Conversations with Annalisa Barbieri

Annalisa Barbieri

  • 51 minutes 56 seconds
    Birth Trauma with Kim Thomas, journalist and CEO of The Birth Trauma Association

    This is the final episode in Series 7. It's about birth trauma and I speak with journalist, author and CEO of The BTA, Kim Thomas.


    We talk about what birth trauma is, what can cause it (we do not go into graphic detail), how it can manifest and how to get help. We discuss the difference between Post Natal Depression and Post Traumatic Stress Disorder brought on by birth trauma. We also discuss the impact of birth trauma on birthing partners.


    May 2024 update: Parliamentary report.


    Some organisations we talk about in the episode:


    The Birth Trauma Association.


    Kim Thomas's book on PTSD and Birth Trauma.

    Masic: https://masic.org.uk/about-masic/

    Magnolia midwives: https://www.instagram.com/magnoliamidwives/?hl=en

    Doula UK: https://doula.org.uk

    Tommy's: https://www.tommys.org

    Nice Guidelines: https://www.nice.org.uk/guidance

    Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists: https://www.rcog.org.uk

    https://www.mind.org.uk/information-support/types-of-mental-health-problems/postnatal-depression-and-perinatal-mental-health/useful-contacts/


    If you'd like to support us you can leave a one off donation here: https://supporter.acast.com/conversations-with-annalisa-barbieri

    If you'd like to listen to this episode, past or future ones, ad free then consider becoming a patron on Patreon, from just £3 a month. You also get early access to episodes. For £5 a month you get them as soon as they are produced.


    Produced by Hester Cant.


    IG: @annalisabarbieri

    All links to pretty much everything else I do: linktr.ee/annalisabarbieri

    Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/conversations-with-annalisa-barbieri.


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    21 March 2024, 4:00 am
  • 56 minutes 46 seconds
    Envy with psychotherapist Ryan Bennett-Clarke

    Interviewing Ryan Bennett-Clarke for my Guardian column - about something else entirely - we got talking about envy. And what he had to say fair blew my mind.


    What is envy? How does it differ from jealously? Where does it come from and how does it manifest? If you've ever left a person feeling like little bits of you have been taken away, well envy may be the answer. We talk about how envy feels, why people get jealous or envious, how it's on the rise with social media; and we also talk about some nifty ways to 'interrupt' envy. How to answer back to those barbs. I found this one of the most thought-provoking episodes I've ever done and I have to admit I looked at certain people in a different way. Dare I say this is life-changing? I think it might be.


    Ryan Bennett-Clarke, né Marjoram is a UKCP accredited psychotherapist. He has written two papers for The Journal of Psychodynamic Practice:


    The Insidious Dance of Love and Hate: An examination of Envy and Greed in the Stalker-Victim Dynamic: Part One - Theory

    https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/14753634.2022.2039880 


    The Insidious Dance of Love and Hate: An examination of Envy and Greed in the Stalker-Victim Dynamic: Part Two - Clinical Application


    https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/14753634.2022.2039881  


    and you can read more about Ryan here:




    Let us know if you feel this episode has brought up any thoughts, or if you have ideas for other episodes: [email protected]



    If you'd like to support us you can leave a one off donation here: https://supporter.acast.com/conversations-with-annalisa-barbieri

    If you'd like to listen to this episode, past or future ones, ad free then consider becoming a patron on Patreon, from just £3 a month. You also get early access to episodes. For £5 a month you get them as soon as they are produced.


    Thanks so much for listening and please remember to share with friends and if you feel able to, leave a review, it really helps.


    The producer is Hester Cant, the music is Toby Dunham and our artwork is by Lo Cole.


    IG: @annalisabarbieri

    All links to pretty much everything else I do: linktr.ee/annalisabarbieri

    Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/conversations-with-annalisa-barbieri.


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    14 March 2024, 4:00 am
  • 48 minutes 21 seconds
    Unresolved Grief (adults bereaved in childhood) with psychotherapist Mandy Gosling

    Although unresolved grief can hit us at any stage in our lives, this episode specifically talks about childhood bereavement and the impact it can have on adulthood. My guest is UKCP and BACP registered psychotherapist and researcher Mandy Gosling who, as we shall hear, has personal experience of early bereavement.


    An early bereavement can lodge - if not processed - and be carried into adult hood, manifesting as inability to hold down jobs or relationships, feelings of loneliness or depression (of course you can feel all these things without having been bereaved). Mandy talks about her personal experiences, how they impacted and how we can help children process grief and if that's now you as an adult, what you might consider doing to lighten your psychological load.


