients in my therapy practise appropriately.
I've got to take a step back from running my business
and I had to rely on my colleagues to help me.
It's a real chance to try to work out how
you're going to have these difficult conversations, how you can
have conversations that are possibly going to upset someone you
love and care about, but at the same time you
want to be able to communicate, you want to be
able to feel and you want to be able to
start that conversation off.
What we tend to do, and I've done this
myself, I've buried my head in the sand, I
tried to ignore it, I threw myself into work.
I've done all the classic cliche avoidance techniques that
I talk about quite regularly in my room.
And this is the thing, it's easy
for us to talk about it.
It's easy for us to give advice, to talk to others.
It's easy for everyone to do that.
You ask 100 people, they'll have 100
different opinions on what you should be
doing and what you could be doing.
But realistically, it's the conversation you're having
inside of here, the conversation you're having
in your mind that really matters.
It's very easy to point the finger, it's very
easy to blame somebody else, very easy to blame
a colleague, a partner, anyone you look at around
in the world and they blame the government, they
blame this, they blame that.
But this is about taking responsibility.
And this is what I've had to do just recently.
I've had to upset the person that
I care about most in the world.
I had to talk to her and tell her how I'm feeling.
And it's been really difficult.
It's been really painful for her to listen to,
it's been really painful for her to process.
And all of that compounds how
I'm feeling, the guilt, the avoidance.
It's easier to avoid that, then up, see
someone upset who you love and care about.
But I think for me it's about taking responsibility.
I've had to take responsibility for how
I feel, for how I think.
Nobody can change that conversation in your head.
We have to do that ourselves.
We have to try to encourage to ourselves
to be open, to be able to
express ourselves freely, but also understanding,
as I said, I can understand how difficult it can be.
I've always known how difficult it
can be to have those conversations.
Just recently, I've really experienced that for myself.
And it's been really painful and really upsetting.
And I've had to have some bad days, bad weeks where
things have seen quite dark, quite difficult to get up, to
take one step, to do the one thing, things that I
try to encourage my fantastic clients, people around me, my friends
and family to do all the time.
But when you're in that moment, when that cloud is
around you, it's very difficult, very hard to take that
step, to know what to say, to know how to
react, to keep those emotions under control.
You know, unfortunately, I can't make any
apologies for upsetting my partner.
I'm sorry about her seeing her upset.
I'm sorry about her hurting.
I don't want that to happen.
But I don't apologise for expressing how I feel.
I would like to think I've done it in
a malicious, not in a non malicious way.
I haven't pointed or tried to blame anyone else.
So I've taken personal responsibility of how
I think and how I feel.
I think by doing that, it can
give you quite a lot of power.
It's okay to feel low.
It's okay to feel that dark
clouds, to experience that pain.
Sometimes it represents the amount of
emotion you have over something.
If you love and care for someone or something, enough pain
you feel when it's taken from you can be immense.
But also we have to be aware
that we have a responsibility ourselves.
No one's coming to save us.
No one can truly help us
until we want to help ourselves.
I know that difficult conversations aren't over, and
I don't know what's going to happen.
I don't know how we're going to communicate
tomorrow, next week, in six months time.
All I know is that I need to keep being honest.
I need to express how I feel.
Sometimes that's really difficult because
I don't really know.
So it's okay for you not to know how you
feel, accept it, explain it, but maybe spend some time
trying to process, trying to work out exactly what it
is you need to do next for you.
It's very easy for us to stay in
relationships, to do things for other people.
We care for other people.
Well, we need to care for ourselves too.
The reason I've been off, as I said, I've
been struggling, and I've found that really difficult.
And some people reached out for
me and some people haven't.
And again, that highlights and adds to the pain
in some ways because the people that are reaching
out to me, you tend to push away because
you don't know what to say.
You don't know how to explain things.
And you know, ultimately that whatever
they're saying isn't going to help.
But also the people that don't reach out, the people
you thought were friends, the people you had around you,
who you thought were in your circle, those people who
aren't there when you need them most, that really adds
to the pain that I feel.
I've been through it before, but
this has shocked me now.
This is exacerbated.
All those feelings that I've been feeling made
me feel quite lonely, got isolated, which again,
pushes me down, adds to that dark cloud.
So what did I do?
Well, at certain times when I started having
these conversations, I have to prepare myself, really.
I have to look at what do I want to say?
What do I want to get across?
I try to take responsibility for everything I'm saying.
My aim is never to blame anyone else.
I use the word I or we. It's not about
striking out or hurting the other person verbally.
Nobody wins.
Nobody wins
when you start to argue the conversation, the thoughts
and feelings are very emotive, they're very emotional.
And you're not going to get to an end point
where both of you are still talking, are still communicating.
You're going to get to a point where
you're tearing lumps out of each other.
It doesn't matter where it is.
So really, it's about us taking some responsibility
for how we feel, how we explain things.
If we say the wrong thing, if we
aren't communicating it in the right way
I need to accept that.
I need to try to communicate it differently.
We've been having several discussions that
have been really painful, really difficult.
And I still feel this is two weeks later and I
still feel really emotional and find my day to day mood
is challenging because 1 minute I'm okay, the next minute I
can be emotional, I can be upset, tearful, and I know
my lovely partner, she's feeling the same way.
The first week I felt that black cloud, I was
in a place where I didn't really want to be.
I was facing thoughts and feelings I hadn't
faced or felt for a very long time.
