Counseling
- Counseling is a specific mental health discipline that includes aspects of guidance and psychotherapy
- It focuses on improving the quality of life and involves both the counselor and client in collaboration.
- Psychotherapy and other counseling techniques help individuals explore moods and behaviors, provide fresh perspectives, and offer a better understanding of emotions.
- Counseling can help to improve mood, treat mental illness, reduce medical costs, improve communication and relationships, and promote self-esteem and resilience.
- The goal of the counseling is by listening and moving in line with the client to find the best approach, evaluation techniques, and therapy’s for every client.
Why to Counseling?
Choosing to go to counseling isn’t a bad choice, it’s nothing to be ashamed of. There are many times when the importance of counseling will help a person to move forward in their life and enjoy it to its fullest. There are counselors for anything and everything in life that a person can imagine. Choosing to counsel is a huge step and will go far in helping a person to enjoy their life.
The mental health and well-being of Indians are greatly underlooked. We as a society tend to shrug away from such topics and issues. The result is a spike in secret sufferings and self-harming tendencies.
We, at Hive Counseling, have taken a resolve to fight the stigma associated with depression, anxiety, Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), and a host of other mental issues. Our empathic resolve is to help everyone heal within a non-judgemental safe space and lead better lives.
Problem Addressed
Counseling psychologists focus on normative developmental and mental health issues and challenges faced by individuals across their lifespan, as well as systemic challenges (such as prejudice and discrimination) experienced in groups, workplaces, organizations, institutions, and communities. They use strengths-based perspectives and practices to prevent and ameliorate emotional, relational, physical/health-related, social, cultural, vocational, educational, and identity-related problems.
Counseling psychologists serve persons of all ages and cultural backgrounds in individual, group (including couples and families), workplace, organizational, institutional, and community settings. They work with groups and communities to assist them in addressing or preventing problems, as well as to improve the personal and interpersonal functioning of individual members. Counseling psychologists also intervene in organizations, institutions, workplaces, and communities to enhance their effectiveness, climate, and the success and well-being of their members.