Roundabout Publications

Community magazines for local advertising in Monkseaton, Tynemouth, and Whitley Bay

  • Home
  • Advertising & Prices
    • About Advertising
    • Advertising Prices
    • Advertising Terms & Conditions
    • Deadlines & Distribution Dates
  • Articles
    • By Author
      • Angela Melvin
      • Anne Morrison
      • Carole Saville
      • Charlie Steel
      • David Tickner
      • Geoff Holland
      • Gill Crann
      • Helen Bowman
      • Jenny Foster
      • Katherine Wildman
      • Lesley Anne Collins
      • Terry Took
    • By Topic
      • Adventures of a North Sea Pilot
      • All at Sea
      • Art and Culture
      • Business
      • Entertainment
      • Family Life
      • Food and Drink
      • General Interest
      • Great Days Out
      • Health
      • Local History
      • Pirates
      • Shopping List Shorts
      • Sport and Leisure
      • Technology
      • Travel
      • Walks
      • Young Life
  • About Us
  • Contact
    • Advertising Enquiry
    • Community Entry Enquiry
    • General Enquiry

HEALTH: Relationships and Anxiety

July 1, 2015

Supportive coupleAnxiety is more openly discussed and recognised as an issue that can have a major impact on a person. What is less often discussed is the pressure anxiety or stress can put on a relationship. If one partner is experiencing severe levels of anxiety and stress it could lead to the breakdown of the relationship.

People can become anxious for a number of reasons:

  • Childhood examples of how parents coped with life.
  • Situations, such as bullying at school.
  • A later life event and then developing a focus on all the awful things that could happen.

Whatever the trigger, anxiety can start to take over your life.

Many people who are anxious focus on their feelings and how terrible things might be. They may be upset by the physical symptoms they experience, not realising that this is their body responding naturally to a perceived threat or danger. To outsiders it can seem as though the person has become totally focused on everything that could go wrong. Those with anxiety often feel bad because part of them knows their worries are unlikely to happen yet they can’t control them. This leads to heightened anxiety and feeling a failure or weak for not controlling their responses.

Anxiety within a relationship can make it very difficult for both parties. Partners can find it very difficult to understand what is happening to their loved one and feels at a loss to know what to do. Often they may think that their partner should just ‘pull themselves together’ and get on with life. The person with anxiety may feel vulnerable, exposed, potentially let down and abandoned, scared of being alone, guilt, shame, worried that they are pushing their partner away.

Sometimes couples get locked in a cycle of negative thinking. Our inner talk can then become increasingly unhelpful and both can feel more and more trapped. Arguments, remarks, misunderstandings all increase the sense of anxiety and helplessness. The non-anxious partner may experience increasing frustration and this will again heighten anxious feelings.

HELP IS AT HAND

There are many ways in which couples experiencing anxiety issues can be helped. One is through the Improved Access to Psychological Therapies (IAPT) service, there are charities, such as Relate, which provide counselling and there are private counsellors and therapists. Therapies like hypnotherapy, CBT, mindfulness and relationship counselling, can help. Many therapists work with both partners at once, some provide a mix of individual and couple sessions.

The focus is often on helping both partners to understand what is happening. You might explore how you communicate, look at cycles of behaviour and assumptions, as well as identifying inner resources both may have that you can call upon to help. Part of the work will be helping the partner who has anxiety learn how to self-regulate their thinking and mood.

Don’t let anxiety break up your relationship, you can get help.

by Anne Morrison © 2015

Anne MorrisonAnne Morrison, MBSCH, GQHP, lives in Whitley Bay and holds clinics in North Shields and Newcastle. She can be contacted by phone on 07905 735 457 or via her website www.annemorrison.co.uk.

Filed Under: Anne Morrison, Features, Health

HEALTH: Eat for life

February 1, 2015

Healthy eatingSo the Christmas and New Year festivities are well and truly over and, perhaps, like many others you’ve over-indulged. The bathroom scales may be reading a kilo or so more than they did last year. And you made a New Year resolution to lose weight in 2015 but are already faltering.

In my experience those resolutions made at midnight on 1st January rarely last beyond the beginning of February. We’re full of determination to make that change this year. And just like previous years all those good intentions fade over time leaving you feeling fed up, frustrated, demotivated, and perhaps a little guilty and angry with yourself for being so weak willed.

You may be glad to know that you are not alone. The seven tips below have been useful in helping people change their relationship with food and how they feel about themselves.

