Counselling & Psychotherapy with Shaen Milward - Ivybridge & Online

Counselling & Psychotherapy with Shaen Milward - Ivybridge & Online

Therapy For Men

For many men, the hardest part is not the therapy itself but giving themselves permission to start. If something here feels familiar, that may be enough reason to get in touch.

Therapy for Men in the South Hams, Plymouth, Devon or online

Some men find it easier to speak with another man, not because women can’t help, but because there’s somthing different about not having to translate certain experiences. I won’t pretend to know your life, but i’m likely to recognise some of the territory.

Many men come to therapy without being entirely sure what they want to say, only that something in life is not sitting right. Sometimes that shows up as pressure, frustration, anger, grief, or a sense of feeling cut off from yourself or the people around you. Sometimes life looks manageable from the outside, but does not feel that way inside.

Alongside my psychotherapy training, I bring a long professional background in health and care. I am a registered Occupational Therapist and have worked across hospitals, community services, hospice care, NHS leadership, and national supervision. I am also a father of two children, so I know something of the pressures of trying to hold together work, family life, and responsibility.

My interest in men’s mental health has grown over many years working in therapy and healthcare, often as a man in predominantly female environments. In those settings, I became increasingly aware of the ways men can struggle quietly, hold things in, or feel they need to carry on without asking for help. That knowledge has stayed with me and continues to shape the way I work and what I have a particular interest in.

You may have spent years getting on with things, carrying responsibility, keeping your head down, or telling yourself that other people have it worse. Therapy can offer a different kind of space, one where you do not have to hold everything together, and where we can begin with whatever feels most important.

You might come with things like:

Holding It Together, Until You Can’t

A lot of men get very good at functioning while quietly coming apart underneath. On the outside it can look like coping, inside, it can feel like pressure, numbness, and never quite being able to switch off.

Fatherhood Without a Map

Many men carry the pressure of wanting to be a good dad while wondering whether they have the emotional skills, patience, or support to do it well. Therapy can be a place to speak honestly about the weight of trying to give what you may not have received yourself growing up.

When Your Worth Gets Tied to Work

Work can become more than work. It can become your identity, and the place you go to keep everything else at bay. For some men, the question is not simply “am I working too much?” but “has work become an antidote to living?”

Porn, Drinking and Drug Use

Sometimes these become ways of switching off, taking the edge off, or escaping feelings that are hard to sit with. Therapy can help you understand what is driving the pattern, without shame, and build steadier ways of coping.

When Stress Comes Out Sideways

For some men, distress does not look like sadness. It looks like irritability, anger, shutting down, snapping quickly, or feeling constantly on edge. Often the issue is not simply anger itself, but carrying too much for too long with nowhere for it to go.

Feeling Alone, Even Around Other People

One of the quieter struggles men bring to therapy is disconnection. Not always dramatic loneliness, just a sense of having no real place to put what is going on. You can be surrounded by people and still feel on your own.

When Relationships Feel Difficult And You Can’t Quite Explain Why

Something shifts in relationships when you stop saying what you actually mean. Not through any single argument or falling out, just a gradual quieting down. Over time the gap between what you feel and what you share can become surprisingly wide..

Therapy can offer a steady space to think, feel, and speak more openly over time. That might mean short-term work around a particular difficulty, or longer-term therapy where patterns run deeper and need more space to unfold. We can work at a pace that feels manageable, and you do not need to have everything figured out before you contact me.