|
I recently completed a course via the Lucy Faithfull Foundation (LFF) which I found to be very useful. I am now separately taking part in one on one therapy with a psychologist who specialises in sexual offending, in order to apply the lessons I learned via LFF to my specific situation. The LFF sessions have thankfully been free due to me being located in Scotland. But what I want to know is, should I also engage with Safer Lives (SF)? I would need to pay for it, which I'm willing to do, but would that be overkill? Are there any real benefits to engaging with SF on top of the work I'm already doing? I'd be particularly interested to hear opinions of people who have taken part in both LFF and SF courses. For context, I'm currently in the limbo period, awaiting the results of device investigation before a plea date is scheduled.
|