Lynne Swarbrick
Two Doves Counselling

Personal and Professional Development as a Counsellor

I have developed for myself a workload with flexibility and many areas of personal interest.

  • I worked with a suicide prevention agency for several years in the 1970's. I gained ten years experience supporting their callers.
  • I became involved in other voluntary groups and several years after working through my own daughter's death.
  • I became involved in a local organisation offering one to a bereavement support CHIBS (Calderdale Help in Breavement Service).
  • I instigated and set up under the auspices of that service support for bereaved parents. Another ten years on I am still involved, but now as a service trainer. Here I gained confidence and sensitivity.
  • I decided to take more formal training in counselling, and additional courses in HIV and Aids counselling, and counselling following rape and assault. I have trained in defusing and debriefing following critical incidents. Within my role as family health visitor I gained much experience I was part of many families lives, I tried to understand the complexities within those relationships. I ran parenting groups, and I trained in child protection. I ran workshops with women on health topics as well as specialised group's e.g.- post-natal depression. I began offering one to one support to the women within my case load.
  • I also began to work part time within an inner city project facilitating counselling skills courses. I witnessed the students growing from within as they learnt new skills and they began to see a future. I did counselling work for social services and the staff of a Family Service Unit.
  • I ran stress management programmes for trainee GP's and solicitors practices. I felt excited as I found the work stimulating and rewarding.
  • I became a 'Look After Yourself Tutor' and so was able to teach relaxation techniques.
  • In 1987 I developed a generic counselling skills service alongside my health visiting practice for adults at the surgery.
  • I wrote an article published in 'Primary Care', a national professional journal and my practice was seen as 'innovative' within the NHS.
  • In 1995 I won the Wyeth Nutrition Health Professional of the Year award. This was a national competition, competing against nursing, community and other health professionals.
  • I decided to take a Masters Degree in Counselling at the University of Leeds. I wanted to balance my practical experience with academic rigour and analytical understanding. I researched into the gender differences in bereaved parents five to ten years following the death of their child. I used grounded theory methodology. The course was of great personal and professional interest, and although very demanding, I gained a great deal. I met with experienced and confident practitioners, and though I had much to learn, I also found I had a lot to give. I learnt much formal theory and of the rigours of research methodology. I learnt to use Kagan's IPR (interpersonal Process Recall) to observe skills. I began to understand properly the 'unspoken relationship' within counselling.
  • I have consciously chosen to expose my practice to a variety of supervisors working from different humanistic approaches. This again offering me challenge as a practitioner.
  • I am member of several agency 'networking' groups. This gives me the professional contact I need. I read the journals I subscribe to Counselling, BAC - Counselling in Medical Settings Journal, Fertility Counselling - BICA (British Infertility Counselling Association), Primary Care Journal.
  • I have taught and co-facilitated, the Advanced Diploma in Counselling and Groupwork course at Huddersfield Technical College for four years. I am now well into a second two-year cycle. I find this provides a very good balance for me. Here I observe the students' awareness growing, and their inner selves emerging.
  • In 2008 I completed a post-graduate certificate course in Cognitive Behavioural Therapy.

Lynne Swarbrick.
 

Training

Here are some of the short courses I have attended over the last few years:

  • 101 Course - Introduction to Transactional analysis.
  • Gestalt - Introductory weekend course
  • NLP workshop
  • The Supervision of counsellors - 2 day workshop
  • Attachment and Loss - (Bowlby) workshop
  • Brief therapy - 2 day workshop
  • Counselling HIV and Aids - Residential course
  • HIV and Aids awareness for counsellors - 4 day course.
  • Counselling following rape and serious sexual assault - 30 hours plus and on-going training with West Yorkshire Police
  • Defusing and Debriefing / PTSD - West Yorkshire Police.
  • Update course on Child Protection - Calderdale MBC course.
  • Counselling adult survivers of abuse - Calderdale NHS Trust Course
  • Depression workshop - Calderdale NHS Trust.
  • Clinical presentations on Assisted Conception Treatments.
  • Sudden Death - CRITEC
  • Children and Bereavement - Child bereavement Trust

 
"Live as brave men; and if fortune is adverse, front its blows with brave hearts. - Cicero (106 BC - 43 BC)"
Please contact me on 01484 717380 or 0772 413 6648, or by email at lswarbrick@hotmail.co.uk.
Brighouse is easily accessible from Halifax, Huddersfield, Bradford, West and South Leeds, and North and East Manchester (and all points in between). I also see clients at clinics as appropriate.
Copyright: David Swarbrick 2008 lawindexpro | swarb.co | Faulty Flipper | wrigleyclaimon