LOSE WEIGHT AND MAINTAIN IT FOR LIFE

  1. Consider it as reducing your weight. It may seem crazy but the word ‘loss’ can conjure up emotions such as sadness, missing something or someone and disappointment. We also try to find things that we’ve lost too, like keys. And you don’t really want to find that weight again do you?
  2. Change how you think about the amount of weight you want to reduce. It can be difficult to picture yourself having achieved your goal, as the gap between where you are now and where you want to be seems unreachable. Break down your weight reduction into smaller, more manageable, steps.
  3. Think of it as a change in your relationship with yourself and food that will last a lifetime. It’s not just for a wedding or special event. Perhaps your weight keeps yo-yoing up and down? It’s not only about the food but how you think of yourself and what food means to you.
  4. As children we are often told to eat up all our food to grow big and strong. That teaching is still there in the back of our minds and influences us when we try to change behaviours. Give yourself permission to leave food on your plate and eat smaller portions.
  5. Sometimes having a little of something you enjoy is better than denying yourself altogether. It is a choice you make. Before you choose, ask yourself “is this going to take me nearer or further away from my goal?” This will help you to consider your future self and the impact of the choices you make today.
  6. If you do decide to have something, have a smaller piece and make it last. Imagine it is the most expensive food or snack that you have ever bought and take your time to really taste it.
  7. Check your alcohol intake, something which is often forgotten – just don’t replace the alcohol with high sugar soft drinks!

There is so much conflicting advice and so many ‘fad’ diets that it can be difficult to know what is best for you. Hopefully, the tips above will give you some ideas that you can use.

by Anne Morrison © 2015

Anne MorrisonAnne Morrison, MBSCH, GQHP, lives in Whitley Bay and holds clinics in North Shields and Newcastle. She can be contacted by phone on 07905 735 457 or via her website www.annemorrison.co.uk.

Filed Under: Anne Morrison, Features, Health

HEALTH: Conquer social difficulties

September 30, 2014

Social anxiety disorder is a very widespread form of anxiety. This can affect anyone at any time, and causes problems with everyday circumstances, from shopping to talking to people over the phone. Those with social anxiety can isolate themselves from friends and family, which, in turn creates more problems both at home and at work.

Social anxiety can be present in many different situations, including:

  • talking while in front of people
  • reading aloud
  • writing whilst being looked at
  • lining up in queues
  • attending meetings at work
  • travelling on public transport

or any circumstance where someone is or thinks they are the focus of attention.

The fear of criticism may also be present with social anxiety and this can also add to more avoidance behaviour. Low self-worth and feelings of insecurity are also typical features and can lead to relationship problems. The partner with social anxiety may no longer wish to go out or needs constant reassurance from their partner that things are ‘alright’. This puts pressure on the relationship and can lead to further issues of lack of trust and being criticised.

Untreated, the levels of anxiety and fear may generalise and accentuate until the person begins to encounter panic and anxiety attacks. Further ramifications of this disorder are depressive feelings and an inability to relax, which can lead to misuse of alcohol and drugs in an effort to escape reality.

As the issue escalates, the fears can be self-fulfilling, as relationships begin to come apart and daily life becomes considerably more difficult.

How can hypnotherapy help? Anxiety, finding it difficult to be with others, low self-esteem and lack of confidence can be treated by understanding what is creating the anxiety – such as worrying about the future – and by recognising that perceptions of possible future events can be altered. Planning how to respond to things that might happen is helped by mentally rehearsing how they can be handled. This does take time but the result should be feeling better able to cope, a more positive outlook and increased confidence.    

Hypnosis works by making positive, beneficial suggestions that work at a conscious and unconscious level. We are very good at making negative suggestions to ourselves all the time – that little internal voice that tells us how badly we did something or makes some other equally unhelpful comment. These are auto-suggestions. In a way we ‘hypnotise’ ourselves by how we talk to ourselves. An experienced hypnotherapist can help us to understand the power we have and to use it in more helpful ways. It helps the person to change their thinking and re-establish favourable thinking patterns and feelings of positivity, control and confidence.

by Anne Morrison © 2014

Anne MorrisonAnne Morrison, MBSCH, GQHP, lives in Whitley Bay and holds clinics in North Shields and Newcastle. She can be contacted by phone on 07905 735 457 or via her website www.annemorrison.co.uk.

Filed Under: Anne Morrison, Features, Health

HEALTH: Grin and bear it

September 29, 2012

I don’t know about you but when I was little I often heard people saying “We’ll we just have to grin and bear it”. And they just got on with sorting ‘it’ out. It turns out there is more than a grain of truth behind the saying.

Recent research is showing that grinning actually does help us bear things more easily and recover from stressful situations more quickly.

Psychological scientists Tara Kraft and Sarah Pressman of the University of Kansas reported in the Psychological Science journal on their recent research into smiling and stressful situations. I won’t go into the details but it involved chopsticks and various tests like putting your hand into a bucket full of iced water. They found that smiling helped to lower the heart rate and reduce the intensity of the body’s stress response.

As we discover more about how the body works, so we are learning that we can trigger positive physiological and emotional responses even when we aren’t really feeling that happy. Their research showed that it can be enough to contract the muscles in the face to replicate a smile – although a ‘true’ smile had the greater positive impact on the body and mind.

