Commitment - To Yourself and Therapy

Commitment - To Yourself and Therapy

Give yourself a minute to think about the many appointments that you make throughout your life. Now ask yourself how likely it is that you might cancel any of them, and which ones, and in what circumstances. In this blog we look at why Committing to Therapy is important to experience positive outcomes.

Your GP appointment; your six-months dental check-up; that massage that you booked three weeks ago; a gym class; a surgery; a first date; a date you made with your partner; a catch-up with a friend; the afternoon you promised to spend with your child.

The appointments that you take the most seriously are probably the ones that you are less likely to cancel.  Essentially, your level of commitment to your plans is based on how important these plans are to you.

Many, not all, of the problems we encounter in our lives are due to a lack of commitment or consistency. For example, we say to ourselves that we will go to the gym more often, but we keep cancelling our classes. We say that we are going to tidy up our house, but we procrastinate. We know we should study, but we don’t. We want to be consistent in our parenting, but we can’t. We don’t want to become angry at our children, but we can’t help it.

The more we make plans or promises but then fail to stick to them, the more we build a “negative view of self”. We come to perceive ourselves as lazy, incompetent, or a failure. Such an inner narrative is damaging to our mental health and can result in lack of life satisfaction.

Psychological therapy has evolved over the last century and different models of therapy have been developed. While these models are varied in the way they approach treatment, there is something they share in common: they all acknowledge that commitment is a key to success.

Imagine this scenario:

Alice has suffered from anxiety since she was very young. When I ask Alice if she has seen therapists before, she says, “Oh yes, so many of them!” When I ask how many therapy sessions she has attended, she answers, “Something like 50”. Generally, after 50 sessions, a person makes noticeable progress. When I ask Alice if therapy has helped her, she says, “Not that much.” I then ask her how long she stayed with each therapist and how often she saw them, she said “Maybe ten sessions with each therapist, attending once a month or once every six weeks.”

Not only as a therapist with twenty years’ experience, but as a person who has herself benefited from hundreds of sessions of therapy, my first thought is that Alice’s lack of progress – or her perceived lack of progress – is due to inconsistency. If she had continued with a competent therapist whom she trusts, and for more sessions, she might well have felt that she has made substantial progress in addressing her anxiety.

Why Committing to Therapy is Important

Research from Scandinavian countries shows that people who commit to long-term therapy are 30% more productive in their lives, get sick less often, and are less prone to chronic illness.

Once upon a time, people would enter into a sort of contract with their therapist. The patient would commit to a regular booking. They also used to sign a contract with their therapist to commit to staying in therapy for a certain period (which is still used in specific therapies, such as DBT). Sometimes they would see their therapist two or three times a week. There are still psychoanalysts who use this model. And the truth is, there are huge advantages to undertaking such a commitment.

While I don’t want to go in depth in the advantages of long-term therapy, I would like to emphasise that a big part of its success is tied to the practice of commitment, consistency, and taking your therapy seriously – meaning that you reflect on what is discussed in a session, in between your sessions.

Typically, sessions either begin with weekly to fortnightly sessions, more time than that, the efficacy of what you may be working on in session decreases. If sessions stretch beyond fortnightly then start to become information ‘catch ups’, as too much time has passed between sessions. Once you and your therapist are happy that the initial work has been done, it is important to have ‘maintenance’ sessions. Which may start with monthly, 6 weekly or even 3 monthly, depending on your situation.

Maintenance Therapy sessions are as important as annual health check ups, and dental checks. Mental Health is with you forever, and your relationship with your therapist is critical in keeping it healthy.

Maybe you do, Maybe you don't - ADHD, Let's find out!

Maybe you do, Maybe you don't - ADHD, Let's find out!