Tag Archives: Hearing Voices

Hearing Voices Network Ireland’s 10th Anniversary on 17 April 2025

Hearing Voices Network Ireland is celebrating its 10th anniversary on 17 April 2025, having had its launch on 17 April 2015 in TCD (https://hearingvoicesnetworkireland.ie/hvni-national-launch/)

Since that time HVNI has organised various HV related courses and workshops, facilitated by experts by experience, such as Jacqui Dillon, Rai Waddingham, Peter Bullimore, Rufus May and Elisabeth Svanholmer, providing training to voice hearers, health and social care professionals, community workers, family members. Such courses not only broadened the awareness of and understanding in working with voice hearers in a validating manner but also expanded the number of HV Support groups across the country. Although the Covid pandemic has led to a reduction in HV support groups over the years, there are still between 14 and 17 HV support groups active around the country (currently waiting to hear from 3 groups), with a number of those groups pre-existing the launch of the HVNI. We are hopeful that with further training this year, we can further expand the number of groups. We also plan to organise an online meeting with HV facilitators to discuss general issues of ongoing support. We are also considering ways to reach out to younger people and to family members/carers.   

In 2021 HVNI organised the12th Annual World Hearing Voices Congress from 1 – 3 September. Due to the Covid 19 restrictions at the time, the Congress took place online. We were ready to welcome the HV community to Cork, but instead, Cork came to the world, in an online fashion!

The HVNI Board currently seeks new Board members. We would love to hear from people, including of course those with lived experience of voice hearing, who are interested in the aims and goals of the HVNI, and like to be part of the ongoing development of the network. We are in particular interested to hear from people with committee work experience (desirable), with skills ranging from PR, social media, general administration. The Board meets online on average once a month. Please express your interest via info@hearingvoicesnetworkireland.ie

Finally, please visit the HVNI website https://hearingvoicesnetworkireland.ie/ where you will find information on the aims and goals of the network. Here you will also find various HV related resources. Donations are always welcome: https://tinyurl.com/3hsp8ecn

Thanks for reading.

On behalf of the HVNI Board

10th anniversary celebration for West Cork Hearing Voices Group!

The West Cork Hearing Voices Groups are delighted to announce that we will celebrate our tenth anniversary in September 2023.

We started with one group and grew to three groups across West Cork. Our goal is to have a group in every main town in West Cork.

Co-facilitators have been trained by Jacqui Dillon in 2013, new facilitators and group members availed of Training in 2022 and 2023.

The group is a safe, relational and reflective space, it honours the very human experience of voice hearing and other experiences and is grounded in the Hearing Voices Network Ireland (HVNI) ethos of mutual support, self-help, empathy, respect and acceptance.

The group is a place to share experiences and come together to get and give support. We are a partnership of voice hearers, mental health social workers and recovery support workers.

Two facilitators are on the HVNI committee and each of us are connected through shared goals and values to the world-wide Hearing Voices Movement.

We are delighted to have reached this milestone and look forward to continuing on this journey together.

Hearing Voices & Working in Mental Health Services

by Eoin Toomey

I work as a Dance, Voice, Movement Facilitator with the Mental Health Service in the county where I live, in Northwest Ireland. I have been in this role for just under 15 years. I am a Voice-hearer and a Survivor of the Psychiatric System. I was an inpatient for five months in the mid-90’s, after beginning to experience many voices and visions post-university.

I have had 15 years guidance of what I would call a visionary Occupational Therapy Manager, who brought me into the healthcare services. I had been volunteering for a Voice-hearers Support Group, and she took me on board as a music therapy facilitator. She had lectured in OT at a University in London, had been influenced by Laingian Practitioners (see R.D.Laing), and by the Person-Centred approach of Carl Rogers, probably the most influential Psychologist from N America in the 20th century.I undertook some in-service training in Facilitation, though most of my learning was on the job. One thing my Boss & Supervisor would say is ‘no us and them’. I have worked in the acute psychiatric hospital, in Day Centres (now Day Services post-COVID) and in Supervised Residential Units; in most, if not all Mental Health Facilities in the county.

I have found that there was some resistance, over the years, to a psychiatric survivor working in mental health services, but that generally there is congruence in working together, and now I am almost universally accepted by other staff within the system. Of course, part of the supervisors/ boss’ role is to protect practice by (a) covering my back (b) ensuring due process with regards to the safety & well being of the Men and Women who are in the hospitals and (c) ensuring that I get paid. Of course an effective supervision process does much more than this.

I have worked for the most part with men and women who were the last inpatients of the older ‘Institutional’ system. I have got to know these people, who are my peers, well. I always take notes on each group and relate any issues arising to my supervisor. Of course we lose people, due to mortality, and the older age cohort, and this, obviously is part of the process also. I find that, as a user/survivor I am naturally congruent with the Men and Women. We are basically a singing group, where members choose the material we use. We also engage ‘check-in’s and some gentle exercises. We keep a time-boundary. Learning about boundaries or limits is essential to good practice. Pre-COVID, we organised an annual Christmas concert in the county cultural centre. This was always a sizeable event, with 30-40 people onstage, and cooperation between nursing, allied healthcare workers (OT’s, Social Workers, Psychologists and Peer Support Workers) on all aspects of the event, including being part of the backing band and organising the transport and food. We worked all year in preparation for this concert, and often the auditorium was packed to capacity. COVID, and mortality has ended these ‘Community Christmas Concerts.

The DVM is also part of Nurses training. I often have student nurses sitting in on groups. DVM and other music ‘therapy’ is recognised by medicine as conducive to good health. We know anecdotally that our dvm groups greatly help with the mood on wards and are very popular with the men and women of the service. We perceive that much more therapeutic programmes are needed in hospitals. Part of our ethos is to attempt to alleviate institutionalisation.
As I experience mostly episodic bouts of voices, these days and episodes usually occur periodically in the afternoon and evening, my own mental health phenomena do not affect my work.