Quote:
Originally Posted by lacey12345
Hi all,
I just put this in an old thread, but thinking about it, I wasn't sure it fit.
So here it is:
Dear T,
You work out of a small practice. One of the other people working there is also your best friend of several years. I'll call him Mr. X. From looking around on Google the other day, I found out that Mr. X lost his state license because he had been sexually involved with a client for a few years. Both he and the client were married at the time, and he is still married with children now. It's all very creepy to me, as well as a bit hard to believe.
I'd like to ask you about this whole business, because I'm not sure what to do with this information. I'm not sure if it makes me question your integrity and judgement. I'm not sure I want to be involved with your practice, with you as my counselor, in light of this information. After all, it's a small practice, he's your best friend. You may have known about it at the time, when Mr. X was involved in his affair. You certainly know about it now, and yet you still share a practice with him, he still sees clients. What does this say about you?
You've always been very professional with me. I think you will avoid topics like sex and men with me, or we talk about such things in vague euphemisms. Maybe it's part of your personality or mine, maybe it's because we are opposite genders, maybe it's a consequence of what your friend did or how male therapists generally approach counseling female patients--that you avoid topics of conversation that are sexual in nature because of the gray area and possibility of overstepping boundaries. I don't know. But if I'm embarrassed to talk about sex (I never had the sex talk with my parents, and I think they chose to ignore the possibility that I have been sexually active w/ boyfriends), and you avoid talking about it, that just seems... unhealthy. Repressive. Should I be seeing a female counselor where I might be able to talk about these things and consider sex as a healthy part of existence?
Ultimately, I don't know what to do about Mr. X. I find myself questioning your judgement, your integrity. Should I stop seeing you? I may be assuming too much about what you knew and when, but since the license revoking was public, I know you know now and continue to share a practice with this man. Maybe there is more to the story, maybe it's a financial thing now (though you say he is your best friend), maybe it's convenience. But what he is reported to have done is morally reprehensible. How can I trust your psychological insight and general wisdom if I am questioning your general body of ethics and morality? Should I judge you by your chosen colleague and close friend?
I also don't know who to ask about this. A friend? (Many of my friends don't know I'm in counseling.) A parent or family member? (I don't know if I could talk to them for advice without having to act on that advice. For example, my dad would likely feel very uncomfortable with the breach of professional ethics on Mr. X's part, that he doesn't want me near such an environment, and he might want me to stop seeing you, T. Dad already thinks I'm doing well and maybe it's time to discontinue therapy.) The whole business leaves me unsettled and though I've known you, T, for over two years, I'm finding myself distancing myself from you, already mentally questioning the advice and wisdom you've given me over the last several months. Which makes me sad, because you have helped me a lot. I think. Ah, I'm confused. Does this knowledge now erase what our relationship has been? It may not be fair, but emotions aren't rational. I'm also slow to trust, and now I am wondering if I have misplaced that trust.
Silently wondering,
Lacey
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I got distracted and didnt read the whole post so pardon me if I am out of touch with this but I have a question -
the person that had an unethical relationship with their client wasnt your therapist so why would another therapist (not your own) having unethical relationships with someone that is not you, question your therapist and whether your own therapist is ethical.
in order to write this letter you already have built up a sense of trust with your therapist right and you know your therapist isnt the unethical one right and you know the sexual abuse by that unethical therapist wasnt you.
Im just not seeing the problem here unless that old thing called transference is kicking in here where you are in your mind making that unethical therapist into being your therapist and in your mind making the victim to that other therapists abuse to be you.
Also I dont know about where you are but here where we are, when a mental health provider does something like this and loses their credentials the other co workers dont always know why, what happened or anything of the sort.
therapists have to "renew" their credentials from time to time and its quite normal for a mental health providers credentials to expire and it takes time to go through the renewal process. So using my work places as an example its not unusual for me to know this provider or that one lost their credentials but still be practicing and not know it was because theirs expired and are going through the renewal process or they did something wrong and got sanctioned or must complete a probationary period and requirements before their credentials are reinstated.
if where your therapist works its the same way, your therapist may not know that mental health provider doesnt have his credentials, or maybe that provider lost their credentials and completed what ever punishment needed completing and now the credentials have been reinstated, and what ever else is involved.
your therapist may not even be legally able to discuss with you what goes on with her co workers. it you were here at the crisis center and this happened here those that work here are unable to discuss what goes on with the personal lives (having sex with their clients is considered that therapists personal life and job not up for discussion with me and my clients) of other treatment providers we work with.
your therapist though will be able to work on your issues as to why what a treatment provider not your own is making you question your treatment providers interaction with you and why it makes you uncomfortable to know a treatment provider that you dont have did this. basically keeping the conversation on you and your issues. not on the unethical therapists issues.
if you are asking for opinions about the sound of the letter, grammatical and such what I did read of it is worded ok to me.