• @[email protected]
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    91 year ago

    I’m doing good. I feel like I’m thriving but I’m still pretty lonely and don’t often socialize.

    I’ve heard pretty bad things about therapy they have poor outcome percentages. Very few people actually get better after a year of therapy. A year of therapy can be tens of thousands of dollars.

    • aeternum
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      71 year ago

      I’ve been in therapy since i was a teenager (am 36 now). I can say, with a lot of determination, shit can get better with therapy. I was always trying to kill myself 20 years ago. now I haven’t been to hospital in like 2 years.

            • aeternum
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              41 year ago

              yup. it’s pretty bullshit that mental health isn’t free, yet a lot of other medical stuff is (at least where i live)

        • @Something_Complex
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          21 year ago

          More importantly how can you afford that but not a yearly basic check up with your doctor?

          • @[email protected]
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            31 year ago

            The yearly check up seems to be an American concept designed by a medical industry that make money the more often they have to see you. In countries with national health services you’re more likely to just see a doctor as and when you need it.

          • aeternum
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            21 year ago

            Your americanism is showing :)

            as the other commenter said, that’s a somewhat uniquely american thing. I just visit the doctor when something is wrong with me. If there’s nothing wrong, there’s no need to go to the doctor.

            • @Something_Complex
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              11 year ago

              Actually European here, but there are way to may diseases that can sneek up on you for you not to go everytime+whenever you feel like it

    • @[email protected]
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      31 year ago

      If you have good insurance it’s no nearly that much. Weekly, with good insurance, you’re looking at ~$20-30. Without insurance, with a payment plan for low income individuals, you can find discounted care around $60-70/session fairly easily. They didn’t check my income when I was offered that, just in response to me mentioning I might need to quit when my insurance was shit for a year or two.

      The Secular Therapy Project may be worth looking at. It focuses on specifically finding non-theist care providers, but as I understand it, you’ll be less likely to find non-evidence based providers, so somewhat better outcomes.

      Ultimately, therapy is a space for you to work through your own issues with the help of a trained professional who can guide you, but imprecisely. They’ll offer tools, and it’s up to you to figure out how to use them in a way that suits you. The tools can work, but only so much as you are willing to learn to apply them for your own benefit. Some will suit you better than others. It’s hard to have that much patience to continue trying new approaches, introspecting, and growing two steps forward and one step back, but it’s worth it. Ultimately, as cliche as this probably sounds, every day you’re putting in that effort, trying to see the good, reaching towards contentedness and your dreams, is a small victory. It’s a step in the right direction.

      *these prices are for US healthcare prividers. It may be different elsewhere.