A brief history of the English Hearing Voices Network


Page updated 10/03/2008




Julie Downs, co-ordinator of the Hearing Voices Network (HVN), offers a brief history of the organisation, and outlines what it represents.

Aims and purpose of HVN

Part of the overall aim of HVN is to promote positive explanations of voice hearing experiences and give people a framework for developing their own ways of coping. In order to cope with their experiences people need to take control of their voices and regain some power over their lives.

The aims of the network are

  • To raise awareness of voice hearing, visions, tactile sensations and other sensory experiences
  • To give men women and children who have these experiences an opportunity to talk freely about this together.
  • To support anyone with these experiences seeking to understand, learn and grow from them in their own way.

    We try to achieve our aims through these objectives:

  • Promoting, developing and supporting self-help groups
  • Organising and delivering training sessions for health workers and the general public
  • Making available a telephone line that gives information and help to people who experience hearing voices, seeing visions and tactile sensations
  • To give men, women and children who have these experiences an opportunity to talk freely about them
  • Produce four newsletters a year

  • How the Hearing Voices Network started

    The Hearing Voices Network has developed from a handful of groups to become part of a national and international network. The groups started as many voluntary groups do out of necessity, with the impetus coming from a voice hearer. It was based on the revolutionary research of Professor Marius Romme and Sandra Escher. Their research proposed that the way to cope with hearing voices was to talk about them, to get people who heard voices to get together to talk to each other about their experiences.

    Whist this may not sound very revolutionary it nevertheless was. At the time of the research (1987), classical psychiatry regarded hearing voices as a delusion, a psychotic symptom, a symptom of schizophrenia. To talk to the person hearing voices was to collude with their delusion. The treatment was to ignore the voices and give the person medication to get rid of them, if this did not work the dosage was increased.

    Often the voices would not go away and the people suffered severe side effects that sometimes ruined their quality of life and destroyed relationships. Though I write in the past tense and ideas and psychiatric practices have, and continue to change in relation to hearing voices, much of this practice is still carried out today. Sadly some people still do not get the help they feel they want and this is where hearing voices groups fill a need.

    The first group

    The first UK hearing voices group was formed in 1988, it began as a small planning group originating in Manchester, inspired by the pioneering work of Romme and Escher and the Dutch self help group, Foundation Resonance which was established through Romme and Escher’s work.

    One of Romme’s patients, Patsy Hague, had persistently heard voices, her quality of life was all but destroyed and she was becoming increasingly suicidal. Patsy had developed a theory based on a book by Julian Jaynes, ‘The Origins of ‘Consciousness in the Breakdown of the Bicameral Mind’ (1976). She found it reassuring to read that hearing voices had been regarded as a normal way of making decisions until about 1300 BC. According to Jaynes, the experience of hearing voices has almost disappeared and been replaced with what we now call consciousness. Patsy Hague shared this information with Romme.

    After thinking through what Patsy had talked about, Romme eventually decided to set up meetings between Patsy and other people who heard voices. Romme listened with interest and amazement as they talked to each other, he was struck by the way in which they communicated and understood each other. These meetings continued and every session between people who heard voices produced a great deal of recognition of each others plight. However they also revealed what Romme described as, ‘’a huge void of powerlessness, in my experience none of these patients were able to cope with their voices’’

    Romme and Esher decided that in order to help people who were not coping well with their voices they must find people who were. Consequently, Romme and Patsy appeared on a popular Dutch television programme. Patsy and Romme talked about her experience of hearing voices and invited people to contact them after the programme. The response was surprising, seven hundred people contacted Romme. Three hundred of these said that they were not coping well, 150 said they had found ways to manage their voices.

    The response of the people who were coping led Romme to organise contact between people to exchange information and discuss their experiences, eventually going on to organise a conference to gather more information. This was the beginning of hearing voices self-help groups, Romme and Escher went on to carry out more research on voices, the Hearing Voices Network had begun.

    Foundation Resonance

    The conference, led to establishing ‘Foundation Resonance’, whose aim was to break down the social taboos surrounding voice hearing. Foundation Resonance is a network of people who hear voices whether these are associated with psychiatric illness or not. Families and professionals also form part of the membership. Similar to the UK network, It has a telephone link and puts people in touch with each other and has self help groups throughout Holland.