    You can learn more about Mandy and her work here: www.abcgrief.co.uk or www.mandygosling.co.uk 


    Some useful bereavement websites:


    https://www.winstonswish.org


    https://www.childbereavementuk.org


    https://www.cruse.org.uk




    Let us know if you feel this episode has brought up any thoughts, or if you have ideas for other episodes: [email protected]

    If you'd like to support us you can leave a one off donation here: https://supporter.acast.com/conversations-with-annalisa-barbieri

    If you'd like to listen to this episode, past or future ones, ad free then consider becoming a patron on Patreon, from just £3 a month. You also get early access to episodes. For £5 a month you get them as soon as they are produced.


    Thanks so much for listening and please remember to share with friends and if you feel able to, leave a review, it really helps.


    The producer is Hester Cant, the music is Toby Dunham and our artwork is by Lo Cole.


    IG: @annalisabarbieri

    All links to pretty much everything else I do: linktr.ee/annalisabarbieri


    Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/conversations-with-annalisa-barbieri.


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    7 March 2024, 4:00 am
  • 44 minutes 18 seconds
    Shame with clinical psychologist and psychoanalyst Dr Stephen Blumenthal

    Dr Stephen Blumenthal returns (catch him in Series 2 talking about Intimacy and Trust in Series 5) and this time we're talking about shame. What it is, how it differs to humiliation and embarrassment or even guilt. Shame can make people act differently - either because they are avoiding shame or trying to cover up the shame they already feel. Where does shame come from? And why is some shame useful to society?


    If you’d like to learn more about Dr Blumenthal and his work you can do so at https://stephenblumenthal.com.



    Let us know if you feel this episode has brought up any thoughts, or if you have ideas for other episodes: [email protected]

    If you'd like to support us you can leave a one off donation here: https://supporter.acast.com/conversations-with-annalisa-barbieri

    If you'd like to listen to this episode, past or future ones, ad free then consider becoming a patron on Patreon, from just £3 a month. You also get early access to episodes. For £5 a month you get them as soon as they are produced.


    Thanks so much for listening and please remember to share with friends and if you feel able to, leave a review, it really helps.


    The producer is Hester Cant, the music is Toby Dunham and our artwork is by Lo Cole.


    IG: @annalisabarbieri

    All links to pretty much everything else I do: linktr.ee/annalisabarbieri

    Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/conversations-with-annalisa-barbieri.


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    29 February 2024, 4:00 am
  • 59 minutes 16 seconds
    Why You Can Never Plan Too Much with Professor Lucy Easthope

    Professor Lucy Easthope is a UK expert and advisor on emergency planning and disaster recover. A world authority on recovery and disaster planning and its aftermath. She’s Professor of Practice of Risk and Hazard at the university of Durham and a professor in Mass Fatalities at the university of Bath.


    Lucy studied law at university and has a masters in disaster management and a pHD in medicine.


    In 2022 Lucy published a best selling book that talks a lot about her work and a little about her life called When the Dust Settles, Searching for Hope after disaster. It’s a must read and one that I recommend to all who will listen. If anyone knows about planning it’s Lucy and in this episode we talk about how she takes her incredible experience into every day life. Can we ever plan too much? Why is planning a good idea but how we should also leave a little room for spontaneity. Perhaps. And one of the most important take aways for me - look after the planner in the family


    You can find her website here: http://whatevernext.info/



    Let us know if you feel this episode has brought up any thoughts, or if you have ideas for other episodes: [email protected]

    If you'd like to support us you can leave a one off donation here: https://supporter.acast.com/conversations-with-annalisa-barbieri

    If you'd like to listen to this episode, past or future ones, ad free then consider becoming a patron on Patreon, from just £3 a month. You also get early access to episodes. For £5 a month you get them as soon as they are produced.


    Thanks so much for listening and please remember to share with friends and if you feel able to, leave a review, it really helps.


    The producer is Hester Cant, the music is Toby Dunham and our artwork is by Lo Cole.


    IG: @annalisabarbieri

    All links to pretty much everything else I do: linktr.ee/annalisabarbieri

    Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/conversations-with-annalisa-barbieri.