I speak to people often about in
my office, and I feel them.
But again, when you feel them personally, when you feel
them inside physically, and when you feel them in your
brain, in your mind, in a conversation, it's constant.
When we don't look after ourselves, we don't eat
properly, we don't sleep properly, all those things, again,
exacerbate how we feel and how low and how
much energy it takes to actually get out of
bed, to speak to somebody.
I use my experience, I
suppose, my knowledge, my fortune.
I'm going to change my tact
but I feel that I'm fortunate that the people that I've
interacted with over the years have given me so much.
They give me so many coping mechanisms.
They give me so many ideas about
how to deal with my own emotions.
More than I could ever learn on any
course or at any college or university.
Experiencing people in pain, being there, it gave me quite
a lot of power, quite a lot of benefit for
dealing with things myself, quite a lot of strength.
I thank all of my clients for doing that.
So what I use is I allowed myself a week.
I allowed myself that week just to feel sorry for
myself or to feel low, to feel that dark cloud.
And then I knew I had to take responsibility.
I knew that I had to accept the challenge
of getting out of bed, of getting on.
It's okay for us all to feel these things.
I know not at the time, not doing it.
It's easy for me now to say two weeks
later, two weeks ago, I may not be able
to make this podcast, make this video.
So just look at things.
Look at it.
We just got to do one thing.
We got to take responsibility for looking
at ourselves, for caring for ourselves.
I try to have that conversation change the words
that I was using in my own mind.
I tried to get up and say, Right, that's enough.
Today's the day.
I'm going to get out of bed, I'm going to
have something to eat, I'm going to go outside.
All those things were a challenge,
all those things are difficult.
All those things are what we normally, on
a day to day process, take for granted.
The reason I'm doing this video is to show
you that we can all go through this.
It doesn't matter who we are.
Does it matter that I have all
this experience, I have all this knowledge?
I can adapt and help other people.
I can still do that.
But when it comes to ourselves, it
becomes more challenging because we're so used
to putting other people first.
We're so used to passing responsibility on to them.
And this is about us taking
responsibility for ourselves, for you.
I want you to know that when you speak to
a therapist, when you reach out, they have had their
own experiences, have had their own knowledge, they do really
understand how you feel, obviously in different ways.
Nobody can truly experience a depth
of feeling that I went through.
But a colleague, a therapist,
somebody impartial would understand.
If we communicate it, if we allow ourselves to
say, this is how I feel, whether that's you
writing it down, whether that's you expressing it, whether
that's doing a podcast just like this, part of
the process for me is allowing others to see
the feelings and emotions that I went through.
I want you to know that you're not alone.
I want you to know that there is
people there, even when you think there isn't.
But what I also really want you to know is
that it doesn't matter what's going on in the past.
It doesn't matter what sort of upbringing you've
had, what sort of life you've had.
Whatever has happened is gone.
You need to take responsibility.
We are in charge.
I am in charge of what happens to me next.
I'm in charge of the conversations, I have
emotions, I'm in charge of the challenges, how
I look at them, how I see them.
Do I see them as huge, great, big things?
Or do I see them as, let's
do one step, let's do something.
Let's get through today and
then we'll look at tomorrow.
How are you going to deal with yours?
What advice do you need?
Do you need some advice from someone like myself?
Do you need advice from me?
Please contact me, drop me a message,
anything, any way that I can help.
But what I want you to be aware of, if you
start to take responsibility to yourself, saying, I need to be
the one that needs to start the conversation, I need to
be the one that gets out of bed, I need to
be the one that feeds myself, things can change.
Yes, it may be painful for a while, yes, it
may be difficult for a while, but we are amazing.
We have an amazing resilience, an amazing strength to get
through these things, they are painful at the time.
Everything is temporary.
Our lives, our lives, they go through
different things, they go through different challenges,
and those challenges are temporary.
It may not feel it at the time, it
may feel it's constantly, one thing after another.
But we also have to accept, and I have to
accept to be a better version of me, for me
to grow and to change how I interact with other
people and have better relationships with them.
I need to go through this.
I need to understand how I think and feel.
I need to do that for myself, I need to do
that for everyone else I interact with after this point.
But I'm also aware that the little things
are so much more important to me now.
Those little interactions with little moments that bring me happiness,
that make me smile, they mean so much because two
weeks ago I was in so much pain.
We can live with regret.
I should have done this and I should have done that.
And I appreciate, a lot of us do and a lot
of us have circumstances, have problems and difficulties in our lives
that make things even a little bit more challenging.
But as I said, we have amazing ability
to adapt, we have an amazing ability to
take an extreme amount of stress and pressure.
Just try a day to change one thing, to do
one thing for yourself, whether it's take five minutes, go
for a walk, have a coffee, it doesn't matter.
Get out of bed, breathe some air, put
yourself at the same level as everybody else.
No one is more important than you.
We're all the same.
We're all in this together.
We just need to take responsibility for ourselves.
Stop pointing that finger, start saying, I feel this.
That gives us a lot of power,
gives us a lot of control.
I want you to look after yourself.
I want you to be amazing, I want you to be happy.
I want you to smile every single day.
If I can be a part of that, if I
can help in any way, please let me know if
this video or this podcast has helped anyway, but for
now, the therapy guy is signing off again.
I hope you have a great day and I will see you soon.
Thanks for listening.
Take care of yourselves.
Bye for now.
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