
Jun 06, 2014, 06:30 PM
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Member Since: Nov 2010
Location: PNW
Posts: 492
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Quote:
Originally Posted by skies
Maybe i'm in the minority here, but it wouldn't be the first time...I don't think it's withholding love; it's withholding enmeshment, which to many of us, might seem like withholding love. An easy way to explain this is--if your therapist were to give you what you needed, she'd be sort of 'people pleasing', rather than being a separate person from you.
Attachment is one-sided, child/immature love. Mature love involves being separate from another (but connected/bonded). So to answer your question: when a therapist withholds enmeshment, it helps us construct psychological boundaries, which provides us with the framework needed for mature love.
A therapist giving us or becoming what we want/need is not love. A therapist's unconditional acceptance, compassion, support, validation, etc., is love.
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What do you mean with "attachment is one sided, child/immature love"?
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