    The UK experience

    In 1988, Paul Baker, a community development worker from Manchester attended a conference in Trieste. This was called ’The Question of Psychiatry’ and was sponsored by the World Health Organisation. Baker was there in a search for non-medical solutions to mental health problems and It was here that he met Romme and Escher who were presenting information of their work on hearing voices.

    For mixed reasons Baker found this fascinating, having a close relative who experienced voice hearing and as a community development worker he was keen to promote and develop initiatives that supported people in maintaining their own autonomy in the face of distressing symptoms. He left Trieste with his interest aroused and later that year, in November, Romme invited him to attend a conference in Maastricht, this was called simply, ‘People who hear voices’.

    Romme explained to Baker that the decision to hold a conference was not his, but that of Foundation Resonance, the patients felt that professional mental health workers were not accepting the reality of their voices. For this reason greater numbers of professional mental health workers than voice hearers had been invited to the conference. The people who heard voices wanted to demonstrate that normal healthy people hear voices without being psychotic. The conference fulfilled the hope that the professionals would listen to the explanations and experiences of the people who heard voices. Baker was impressed with the conference, describing it as fascinating and extremely useful,... ‘‘ the fundamental to the approach adopted by Romme and Escher and Resonance, has been its emphasis on partnership between voice hearers themselves and professionals who followed this lead; this was a refreshing change from most of the approaches I had come across before, which rarely - if ever, gave such importance to the views of those who had actually experienced the mental health difficulties under consideration.’’ (Baker 1989)

    Following the conference Baker came back with these words from Romme in his mind, ‘‘I ask you to do the same in England. Groups need to be established in each country, where people can talk about hearing voices ...it takes groups of people with the same experience to change attitudes… in America and England at the moment, psychiatrists are conducting themselves as parents. My goal is not to change psychiatry, not to change the parents but to offer the hearers of voices an organization through which they can emancipate themselves’ ( Romme in Baker 1990)

    Baker proceeded to interest other people in this idea and in 1989 Romme and Escher and a member of foundation resonance visited Britain. Before the visit Baker had set up a series of public meetings in Manchester, Sheffield and Liverpool. The meetings were well attended by voice hearers, their relatives, members of the public and mental health workers. Other meetings followed, eventually groups were set up in London and Manchester, these were the first UK hearing voices groups.

    What are Hearing Voices groups?

    Hearing Voices groups are typically, a number of people who share the experience of hearing voices, coming together to help and support each other, they exchange information and learn from each other share the same problems and may have similiar life situations. Sometimes the group may include relatives and carers of people who hear voices.

    The purpose of hearing voices groups is to offer a safe haven where people feel accepted and comfortable. They also have an aim of offering an opportunity to for people to accept and ’live with their voices’, in a way that gives some control and helps them to regain some power over their lives. However, these are broad aims and not all group members will use the group for this purpose

    Many people feel who hear voices feel completely powerless and say that their lives have been taken over by the voices. Most have never had an opportunity to talk to anyone until they attend a group and all members say that talking helps them. Members will use the group in different ways, at different times of their lives. This is why it is not very useful to think of groups in terms of measurable outcomes. When it comes to reviewing the group, (a useful exercise to check if members are getting what they want from the group), evaluation should be creative.

    It is of little value to think of success in terms of numbers of members, these are bound to fluctuate according to need, most groups are fluid and members will move in and out of them as changes occur in their lives. Some people take great comfort from just knowing the group is there, and although it may be a resource they use infrequently, they nevertheless are glad of, and find comfort from its existence.

    Campbell goes on to make the important point that, ’’central to the argument is the proposition that people with a mental illness diagnosis can be providers as well as recipients of care’’.

    An important and fundamental part of self-help groups is that they validate an individual’s experience. They can make an astonishing difference to, and can be a turning point in peoples lives. Ron Coleman (1999) (describes how his first visit to a hearing voices self-help group affected him. ’’ Anne Walton, a fellow voice hearer who, at my very first hearing voices group asked me if I heard voices. When I replied that I did, she told me that they were real. This does not sound like much but that one sentence has been a compass for me showing me the direction I needed to travel and underpinning my belief in the recovery process.’’

