However, you did say you told your T you were having suicidal thoughts, so maybe that was behind her strong emphasis on trying to get you to change your thinking. She was worried about you and perhaps CBT is the only method she knows how to use to help.
I do think that when I told her I was having suicidal thoughts it worried her, and she probably thought that trying to practice CBT would help with them. However, I've told her before that I don't like CBT. I have been trying to do the worksheets and things like that, but when I felt really bad this past week I couldn't even do them. I think sometimes the worksheets help when I am only feeling midly negative, but not when I am so bad that I can't get out of bed. I also think that you and the other posters have made good points in regards to her ability to do other types of therapies. Her main focus is CBT for eating disorders, actually, and she did help me enormously with my ED. On her faculty page and her Psychology Today and somethingfishy pages, it says she is mainly CBT and sometimes uses psychodynamic therapy (which I am not super sure what psychodynamic means, sounds kind of vague). So I guess because her therapy is so CBT oriented it makes sense that she would immediately go there, even though I've told her before that I am not really that into it, even though I do try and do the worksheets. It's not that I mind doing the homework, it's just that I don't find it particularly helpful, and definetely not at this moment. The thing is, is that I honestly don't think I would ever leave her. I am way too attached to her, and I do feel like we have a great connection, and I know (or at least prety sure) that she does genuinely care about me. But maybe you guys do have a point that she should try brancihng out and trying different methods, instead of constantly whipping out her list of cognitive distortions. Yesterday when she pulled out the cognitive distortions list I actually rolled my eyes and said "This is the third time you've pulled that list out."

But I really wouldn't leave her because of her focus on CBT.
Why do you have double sessions? When the session is a big argument, it would be very painful, at least for me, to have to tolerate that length of time. Could you have single sessions with her until you get back on track or are doing more productive work?
This was actually the first double session I've ever had with her. We decided to schedule one since this was the first time I had seen her in about a month. Next week it is back to single sessions.