Bereavement Counselling Service (SW)
The Bereavement Counselling Service is a specialist service for those people who have suffered a traumatic bereavement or who are suffering with complex grief.
In brief, the Bereavement Counselling Service accepts referrals for:
- People whose grief has not been resolved within a reasonable period of time in relation to their loss, resulting in significant problems.
- Those whose experience of bereavement has been particularly distressing or traumatic, in order to prevent subsequent development of problematic and complicated grief.
Contacts details
3 Eagle Road
Langage Business Park
PL7 5JY
The Bereavement Counselling Service (BCS) is a charity which offers specialist bereavement counselling in response to complicated grief and traumatic loss.
Our counsellors are trained to help clients manage the wide range of emotions and responses to loss and bereavement. We help to find a way of coping with life without the loved one and to find a more manageable way to grieve.
Bereavement & Its Effects
Some losses and bereavements are difficult to come to terms with, we can be poorly prepared for the physical and emotional consequences of our loss, and may find ourselves overwhelmed, disoriented and wondering what to do next. Grieving can be very distressing and leave you feeling vulnerable.
Most frequently these emotions are a normal reaction to bereavement, especially when the person was a close loved one.
With the help of family and good friends most bereaved people are able to adjust to life without the loved one and find fulfilment in the life they lead in spite of the fact that life has changed and they continue to miss the person who has died.
Complex grief - what is complex grief?
The Bereavement Counselling Service specialises in helping people, who are experiencing complex grief, find the path to normal grieving.
Am I experiencing Complex Grief? There are different types of complex grief:
Prolonged Grief:
This is where the intense, emotional response, which is often experienced in the early stages of the bereavement, is prolonged to an extent that it becomes the main focus of your life and is in fact a way of being that prevents you from re-establishing your normal life.
Inhibited Grief:
This is where the death of a loved one does not seem to make an impact on the life of the bereaved person, so that life goes on without much consideration of loss. It can be that the bereaved person has such a busy life, with responsibilities like children to care for, finances to be concerned with, that the person does not fully acknowledge the death of the loved one and grieve in a healthy way. This can `catch up' with the bereaved person at a later stage in life, when perhaps their children leave home or there is another death of a close person. Inhibited grief can lead to depression and other physical illnesses.
Other Risks and Traumatic Loss:
Where the death of the loved one is very sudden, traumatic or where there are multiple deaths, Counsellors at The Bereavement Counselling Service can work with those who are at risk of developing complex grief. This is a particular risk when the death is that of a child or where the circumstances of the death are traumatic.
A GP referral is required in order to access our service and we can see those people who live in Plymouth or parts of South Devon.
In brief, the Bereavement Counselling Service accepts referrals for:
- People whose grief has not been resolved within a reasonable period of time in relation to their loss, resulting in significant problems.
- Those whose experience of bereavement has been particularly distressing or traumatic, in order to prevent subsequent development of problematic and complicated grief.
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- Everyone, over 18 years old
- Anxiety
- Stress
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