Quote:
Originally Posted by CANDC
Glad you are going back to university and have self harm under more control.
This may have some helpful tips to get self harm totally on the backburner.
https://www.google.com/url?q=http://...GtLlzfGxFF4aPQ
Not sure how the best way to handle needs assessment. How about talking to your therapist about this.
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I intend to speak to her, but I'm not due to see her for over a week (because of how much progress I've made, stupidly) and she's only in work on Monday next week. I'm emailing her as I do regularly and I'll mention it then but she doesn't tend to reply, it just prepares her for the meeting a bit better. Thank you for the link though - it's all stuff I knew about before, but it's always nice to read through others' experiences.
Quote:
Originally Posted by PinkFlamingo99
This sounds really discriminatory to me. Does your university have an ombudsman? They are there to help protect your rights.
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It's not so much discrimination as an over-reaction. She has a legal duty to keep me safe and on the face of it, without asking me more questions, yes I can see that my particular method of harming might seem like it poses a risk . It's not that I don't understand why she's done it but just wished she'd asked me about it and brought it up with me rather than going into "omg panic" mode. It's causing so much stress and it's not what I need right now.
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100mg Quetiapine XR eve, 250mg Pregabalin bd, 50mg morn, 100mg eve Trazodone, 1mg Lorazepam eve, 20mg omeproazole morn, 135mg mebeverine thrice daily, 30/500 Co-codamol bd.
Emotionally Unstable Personality Disorder, Anxiety, Panic, Depression, Psuedo-pyschosis, Chronic knee pain, Stomach "problems", Chronic anaemia.
Dyslexia/Dyspraxia.
Just trying to get through one day at a time.
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