It seems that I will be starting CBT for trauma in February. I'm not counting on it, experience has taught me never to expect the local NHS to do as they say. It won't be with the trauma specialist they had promised as he has no capacity. Instead it will be a Psychologist who did an assessment last February. I found her OK - calm and thoughtful, and apparently knowledgable, so if it happens it may well be productive.
Before that though, there is to be a meeting to discuss what support I will need outside therapy. I have no idea.
I know that on two occasions getting into stuff in therapy has "made" me suicidal, but not a clue how it could have been avoided. And again, experience has taught me that asking for help from the NHS tends to be ignored and that I then feel much worse. I can't help thinking that this is my problem and I need to deal with it, even though I know that in practice that tends to up with me drugging myself into oblivion.
There must be a standard approach to this - can anyone recommend anything I could reasonably ask for?
I had thought it was the job of the therapist to teach and mentor me in skills to manage myself, but it doesn't look as though it will work that way.
Before that though, there is to be a meeting to discuss what support I will need outside therapy. I have no idea.
I know that on two occasions getting into stuff in therapy has "made" me suicidal, but not a clue how it could have been avoided. And again, experience has taught me that asking for help from the NHS tends to be ignored and that I then feel much worse. I can't help thinking that this is my problem and I need to deal with it, even though I know that in practice that tends to up with me drugging myself into oblivion.
There must be a standard approach to this - can anyone recommend anything I could reasonably ask for?
I had thought it was the job of the therapist to teach and mentor me in skills to manage myself, but it doesn't look as though it will work that way.