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    22 February 2024, 4:00 am
  • 1 hour 13 minutes
    Where to Die (Home, Hospice, Care Home or Hospital) with Dr Kathryn Mannix

    Where to die? Not everyone gets that choice but you or a loved one might and that choice may be to go home from a hospice or hospital or care home, or go into one. In this sensitively handled but hugely informative episode, I talk again to Dr Kathryn Mannix, palliative care doctor and author of two excellent books: With the End in Mind and Listen. We talk about what to think about: care, equipment, environment, all things that need to be carefully considered and weighed up. When my own mother was dying and she wanted to go home, I was tortured by what to do and doing the Right Thing. Dr Kathryn Mannix held my hand through this process and lessened some of the pain. Despite the subject matter we end the episode on a really poetic, positive takeaway from Kathryn which should soothe even the most troubled of souls.


    A few links we refer to and which you may find useful:


    https://eol-doula.uk/

    https://www.kathrynmannix.com/



    Let us know if you feel this episode has brought up any thoughts, or if you have ideas for other episodes: [email protected]

    If you'd like to support us you can leave a one off donation here: https://supporter.acast.com/conversations-with-annalisa-barbieri

    If you'd like to listen to this episode, past or future ones, ad free then consider becoming a patron on Patreon, from just £3 a month. You also get early access to episodes. For £5 a month you get them as soon as they are produced.


    Thanks so much for listening and please remember to share with friends and if you feel able to, leave a review, it really helps.


    The producer is Hester Cant, the music is Toby Dunham and our artwork is by Lo Cole.


    IG: @annalisabarbieri

    All links to pretty much everything else I do: linktr.ee/annalisabarbieri

    Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/conversations-with-annalisa-barbieri.


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    15 February 2024, 4:00 am
  • 43 minutes 28 seconds
    What makes a 'real' relationship with psychotherapist Joanna Harrison

    Not what makes a relationship real vs fantasy or made up, but the nubbins of relationships, the reality. Many people seem unprepared for what a real relationship looks and feels like, and this might be because of how they are portrayed on TV and on social media where many times it's only the polar opposites which are show: either people talking about how fantastic their relationship is or how terrible. Real relationships are quite ordinary. But what should they be like? Is it okay to argue? When do you know if your relationship has tipped from 'real' to dysfunctional or even abusive? If relationships are such hard work why do we even bother to have them?


    Joanna Harrison is the author of an excellent book called Five Arguments All Couples Need To Have, but she was also a divorce lawyer in a former life, and is now a senior clinician at Tavistock Relationships and a consultant to parents and separating couples at the law firm Family Law in Partnership.


    You can read more about her and her work at joannaharrison.co.uk. She's on Instagram as @joannaharrisoncoupletherapy.


    Let us know if you feel this episode has brought up any thoughts, or if you have ideas for other episodes: [email protected]

    If you'd like to support us you can leave a one off donation here: https://supporter.acast.com/conversations-with-annalisa-barbieri

    If you'd like to listen to this episode, past or future ones, ad free then consider becoming a patron on Patreon, from just £3 a month. You also get early access to episodes.


    Thanks so much for listening and please remember to share with friends and if you feel able to, leave a review, it really helps.



    Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/conversations-with-annalisa-barbieri.


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    27 October 2023, 3:00 am
  • 56 minutes 6 seconds
    Managing the In-Laws with psychotherapist Hannah Sherbersky

    The in-laws, long the butt of jokes but in reality rich fodder for my Guardian mail bag. Of course, none of us think of ourselves as troublesome in-laws, but maybe we are? In this episode I talk to psychotherapist and CEO of the association for family therapy and systemic practise. Hannah has been a family and couples psychotherapist who has worked in the mental health service for thirty years. She’s also an associate professor at the university of exeter and deputy director of a clinical training department called CEDAR - clinical education development and research - that sits within the university’s psychology department.


    We talk about all the usual in-law problems, work out that three things seem to underpin them and I present my own theory.


    Let us know if you feel this episode has brought up any thoughts, or if you have ideas for other episodes: [email protected]

    If you'd like to support us you can leave a one off donation here: https://supporter.acast.com/conversations-with-annalisa-barbieri

    If you'd like to listen to this episode, past or future ones, ad free then consider becoming a patron on Patreon, from just £3 a month. You also get early access to episodes.


    Thanks so much for listening and please remember to share with friends and if you feel able to, leave a review, it really helps.


    The producer is Hester Cant, the music is Toby Dunham and our artwork is by Lo Cole.


    IG: @annalisabarbieri

    All links to pretty much everything else I do: linktr.ee/annalisabarbieri

    Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/conversations-with-annalisa-barbieri.


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    20 October 2023, 5:00 am
  • 1 hour 5 minutes
    Difficult Conversations Around Suicide with consultant psychiatrist in psychotherapy Dr Jo Stubley

    Talking about suicide is never easy, yet it's essential. In this difficult episode both Dr Stubley and I bring personal experiences to the conversation in the hope that it might facilitate your own conversations.


