Depression
Talking therapies for depression - experiences of talking therapy
Does therapy work?
That therapy can work (compared to having no treatment) is clear in the research. Certainly, 31 out of 38 people we talked to said that talking therapies had helped them. Despite the costs in money and time, people we saw considered talking therapies to be one of the most helpful approaches in depression. In particular, people were very positive about cognitive behaviour therapy (CBT), which many had had (see 'Depression - Managing the mind'). People were also positive about a range of other talking therapies, including person-centred counselling, psychosynthesis, systemic consultation, psychodynamic approaches, psychoanalysis, art therapy, group therapy and Gestalt therapy.
Cognitive behaviour therapy (CBT) helped him focus his thoughts on his successes, however small,...
Cognitive behaviour therapy (CBT) helped him focus his thoughts on his successes, however small,...
How so?
Well that I could change my thinking and I could thereby change my feeling.
Can you give me an example?
A particular example was he said, when you go lie down to go to sleep, he said, "You tend to look back on your day and think of all the failures," and he said, "why don't you just think of everything that's been successful?" He said, "With the proviso that for someone like you, who's severely depressed they could just get out bed in the morning and that is a victory." So' and I started doing that, and every night I would just lie there I'd think well I shaved today, you know I was down in time for breakfast, and I did a crossword puzzle and so forth," Well you know actually you've done quite a lot you know. And then I woke' wake up in the morning with the memory of that. So just things like that, a few things like that with cognitive therapy. You know I think they helped quite a bit.
The range of talking therapies available is bewildering, but it was clear that a respectful and safe client-professional relationship - which helped people to sort out their problems - was more important than the kind of therapy they had.
The talking cure
Many people found that just being given the freedom to talk about their feelings and thoughts helped them to unburden themselves and work out what was at the root of their problems. Many were also surprised about the topics that arose through talking. One woman found herself talking about things she would not even tell a best friend. She discovered she had kept up a façade with other people all her life. Therapeutic discussions also worked by helping people to think about their problems in different ways. Practitioners commonly guided people to address their own issues, helping them to think of their problems in more helpful ways, rather than providing solutions. Through talking therapies, people became more insightful and could frequently make changes to improve their lives (see 'Gaining insights about depression').
She saw a university-based counsellor and was relieved to be able to talk about anything she...
She saw a university-based counsellor and was relieved to be able to talk about anything she...
Is it that you didn't tell your friends about the counsellor, or about being depressed?
Both. I think I felt that I wanted to keep them both apart, and that I was going there to help myself understand what was going on, and you know, get help, but I wanted to keep it separate from my normal life. I was..... I think I was worried about how I might react to.... I was worried about people seeing me differently'
You said the counselling was helpful - in what way was it helpful?
It was a big relief to have someone who I could tell anything I wanted, anything that was bothering me, and not worry about what they might think about it or how it might affect our relationship. And you know, it also helped to feel that I was doing something about my problems as well, so...
What did you like about the counselling?
Just the friendliness, and I always looked forward to the weekly session, and it, you know, helped me sort out my thoughts and feelings, describing them to someone else.
In therapy she could talk to a stranger about issues she had never discussed, and work out what...
In therapy she could talk to a stranger about issues she had never discussed, and work out what...
But I think in a sense it's a relief that you can talk about something that is really... you don't realise that that is what has caused everything. But you, when you talk about it and divulge things, it... you suddenly get this kind of relief and you don't always know exactly what it is when you first start. And it's only through regular therapy sessions that you suddenly find yourself talking about things that you never ever expected you were going to talk about.
Talking about difficult and intimate problems in her life to her counsellor helped her see her...
Talking about difficult and intimate problems in her life to her counsellor helped her see her...
And the way she put it made me think, 'Oh, perhaps I wasn't as much at fault, perhaps only partly, perhaps somebody else was responsible for part, at least part of this situation'. And that was tremendous, it really was. I mean, and this' when did I last see her, possibly a year ago and I've not gone backwards. Yes, she really has resolved one or two issues with me.
His counsellor supported him without setting the agenda, helping him to make his own decisions.
His counsellor supported him without setting the agenda, helping him to make his own decisions.
And what did you get out of that counselling?
A return of self esteem, I think is the biggest thing. But that is one of the real big issues with depression anyway isn't it? He helped me and supported and encouraged me without laying down an agenda which again I think is how it should be done. He helped me get my head around things and make my own decisions.
And it was largely with his support that I did go back into work again. I left the career in IT and some fifteen, fifteen months afterwards, I was out of work fifteen months. I returned to work as a college lecturer, teaching management. So although it was a black time in some ways, I think the blacker times were before the diagnosis.
After the diagnosis, [pause] I suppose I just had a break, a rest, I don't know what the term nervous breakdown means, I don't think it is clinically valid, but I do know what burn out is and I think it was burn out. And serious mental exhaustion that had been brought on by long term exposure to shitty workplaces. And you need time to recover from that kind of emotional damage.
The past and present
Some people found it helpful to talk about their past, including childhood. They were very much helped by discovering through therapy that they had an 'inner child' who needed comforting. For instance, one man was surprised by his 'reservoirs of pain' and described how he found it therapeutic to reconnect with himself at age ten to listen to and 'comfort' that self. Others found going over their past unhelpful and even traumatic. Such people benefited more from talking therapies that focused on overcoming present-day difficulties e.g. work stresses, relationship problems.
Ending therapy
At some stage, people thought about ending therapy. With more open-ended therapy, people made their own decisions about when they felt they had finished therapy. Some felt they needed to finish because they were consuming resources that others in more distress could be using. But as one therapist explained to a client, it is part of depression itself that some people do not feel entitled to talking therapies. One man mistrusted a particular therapist, and suspected they were prolonging therapy for financial gain. Some women were clear that people should negotiate the ending of open-ended therapy, since like the end of any relationship, there is grieving work to be done. When one woman's long-term therapist was off sick for 6 months she suffered a strong grief reaction.
Says counselling involves a journey and relationship with your practitioner that will one day end...
Says counselling involves a journey and relationship with your practitioner that will one day end...
Yeah they are on the journey and I think that's its safe' because they're on a journey that you are on, and they are with you every step of the way sort of thing. And you don't have to talk. Sometimes you can just, by not saying anything you are saying heaps, you know, so it's yeah.
But then also they're [laugh] the downside is that once you've been seeing your counsellor for so long and you've built this wonderful relationship you're in'.then you've got to have an ending and that's quite scary' is when you think, oh my gosh I'm not going to be seeing this counsellor anymore. "Who am I going to off-load it onto? Who am I? "
And it's the same with, within families that become dependent on, doctors, nurses, social workers. There can be a dependency culture where you think, well actually I don't want to be going alone, because that's what you've got to do at the end of the day. You have to take that step and you have to brave it on your own.
With NHS or other therapy that is short-term, enduring relationships are not built, and so less grieving work has to be done. The downside of short therapy courses is that the depth of the relationship is limited, and this may decrease the benefit of therapy. A few people were inspired by their own experiences of therapy to go on to learn how to become counsellors themselves. Their courses also helped them to further cope with their own issues.
Last reviewed September 2017.
Last updated September 2017.
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