I had a very good counsellor actually, a psychotherapist I think he was. And I saw him for about twenty something weeks, something like that, sessions anyway. And we covered lots of different things. And it probably was helpful. But I think by this time my antidepressants had sort of kicked in. So I wasn’t, I wasn’t able to reach within, within you know, my emotions became more numb, if you like.
How long did you have to wait to see a counsellor?
Fairly long. I don’t remember how long. But it was …
Weeks or months?
It was weeks.
Hm.
It wasn’t months to fair, it was weeks. But by then the antidepressants had surely kicked in.
Yeah.
And I wasn’t crying an awful lot. The same thing was happening with my mum, she wasn’t crying. She wasn’t, you know, the antidepressants were doing their job really. We were functioning if you like.
Hm.
And not, not … yes we were … I think the antidepressants help you to function, carry on. Not reach in and not feel that raw pain and emotion as much as you would without them.
…I think initially it’s about speaking and about opening up and talking, you’re given the opportunity really to talk about how you feel (during counselling). I was asked how I felt and my relationship with my brother and how this has affected me. And, and from, from that other things emerge, you know, about your, I mean, my, my former life, before my brother, the way our childhood was. So it obviously can become in, intensive in that, and things do come to light, you know, come to the surface a bit. But it’s worth persevering really. For instance, it sort of dawned on me through psychotherapy about our childhood, whereas it hadn’t before.
Hmm. So this was psychotherapy rather than just counselling, wasn’t it?
Well both. I think counselling will do that as well.
Yes.
Psychotherapy is a bit more, it’s a bit more practical I would say. Counselling is sort of more about the patient or the client or whoever speaking, opening up. The counsellor, counsellor more, offering, steering the, the client in the right direction. Whereas psychotherapy is very focused on treatment and maybe sort of how to review your thinking and other things. Many aspects are covered in psychotherapy.
By treatment, do you mean to, to help the person reassess and think in a different way?
Yes. Yes.
Or did you have something else in mind?
Yes, that’s about it, to sort of change your thought processes and negative thinking and ...
Hmm.
... what you can actually do to, practical things, what you can actually write down things, you know, write down events and how they’ve affected you and, you know, just sort of very practical, so that you can actually see what’s happening there.
So were you encouraged to write about what had happened?
I was sort of made to write about things, and I remember having a lot of fears and worries about something happening to my younger brother mainly.
Hmm.
So I was, that was put more into perspective in that, you know, what are the like, what’s the likelihood? What would be the event? What would be the, you know, that sort of analysing.
Hmm.
And the risk factors and trying to sort of get it into perspective so you’re not overwhelmed and thinking, “My God, this is going to happen to him.”
Yes.
Tomorrow. You know. And also [sighs] also I sort of, when things come, come to, came to the surface a bit more, how to sort of practically create boundaries, say with my mum, trying to do that sort of stuff, because it’s been quite tough because she’s been left isolated.
Hmm.
And I became a bit entangled, you know.
So therapy helped you decide on how much you should help and when you should help?
Yes.
And that sort of thing.
Yes, and that’s been a very, very long and difficult, and it’s still going on…