Psychosis Support
A steady, non-judgemental space alongside your wider care.
Support Alongside Your Care
Experiencing psychosis—or supporting someone who is—can be frightening, disorientating, and isolating. This counselling is not a substitute for psychiatric or crisis care, but a complementary space to process the emotional impact: the fear, the confusion, the grief, and the rebuilding of confidence and identity that often follows.
What Might Bring You Here
- Processing the emotional aftermath of a psychotic episode
- Fear, shame, or low confidence following psychosis
- Rebuilding a sense of identity and trust in yourself
- Family members processing fear, grief, or exhaustion
- Navigating relationships, work, or study after an episode
How We Work Together
I work alongside your existing clinical team, not in place of it, focusing on the emotional and relational side of your experience—how you feel about what happened, how it has changed your sense of self, and how to rebuild confidence and connection at a pace that feels safe for you.
Rebuilding at Your Own Pace
Recovery rarely moves in a straight line. This is a space to find steadiness again gradually, without pressure to explain, minimise, or move on before you're ready.
Further Support
If you or someone you know is currently unwell or in crisis, please contact your care team or one of these services:
- In an emergency, call 999 or go to A&E.
- Samaritans: 116 123, free, 24/7.
- Rethink Mental Illness Advice Line: 0808 801 0525.
- Mind Infoline: 0300 123 3393.
Helpline details correct at time of writing—please verify current numbers before publishing.
Related Support
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