Quote:
Originally Posted by stopdog
What I object to is the woman characterizing the situation as me "thinking" she was distracted rather than her admitting she was distracted, particularly when she did admit it at the time of the incident AND that her distraction or even the dog was not actually what I was trying to talk about.
|
And that is a valid objection, for sure. I don't recall my T ever admitting fault for anything. Like, instead of owning up to allowing his frustration to affect my therapy, he'd say, "I had to change my strategy because you weren't receptive to it" or some nonsense.