Emotional Abuse Therapy therapists in Maryport, England ENG, United Kingdom GB
DR BP Upadhaya
Psychologist, PhD Clinical Psychology, AD ( HOMEOPATHY,NATUROPATHY,HERBAL MEDICINE,CBT,FAMILY THERAPY,NLP,COACHING
Neuropsychology
Psychology
Holistic Medicines
Holistic Therapies
Integrated Medicine
Integrated Therapy
Functional Medicine
Unified Therapy
Diet Therapy
Nutrition Therapy
Hypnotherapy
NLP
Psycho-visual Therapy
Family Therapy
Psycho-sexual Therapy
Sexual and Marital Psychotherapy
Homeopathy
Herbal Medicine
Naturopathy
Quantum Medicine
25 Years Experience
Mary Knoblock
Hypnotherapist, Licensed RTT Practitioner, Clinical Hypnotist, Duke Certified Health Coach, Spiritual Counselor
For emotional abuse, we choose the method that works best for you and create a safe a emotionally secure environment to help you process through the effects of emotional abuse. Many of the methods I use can help you find your inner calm, re-center and increase your self esteem and self worth.
9 Years Experience
Greta Cowles Consulting
Life Coach, LMFT, SEP, PIT, Trauma Stress Studies
Developing tools to stop the abuse by setting boundaries, developing self-worth and safety, and learning to not tolerate abusive behavior.
11 Years Experience
Dr Ian Anderson
Psychologist, Consultant Clinical Psychologist (HCPC registered), PhD, MSc, MSc, MSc, MA (Econ), BA (Econ) Hons
I believe that emotional abuse is 'invisible violence'. The perpetrators can be parents, intimate partners, work colleagues, or so-called friends. The outcome is devastating. Nobody should suffer this violence in silence. I will work with you to change it.
44 Years Experience
John Castleford
Registered Psychotherapist, MA, mARCHTI
Bullying in the Workplace/Community is what got me started as a therapist, helping those in teaching and the health service who were being bullied out of a job by inscrutable bosses eager to edge out established staff in favour of cheaper employees straight out of college. I learned that it's not easy to do much about bullying in institutions--particularly when it's done with a fake smile, behind closed doors. Instead, it's much more straightforward to help individuals develop resilience and coping strategies founded on strengthened mind sets. I was a senior caseworker for a professional teaching association and saw numerous examples of bullying and emotional abuse, but was also instrumental in providing help and support for targets of abuse by workplace colleagues. Those who live in countries such as UK, Europe and Australia benefit from legislation that governs workplace relations; but not everyone will have the benefit of protective laws --eg USA where such laws are less powerful or nonexistent. But irrespective, laws that proscribe bullying in the workplace can be a blessing and a curse.
I can also help and support those in toxic relationships, who suppress their own quality of life because of external demands that keep them trapped. And when a person suffers from gaslightling (see the 1948 movie 'Gaslight' with Charles Boyer and Ingrid Bergman to see this in action), is there any wonder confidence erodes to the point where you feel unable to escape and take a scary step into the big, scary unknown can leave you locked into an insufferable situation?
14 Years Experience