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Old Oct 02, 2011, 11:00 PM
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scorpiosis37 scorpiosis37 is offline
Magnate
 
Member Since: Apr 2010
Location: USA
Posts: 2,302
Rainbow...

After reading all of the posts from people who have successful e-mail relationships with their Ts, I thought you might benefit from a different kind of response. So, here goes...

I don't e-mail with my T precisely because, if I did, I would be in much the same boat you are in now. It would start of innocently enough but, after awhile, I would start writing her longer and more frequent e-mails and I would start hitting "refresh" in my inbox to see if T had responded, and when I got a short, standard response, I would feel as though my T didn't care enough about all of the important, sensitive information I shared with her. I would then respond-- not by backing off like perhaps I should-- but by writing her even more personal and even more intense e-mails in order to try to elicit a bigger response. It would be a disaster. So, for me, I know that I can never start e-mailing with T because there is no possibility that it could end well. It's something I have to accept.

So, while e-mail may be a productive therapeutif tool for others, I benefit more from T establishing clear boundaries-- and then respecting them. This means that I also have to sit with my feelings even when I FEEL like I want to contact her. It's not always easy. In fact, sometimes it's quite hard. But it's something I have to do. I used to be really bad about maintaining appropriate boundaries-- and other people used to enable me by accepting my boundary crossings or crossing the boundaries themselves. For me, I struggle with wanting to "push" a mother/daughter relationship on older women who take an interest in me. For awhile, things would be wonderful-- but then I would want more and I would push too much-- and my pushing would push them away. I know that I still have those same desires, and that mother/daughter dynamic still comes up with my T. It would be SO EASY for me to test T's limits and see how much of maternal attention I could get her to give me. I know that I could "get more" out of her if I tried-- she has some flexibiility and I could push a bit more before I reached her limit. But, to do so, would be to display negative behavior that I have worked hard to change. It is SO much better to control my behaviors, to exercise patience, and to allow T to CHOOSE to share personal details with me, CHOOSE to tell me that she cares about me, and CHOOSE to ask me questions like "how can I support you?" This is the first time in life I haven't "pushed" someone to give me those things and, instead, let someone come to me and offer them. It feels so much better to know that when T offers things to me, she is doing so because she WANTS to, not because I am making her or she wants to appease me. As a result, my relationship with her is so much stronger AND I feel so much better about myself. It's taken a year and a half, but my feelings of neediness are also subsiding. They're not gone-- they're something I still struggle with sometimes-- but they are not nearly as strong as they used to be. And, when they arise, I'm able to control them. When I feel like I want to e-mail T or call T or text T, I write in my journal. (I keep a therapy journal on my computer). I write down everything I want to say if she were going to read it-- but I don't send it. However, those times when I write down something I DO want her to read, I print it out, and I bring it into session. She reads it, and then we talk about it. This is much better for me because it gives me the option of showing her how I was feeling during the week, but it maintains her boundaries (and mine) of only doing therapy during session-- and it ensures that she will respond, in detail, to what I share. Because I have her right there, I can ask her follow up questions and make sure that we discuss everything we need to. I'm not left with the feeling of having shared something meaningful with T and then getting a response like "the weather is nice today." That woudl be too painful for me. Anyway, I'm probably sharing more detail than you need, but I just want you to know that you are not alone-- you are not the only one who cannot do e-mail with T! And that's OKAY. For me, it's more therapeautic that T does NOT do e-mail... and I think a sign of a good T is somehow who will enforce boundaries when they need to. Sometimes, we have to learn that what we want may not actually be good for us!
Thanks for this!
beautiful.mess, Dr.Muffin, rainbow8, skysblue