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Real Student Stories

Picture of a student Meet Tomas

Picture of Charlie

Picture of Sarah

Picture of Andy

Picture of Tasha

Picture of Anala

Picture of Craig

Picture of Katie

Picture of Keisha

Picture of Daniel

Picture of Hannah

Picture of Tomas story archive >> '; document.getElementById('storyimage').src='images/anna100.jpg';">

Picture of Anna After a tough childhood in the Ukraine, Tomas was suddenly moved to the UK as a teenager and had difficulties relating to his new stepfather and adapting in school. Depression led to a suicide attempt and has affected his studies... more > >


Also in "Tackling Depression"... "I think also having my son maybe brought out the will to fight. We went through a court case for parental responsibility and there were a lot of fights. But I think because things were in action, I was starting to get a voice then - I was really starting to speak up." Tonya

Students Against Depression
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Assertive Communication

Confident, clear communication

Depression thrives on isolation, and often interferes with good communication. Assertiveness is about knowing what you feel and need, and making clear choices about when and how to communicate these.

What assertiveness is and is not

Assertiveness is about finding the right balance between meeting your own needs and dealing politely and sensitively with others. It is not about being pushy or selfish. Assertive communication can be distinguished from 'passive' communication on the one hand and 'aggressive' communication on the other.

Passive communication

Keeping your needs to yourself or hinting and hoping others will notice and take care of them; getting upset when others don't notice; bottling up anger and other negative feelings; manipulating others through guilt, pity, "owing you" etc.

Aggressive communication

Putting your own needs first at all times; being loud, pushy and bullying; intimidating others into doing things your way; not listening to other points of view; rarely expressing positive feelings; undermining others with sarcasm, "taking the piss" etc.

Assertive communication

Checking out with yourself what you are feeling; giving clear messages about what you would like; speaking calmly; respecting other people's opinions whilst expressing your own; having a relaxed posture and facial expression; knowing your limits and non-negotiables.

Step 1: Become better aware of your own feelings

Step 2: Notice areas for improving communication

Step 3: Practise on your own

Step 4: Try it out!

Step 5: Make a habit of it

Next:

  social skills  >>

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 <<  practising positive habits

Links

More about changing depressed habits: depressed thinking , stress, anxiety & anger , challenging depressed thinking , managing stress levels , finding what works for you
More about getting support: building support networks , getting support & help , what do counsellors offer?

© 2007 Charlie Waller Memorial Trust British Association for Counselling and Psychotherapy Award for Innovation 2006

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