E
Echo
@indiangirl - well, you are not the odd one out here!! Use this forum to ask all the questions you have. You might want to start different threads for them if the subject matter is different.
My GP first offered me 10 counselling sessions with the practice-based counsellor. I found them really shallow and not tailored for PTSD at all. I hope your counsellor might have a little more experience. When my memories of child abuse started shooting out, she quickly signed me off, because she realised she was out of her league.
The NHS took so long to get me an appointment first with a psychiatrist and then subsequently with a psychologist (over a year in all - grrr!), that I found myself a trauma therapist. And I am so glad I did. I am a great supporter of the NHS in principle, but in this field, I must admit I don't think they are up to it at all - it was a massive time waste. My county has no provision on the NHS for trauma therapy, though I believe some counties do have it available on the NHS. I pay my therapist £45 a week.
I believe I will get much better and certainly better at managing the symptoms. It is a lot of hard work, but if it makes your life so much better then I think go for it. It really depends on you and why you have PTSD, I suppose. I have CPTSD. There is no competition; it just means we are all a little different, but essentially the work is the same.
The best thing is to stick out for the best treatment you can get. You may have to wait many months before the NHS provide you with any trauma therapy, even after you've had the appointments.
There is a massive amount of information on this website. Find out as much as you can, so you know what to ask when you see the professionals. Best of luck.
My GP first offered me 10 counselling sessions with the practice-based counsellor. I found them really shallow and not tailored for PTSD at all. I hope your counsellor might have a little more experience. When my memories of child abuse started shooting out, she quickly signed me off, because she realised she was out of her league.
The NHS took so long to get me an appointment first with a psychiatrist and then subsequently with a psychologist (over a year in all - grrr!), that I found myself a trauma therapist. And I am so glad I did. I am a great supporter of the NHS in principle, but in this field, I must admit I don't think they are up to it at all - it was a massive time waste. My county has no provision on the NHS for trauma therapy, though I believe some counties do have it available on the NHS. I pay my therapist £45 a week.
I believe I will get much better and certainly better at managing the symptoms. It is a lot of hard work, but if it makes your life so much better then I think go for it. It really depends on you and why you have PTSD, I suppose. I have CPTSD. There is no competition; it just means we are all a little different, but essentially the work is the same.
The best thing is to stick out for the best treatment you can get. You may have to wait many months before the NHS provide you with any trauma therapy, even after you've had the appointments.
There is a massive amount of information on this website. Find out as much as you can, so you know what to ask when you see the professionals. Best of luck.