Thanks, sunrise. Yep, I'm beginning to think so as well. And you're right there!

Although cost may not be as much of an issue as I thought - I had a look round various therapy websites round here, and it seems quite a few will either reduce their fees for students/unemployed people, or else they don't charge quite as much as my previous therapist anyway. (Although some of them look really expensive!

)
I don't think the insurance thing happens here - there's a choice of either an NHS therapist or a private one, in which case you pay them directly. Like I said, though, this might not be as much of a problem as I thought - it's possible I'd be able to pay for most of all of it myself.
I think so too, and like you say the university probably has experience with it.
I guess one problem I didn't really mention before is that a lot of the time I don't think I'm "bad" enough or "worth" fixing.

It's easy when I'm having a hard time to think "I need help!" but when I've recovered it's hard to get that feeling back, and I think that might be one of the reasons I was sometimes at a loss for what to talk about in therapy.
</font><blockquote><div id="quote"><font class="small">Quote:</font>
I do wonder sometimes when will this end? How will it become evident when it should end?
</div></font></blockquote><font class="post"> That's a good question, and to be honest I don't know the answer.

Have you talked to your daughter's therapist about it? I'm not sure if there'd be confidentiality issues with that, though.