    Coleman’s story is well documented elsewhere, so briefly I will just say that he eventually became the National Co-ordinator of HVN. Ten years on he is the director of several companies that provide publications, training and organise conferences on mental health issues. But his ability to cope with hearing voices developed from the crucial point of admitting he heard voices and having his experience accepted by other people. This admission and acceptance were the beginning of coming to terms with coping with his voices.

    Other groups also use the analogy of travel, the journey back to taking control of your life is hard work, but it can be done with the a good map of the terrain. Self-help groups can provide this.





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    1. Duncan RobertsonJuly 29, 2007 @ 08:36 PM
      Dear Julie Downs, No-one in the Group seems to be ready to admit the possibility that the voices really are those of spirits trying to communicate with those of us gifted with 'voice' reception. Apart from this, I have found significant comfort in the voices after my bereavement from my wife in 2006.
    2. FiOctober 26, 2008 @ 07:19 PM
      Hi, I am new here and have just found this site. I was wondering if anyone had had any similar experiences to me. My experiences began in 2003, the same year I met my now husband. I have had 5 really memorable occurrences, but more smaller incidences. They have all occurred when I have been relaxing, happy and content or on a day out. The first was while lying in bed, and having the feeling of interference...like someones feelings and thoughts were coming to me...these were of a little girl, who I could see clearly although my eyes were shut. I was lying awake in bed chatting to my now hubby, when I saw the young girl. I kept closing my eyes as we were chatting, then I felt that the girl had drowned. She looked about 8 or 9 and was dressed in ragged victorian clothing and was soaking wet, with long black wet matted hair. She was saying she was angry and wanted someone to suffer because no-one helped her or stopped her from drowning. I told her that she could not do that, and that it wasn't fair, but that she should move on and find peace, and after a while she faded. The second was while waiting for a train, to come home from a day out with my husband. We were happy and laughing, but when the train was about to arrive, I heard it coming, then almost "tuned into" and "heard" a teenage boy (again could see him in my head), he was about 19 and I remember his clothes, hair and everything, and he was saying, "It's all hopeless, it's a waste of time." Then, really weirdly, as the train pulled up and we stepped through the door, I doubled up and started crying. My husband was extremely worried but I could not explain what was going on. All I could say was what I was hearing, "I shouldn't have done it. Why did I do it? It's too late now, it's all over...god I shouldn't have done it". I have had 3 more incidents simliar, and I feel like I am listening to interference on a radio, where two stations overlap and you hear two people talking, except I hear their thoughts over my own. Can anyone shed any light on this please? they are very widely spaced out and do not upset me, more just puzzle me. Has anyone had similar incidences? Any help or advice would be very helpful. Thank you for listening.
    3. GisselleNovember 20, 2008 @ 04:13 PM
      hi, I had a very similar incidence as Fi?, but the confusing part of me hearing these voices is that i only hear angry people fighting arguing in my head...and when i close my eyes I see a flash of whats going on, I can see flashes of their face and most of the time it involves children. Like in one of my visions I was talking to my husband we were both in a happy mood, than I decided I wanted to go to bed, and as soon as i got confortable I was hearing a mans voice yelling and screaming to a young kid, I couldnt tell if it was a girl or boy, and than I saw a flash of the man grabbing the kids arm, the kid is in the floor screaming in horror....than I got up quickly scared and confused I told my husband to talk a little w/ me again so that i can have that disturbing vision away..than again I tried to sleep and as soon as I closed my eyes I saw a woman doing the same exact thing this time I was able to tell that it was a little girl about 3-4yrs old...but I couldnt see her face..I heard the woman saying im tired of you, and the vision of her grabbig her by the arm pulling her very hard and hitting her...again I got up disturb and this time turned on the t.v trying to get that all away...after a while turned it off and tried sleeping again, this time i saw the little girl sitting in a corner of two walls in a fetus position holding her legs w/ her head down..saying please tell them to stop talking about me...than she puts her head up looks at me, her face is full of tears and to my surprise the vision I kept seing was of the little girl thats been missing for months in FL, where I reside.....I usually have visions like this but never of someone that I know its actually missing, its very confusing I dont have them often maybe a couple of times like 3 times in 1mnth....and voices starts like a radio channel crossing over and than the visions starts to appear when I close my eyes...and its always an arguing person, or a group of ppl. But this one of the little girl bothers me. I can never make them go away I guess they show me watever it is they want me to see, but why do I have these, or we have these vision I feel hopeless about them. Thnx for listening.
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