Thread: T can't save me
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Old Sep 18, 2013, 09:31 AM
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growlithing growlithing is offline
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Member Since: May 2013
Location: Boston
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Quote:
Originally Posted by feralkittymom View Post
You're right, of course, that no one else can save us; it's one of the lessons of growing up. But a good T can let us borrow their strength while they guide us to rebuild ourselves.

I'm concerned that your mood swings and how they result in impulsiveness is more than you can handle; and perhaps more than your T can handle. It sounds like your school has a rather minimal health safety net--no services in the summer, Deans very involved, your own T being an intern who will leave. I was a graduate student at a Big Ten school when I started therapy. The school's health services (medical and psych) had the highest possible accreditation. There were @ 20 Ts, several PhDs, and 2 pdocs. And I was doubly lucky that my T was the Director of the Psych Services and had a private practice that I could transition to when I was no longer a student. I didn't know when I started how important those conditions would come to be for me.

I think it would be well worth it to have a discussion with your T about getting you settled with more permanent help. You vacillate between recognizing how badly you're feeling to being in denial about how serious your problems are, depending upon your mood. Such wild swings need to be addressed, probably with a pdoc, before you're going to be able to make progress. The fact that you're SH just makes everything more precarious.

I agree with Chris that you really don't have the luxury to keep diving into denial, both because of the SH consequences, and the external consequences from your school. Thinking that you will die before a hospitalization because of your mother's reaction is frankly nonsensical. If you die, you don't get the chance to live after your mother is long dead and buried. She's a temporary impediment, and your ultimate solution is permanent. You may think that is a viable option now, but that's your illness talking. And if you keep listening, at some point, that choice will likely be taken out of your hands.

Your T, simply by virtue of her relative inexperience and time-limited internship just isn't enough for you. Keep seeing her for support, but enlist her help--or someone else at your health service--to set you up with highly skilled permanent services.
The problem is that I have no money to see someone outside of my T. I know she is way too inexperienced to handle the intensity of my problems, but she is willing to try for no additional money outside of my tuition. I don't know how I could pay for another T without my parents finding out because I am still on their insurance. I'm also probably not going to live here very long if at all after I graduate. Two years is the longest I can guarantee seeing anyone.

The school needs more emergency health support. I can only have an emergency a few times a week at specific hours in order to get help. I always have class during those hours too. But the school is outrageously small so I don't really blame it.

I don't think my mood swings are really that extreme. Maybe they are to someone who only sees some of them, but I don't chronicle the transition very well. I get triggered fairly easily since footsteps set me off and then swing the other direction very quickly.

I don't think I'll die before hospitalization. I don't want to die. I just don't always want to live if that makes any sense. I know going to the hospital is fairly likely at this point. I just don't know how to avoid it
Hugs from:
Bill3