Oh the Fall...

As fall begins, it brings to mind the beginning of the holiday season. However, the holiday season can be overwhelming for many folks. Past memories and painful feelings attached to those memories can create a significant obstacle to enjoying the season. Here are a few suggestions you can do to make it a better experience.

First, try to get more support from close friends. Verbalizing with someone your thoughts and feelings about the upcoming season can alleviate the anxiety and stress.

Second, ask for help when you need it. Trying to carry too much alone while preparing for the different holidays can easily overwhelm anybody. You are not superwoman or superman. Getting others to help is one of the most practical and easy solutions to help ease the load. 

A third strategy would be to increase therapeutic contact by attending more than once per week. Psychotherapy multiple times per week offers greater emotional support and an increased focus to supportively work through painful holiday memories.

Fourth, continue to be active. There are numerous studies that show greater wellbeing is contributed to getting frequent and consistent exercise. The more you keep active in a specific exercise the more it will help you feel calm and contained. 

Putting these four strategies into action can help you survive the tough holiday season and create new memories that are positive and heart warming. Moreover, these practices can also help you survive the tough demands of life through any season.

What is Counseling?

Counseling is process where an individual, couple, family, or child engage in a therapeutic professional relationship with a therapist to help understand, manage, and treat mild problematic metal health distress to debilitating mentally heath symptoms. Counseling is best understood as a relational process where the individual begins to form a bond with the therapist. The bond is created as one continues to feel safe, understood, and not judged by the therapist. As this bond grows in the counseling process, one can feel comfortable to share more about their life and the uncomfortable feelings that accompany their past and present experiences and future anticipations.

The length of counseling can vary in range. Some find the counseling process to take as little as six months. Where others choose to spend more time in the relationship with the therapist which could last several years. No matter what one chooses, the time spent in counseling is effective in creating growth for the individual to have a better quality of life, little to no symptoms, deeper meaningful relational connections, greater self-esteem, and greater comfort experiencing difficult emotions. Due to these reasons, individuals find counseling to be a deeply meaningful investment in their lives. Some even may say the most important.

This post also appears at the La Vie Counseling Center's website.

 

What is Depression?

When someone is struggling with depression, one commonly feels sad or empty most days than not. Some may feel depressed for a short period of time while others may feel depressed for a significant length of time. To be clinically diagnosed with a Major Depressive Episode one must feel sad along with other depressive symptoms for at least two weeks. These symptoms may include diminished energy to no energy, loss of pleasure in hobbies or life experiences that one once found enjoyable, hopeless feelings, suicidal thoughts and attempts, lack of concentration, and interrupted sleep patterns. In depression, some also report a strong negative self-view and possess little confidence that other people care or love them.

It is commonly know that depression can be caused by unhelpful thought patterns and beliefs about oneself. It is also understood that depression can be triggered by a specific situation in one’s life (ex: ending of an important relationship, loss of a job, death in the family, financial strain) or past traumatic events (ex: abuse). However, we are all unique and one person’s cause of depression can look very different from another person's.

Day to day life is already challenging and when one experiences depression amidst these challenges, life can be very difficult to manage. If one’s depression is untreated, the depressive symptoms can become more severe (ex: extreme hopelessness and suicidal thoughts). For these reasons, getting quality professional help is important to help manage and significantly reduce the symptoms. One does not have to live with the potentially debilitating symptoms of depression and one can know that a higher quality of life is possible with professional help.

This post also appears at the La Vie Counseling Center's website.