When life gets 'Trichy'

Most people could say they have picked at their skin or pulled at their hair from time to time. If you engage in either or both of these activities excessively, with repeated but unsuccessful attempts to stop which can cause significant impairment or disruption to your functioning, you may or may not realise that there is a name for this. Body-Focused Repetitive Behaviours, or BFRBs, describe a cluster of behaviours including habitual hair pulling, skin picking, nail biting, nose picking, and lip or cheek biting.

I’m Scared to See a Psychologist, But I Think I Need To

Experiencing difficulties with your mental health is extremely common and we know that accessing support is useful, especially if we obtain support early. But feeling nervous about asking for help is also very common and can lead to delays in starting treatment. A widely cited 2004 study by Wang and colleagues reported that the time between onset of symptoms and start of treatment can be 10 years or longer. So why is it so nerve wracking to link in with a psychologist?

Riding the Emotion Wave

As humans, we experience a variety of emotions. Emotions are a normal and important part of life. Inevitably we will all experience the full range of emotions, ranging from some of the most joyful and euphoric to the deepest of lows, sometimes in the same day! The way we think about, understand, and relate to our emotions can have important implications for the way we behave, think and continue to feel.

Are you feeling burnt out?

Are you guys feeling burnt out? It has been a long year but of a different kind. After two years of long lockdowns and intense uncertainty, life has been back at full pelt. We’re all seemingly moving forward but there seems to be a grey cloud over our heads. Are we even doing ok? What even happened in the last two years? Why are we moving forward but not acknowledging what we’ve gone through over the last two years? I am not even sure we even know the answers to these questions, but I have a feeling that it’s contributing to how we’re all feeling. Moreover, dealing with life, mental health issues, and just the state of the world in general…. Wow. It’s a lot. With three months left of the year, let’s talk about how we can manage these feelings of burn out.

What is Trauma?

What was it like growing up for you? Is a question I often find myself asking my clients. It feels so cliché to be asking this question as a clinical psychologist, but it holds relevance. Not because our parents are to blame for everything, which is what most people assume to be the reason why we ask this question, but because our life experiences shape who we become as adults, right from the moment we are born. As Oprah and Dr Bruce Perry, Child Psychiatrist, put it in their new book, asking this question of: “what happened to you?” is a powerful way to begin to understand the impact of life on people and helps us understand what trauma is.