Towards the end of last year, I met with a number of health and education professionals in an informal process to discuss how they manage their own wellbeing. We discussed what gets in the way of them maintaining their own self-care, and finding external help. Part one of this five-part blog series shares the key blockages to seeking support as experienced by these helping professionals.
The Helping Professionals Interview Series (Part 2): Blocks to Support Infographic
Please see below for a summary of the key blockages to seeking support as identified by these helping professionals.
If you’d like to read about this in more detail, or to hear from the interviewees themselves, please see the recent blog here.
A huge thank you to all the healthcare workers & teachers who so courageously & generously shared their experiences.
If you have found the content of this blog to be distressing, or to have touched into something for you, please feel free to be in touch here.
Alternatively, the following services can be contacted for immediate support:
- Lifeline 13 1114
- Hand n Hand Peer Support (for healthcare workers)
- Beyond Blue 1300 224 636
- Emergency Services 000
Related Resources
The 'Joy - Pain Spectrum' in helping: vicarious resilience (Part 1/5)
Post-traumatic growth is a familiar concept to many. But what about other positive impacts that workers can experience? Vicarious resilience and compassion satisfaction help us to understand the ways that workers in helping or caring roles can be positively impacted, or even transformed, by witnessing the strength and resilience of others. Holding an awareness of both ends of the spectrum - the joy and the pain in the work - may hold the key for a healthy, successful and durable career.
What do the 8 C's have to do with supporting yourself?
This time of the year can be difficult at the best of times: the pressure to get things finished, have fun, be social and make merry; family gatherings; multiple social events; late nights and rich food. Additionally, this year’s festive season follows two years of lockdowns, restrictions, negotiating who has/hasn't been vaccinated, ongoing uncertainty, and for many, financial hardship. See below for how the ‘8 C’s’ of Internal Family Systems therapy can guide what you might need to create space and support for yourself.
Creative embodied group supervision for counsellors, therapists and allied health
Join a small group of peers to learn, explore, connect, express and reflect through shared discussion, music and creative arts experiences.
Header image: Priscilla Du Pree