Other things can also help us manage our stress response in a more effective way. Five of my favourites are:

  • Saying to myself “I choose to respond more calmly”. It can feel quite liberating to ‘choose’ how you respond to people and situations.
  • Thinking to myself “I may not like it but they are doing the best they can with the resources they have available to them”. This doesn’t mean that I don’t try and change things. It does mean I deal with it from a more balanced and calmer perspective.
  • Deep breathing – taking 5- 7 slow, deeper breathes in and out through the nose helps to relax the mind and body.
  • Going for a brisk walk – particularly along the beach (or imagining yourself on a favourite walk). It helps distance you from the situation.
  • Funnily enough, something called the inner smile. A simple closed-eye process whereby you imagine a smile forming inside. Feel it developing without it showing on your face and then gradually allow it to move up and show on your face. Sit with the feeling for a short while then open your eyes and get on with things.

There are many stress management techniques you could use from being more assertive to planning and time management but practicing these simple steps will increase your ability to cope with things that you regard as stressful.

So the next time the kids are starting to get on your nerves or you are cut up at the roundabout or you feel under pressure at work just ‘Grin’. Your heart will thank you.

by Anne Morrison © 2012

Anne Morrison, MBSCH, Clinical and Cognitive Behaviour Hypnotherapist, lives in Whitley Bay and works in North Shields. She is also a volunteer therapist at Hospice Care North Northumberland providing support to patients and their relatives. She can be contacted by phone on 0191 300 0933 or via her website www.annemorrison.co.uk.

Filed Under: Anne Morrison, Features, Health

HEALTH: Losing weight

February 1, 2012

It seems ironic that at a time when obesity levels are rising in the UK, Government scientists are recommending new calorie intake levels. In January it was announced that men can now eat around 2,605 calories of food every day and women can eat 2,079. This is based on a greater understanding of how the BMI (body mass index) and exercise affect weight. But is another 100 calories a day or so going to help or hinder you to be fitter and healthier?

If you are relatively active, moving and walking around during your day, then the increase is unlikely to have much impact. If, however, like many people you drive or take the Metro to work, sit at a desk for most of the day and come home to sit in front of the TV in the evening, then that extra amount is going to put weight on you. If you buy pre- prepared foods, even if they are ‘low fat’ or takeaways, then you may be eating too much. Low fat foods usually have extra sugar to make them taste better, so they aren’t necessarily better for you.

So what can you do to reduce your weight? It really does come down to less in, less on the hips! Our stomachs expand and get used to accommodating the amount of food we eat. The important thing about weight reduction is to treat it as a change for life. Start to think of the long-term benefits and how uncomfortable you feel now with your current weight. It’s not about ‘being good’ or having a ‘bad’ day where you can eat what you want. The usual tips such as eating more slowly or using a smaller plate will help. You may also need to change what you eat and when, perhaps eating less carbohydrates and more vegetables and protein.

You can go on starvation diets, try the latest fad, or attend a slimming club. Whilst many diets work in the short term, long-term weight reduction needs to address not only changes to shopping and eating habits but the psychological aspects of overeating too. Do you eat when you are upset or feel ‘blue’?

For some people, an increase in activity is not an option because they are morbidly obese, with a BMI over 30. One way they may be helped is through gastric band surgery, an operation which reduces the stomach size so it can’t hold as much. However,  people still need to change their attitude to food and reduce the amount they eat; if they don’t it can create physical problems such as reflux and, in some extreme cases, the band can break. This not only wastes NHS money but creates problems for the person too.

What else can you do to reduce your weight? Hypnosis can help people with their weight reduction. It’s not a quick fix as you will work on different aspects over a number of sessions but it can help you:

  • Overcome barriers to eating healthier foods.
  • Be more motivated to walk and take exercise.
  • Change how you eat.
  • Change the way you cope with negative feelings.
  • Change how you think about yourself and what matters to you.

Hypnosis can even be used for those who are morbidly obese through Hypno-band™ or gastric band hypnosis. In essence, this process helps people believe they have had gastric band surgery and therefore eat less food. It may sound bizarre but it does work.

So even though it may seem that you can’t lose weight there are ways and means that can help you. All you have to do is to really want to and take steps to make it happen. Let 2012 be the year you changed your life.

by Anne Morrison © 2012

Anne Morrison, MBSCH, Clinical and Cognitive Behaviour Hypnotherapist, lives in Whitley Bay and works in North Shields. She is also a volunteer therapist at Hospice Care North Northumberland providing support to patients and their relatives. She can be contacted by phone on 0191 300 0933 or via her website www.annemorrison.co.uk.

Filed Under: Anne Morrison, Features, Health

  • 1
  • 2
  • Next Page »
Small Business owner?

Want to advertise?

The deadlines for the 2020 issues are:

MonthDeadlineDistribution Dates
January 20205th December (2019)27th, 30th, 31st December (2019)
February 20209th January29th - 31st January
March 20206th February26th - 28th February
April 20205th March27th, 30th, 31st March
May 20209th April28th - 30th April
June 20207th May27th - 29th May
July 202011th June26th, 29th, 30th June
August 20209th July29th - 31st July
September 20206th August26th - 28th August
October 202010th September28th - 30th September
November 20208th October28th - 30th October
December 20205th November26th, 27th, 30th November
.

Copyright © 2021 · Roundabout Publications· Log in