wp83f7823c_0f.jpg
wp823739d0.png

   www.dreambridger.co.uk         tel: Stratford-upon-Avon (01789) 205038           mobile:07796 083019            email: sandra@dreambridger.co.uk  

wp2c40b640.png
wp48904d35.png
wp137d8758.png
wpdb7f3ee1.png
wpedb6e5c1.png
wpc59badb4.png
wp433f4e06.png
wp0611cc3c.png

How can life coaching help with depression?

 

Depression is a very common ailment, but fortunately it is treatable. Conventional treatment with anti-depressant drugs can be highly effective, but what is often just as important is to ask:  What causes the depression in the first place?  By asking the question, we start to treat depression in a more holistic way.

 

I can provide some answers to this question as, yes, I have been there, done it, and got the t-shirt!  When I went through my depression I went from ‘couch’ to ‘coach’ and I now help people to deal with depression in a more holistic way, coaching individuals through the process.  A holistic approach like this looks at the imbalances in wider aspects of a person’s life.

 

There are many aspects of our lives which may get us down, and might contribute to a depression.  We might be in a job that we don’t particularly like; perhaps a relationship is not going well; or maybe in the middle of winter, our lifestyle means we are not seeing enough daylight.  Life can feel like a roller-coaster that is not much fun.  We may start to feel a little low, and where do we turn to then?   Doctors often don’t have the training or the resources to help sort out all those aspects of our lives.

 

A life-coach can help us deal with stressful aspects of our lives.  A coach works with you to discover your core values - the things that are most important in your life, and a coach helps you to make the changes which will bring your life back into balance.  And when we change things that are not right, and work towards our dreams, the cloud of depression starts to lift, and we find our happiness again.

 

 

Back to Frequently Asked Questions

“The truth is that our finest moments are most likely to occur when we are feeling deeply uncomfortable, unhappy, or unfulfilled. For it is only in such moments, propelled by our discomfort, that we are likely to step out of our ruts and start searching for different ways or truer answers.”

Dr. M. Scott Peck