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Old Dec 09, 2012, 09:13 AM
Syra Syra is offline
Magnate
 
Member Since: Dec 2012
Location: California
Posts: 2,248
Quote:
Originally Posted by hezaa82 View Post
I had a session with my T today, and leaving the building I felt angry and like I wanted to cry. That's pretty common for me actually. I've been seeing this T for almost 4 years. The feeling goes away when I get on the train home and distract myself with looking at my phone or whatever. (having to take a crowded Tokyo train home is the last thing I need after T!)

Today in T we mainly talked about my family and about me wanting to resolve the repressed anger I have against my family. My family is dysfunctional and no one ever talks about feelings. I live in Japan and family lives in the US so I only see them once a year. My T suggested I interact with them based on the here and now, not based on the past. That makes sense to me and I said that. But I said I felt I needed to express some grievances too, like tell my dad that it hurt that he said he would start calling me on Skype but never did. I guess I wanted T to validate my feelings. T said as long as I was doing it for myself and not having expectations for how my family members will respond then it's ok.

Is it normal to feel angry and like crying after a session?

On the bright side I did notice that I'm able to have less unrealistic expectations for my T and think about T more objectively now that I have other outlets for talking about my problems, such as forums like this one, and other sources of advice like self help books.
Sometimes I left t crying and it was good. Sometimes it was because bad things were going on.

I once saw a T who I'm still very fond of. He helped me a lot. He was very skilled with CBT, and I found that very helpful at the time. 20 years later I had another issue and went back to him. CBT wasn't what I needed this time, and he wasn't helpful. I left and went to someone more into what I call "archeology" (probably similar to insight therapy). I'm glad I made the switch. If I had a problem that CBT was helpful for, I'd go back to the first guy.
Sometimes it isn't just finding a good T, it's finding a good T for the presenting issue.