    Dr Jo Stubley is a consultant psychiatrist in psychotherapy and leads the adult section of the trauma service at the NHS Tavistock Centre. Jo is a member of the British Psychoanalytic Society. Regular listeners will recognise that Jo is a returning conversationalist - this is our third episode together. The first one, on trauma in series one, would make a good listening companion piece to this one. 


    If you have suicidal feelings help is available: https://www.papyrus-uk.org and https://www.samaritans.org


    Let us know if you feel this episode has brought up any thoughts, or if you have ideas for other episodes: [email protected]

    If you'd like to support us you can leave a one off donation here: https://supporter.acast.com/conversations-with-annalisa-barbieri

    If you'd like to listen to this episode, past or future ones, ad free then consider becoming a patron on Patreon, from just £3 a month. You also get early access to episodes.


    Thanks so much for listening and please remember to share with friends and if you feel able to, leave a review, it really helps.


    The producer is Hester Cant, the music is Toby Dunham and our artwork is by Lo Cole.


    IG: @annalisabarbieri

    All links to pretty much everything else I do: linktr.ee/annalisabarbieri


    Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/conversations-with-annalisa-barbieri.


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    13 October 2023, 5:00 am
  • 40 minutes 45 seconds
    The Psychology of Money with psychotherapist Chris Mills

    Why do some people find it so hard to talk about money? And whilst it's not a romantic thing to bring up it's absolutely essential if you're thinking of buying a property with someone or moving in with someone. As Chris says if it's difficult to bring up at the beginning of the relationship it's a whole lot harder to bring up at the end when things may have gone wrong.


    A lot of the letters I get at the Guardian are about Wills and Will disputes and whilst it's about the money, Chris and I also look into what money can stand in for, what it represents and how it can reflect the value we put (or not) on ourselves.


    If this episode has tempted you to get a financial advisor the please make sure whomever you deal with is registered with the Financial Conduct Authority https://register.fca.org.uk/s/.


    Let us know if you feel this episode has brought up any thoughts, or if you have ideas for other episodes: [email protected]

    If you'd like to support us you can leave a one off donation here: https://supporter.acast.com/conversations-with-annalisa-barbieri

    If you'd like to listen to this episode, past or future ones, ad free then consider becoming a patron on Patreon, from just £3 a month. You also get early access to episodes.


    Thanks so much for listening and please remember to share with friends and if you feel able to, leave a review, it really helps.


    The producer is Hester Cant, the music is Toby Dunham and our artwork is by Lo Cole.


    IG: @annalisabarbieri

    All links to pretty much everything else I do: linktr.ee/annalisabarbieri


    Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/conversations-with-annalisa-barbieri.


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    6 October 2023, 5:00 am
  • 45 minutes 53 seconds
    How to Help Siblings of Brothers and Sisters with Additional Needs with Linda Owen, Information Officer for the charity Sibs

    Sibs is a charity which supports children and adults who grow up with a brother or sister with additional needs or a long term health condition. And Linda Owen is the rather brilliant, compassionate and informed (aptly) Information Officer for Sibs.


    A lot of the advice Linda gives can also be applied in a family which doesn’t have a child with these additional needs, and there’s a lot to learn here about sibling dynamics. But of course when a child does have additional needs the sibling can often get overlooked and their needs can feel - especially to them - as not important in the scheme of things. Linda talks about how to have conversations with your children, how to get support for them or for yourself. 


    Note: as Linda explains we use the term sibling in this episode to denote the person who doesn’t have the additional needs, and the ones that do as brother or sister.


    A good companion episode to this one, is The Secrets of the Sibling Relationship with psychotherapist Nicole Addis in Series 1.


    The Sibs website: sibs.org.uk.


    Let us know if you feel this episode has brought up any thoughts, or if you have ideas for other episodes: [email protected]

    If you'd like to support us you can leave a one off donation here: https://supporter.acast.com/conversations-with-annalisa-barbieri

    If you'd like to listen to this episode, past or future ones, ad free then consider becoming a patron on Patreon, from just £3 a month. You also get early access to episodes.


    Thanks so much for listening and please remember to share with friends and if you feel able to, leave a review, it really helps.


    The producer is Hester Cant, the music is Toby Dunham and our artwork is by Lo Cole.


    IG: @annalisabarbieri

    All links to pretty much everything else I do: linktr.ee/annalisabarbieri

    Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/conversations-with-annalisa-barbieri.


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    29 September 2023, 5:00 am
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