Quote:
Originally Posted by IndestructibleGirl
I have a really stupid question -
I don't understand vulnerability. I just do not compute. I know and believe my therapist won't shout at me/ be horrible/ laugh in my face if I was visibly vulnerable in a session.
But what good can it do?? What good to have her confirm that (with my attachment issues for example) no, I would never be a welcome part of her life outside the office? Or that no, she would never miss me the way I do her?
Or to take another example, what good can come from sobbing about my dead mother in front of my therapist? She can say some platitudes and look at me full of compassion and genuine empathy. But I know and she knows perfectly well that the clock chimes the hour, we say a pleasant goodbye and I go down the stairs in a million fragments of pain. Then she forgets about it or puts it in the appropriate mental box marked 'clients' but I stay stuck like that for hours/ days.
I often feel like I'm in a sort of concentration camp, and my T and friends and family are all on the other side of the fence - the safe side. It's more painful to me when I admit I'm in the concentration camp, acknowledging that yep I'm there by myself and on borrowed time, unlike them. Much easier to bear if I pretend I'm on the safe side of the fence too.
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I had an awesome therapist once.. so sad he did not have his own practice.. anyway.. but it took me awhile to really let down my guard especially with him being male.. but once I took down the wall and let him in and see the raw emotion and break down completely and got down to the deep dark corners..there became this level of trust.. and if you have a therapist that you can tell genuinely really cares about her patients (as in you) she genuinely cares about you.. then you can be open and have that trust with that therapist. The trust has to be there... the wall must come down in order for them to see the raw emotion and be able to truly empathize ....
That all being said the reason I loved this therapist is becuz of something he always told us to go by.. his phrase was "a good therapist always has a therapist"... we unload alot of big deep stuff on them and if they arent seeing one then thwy either dont empathize (dont care) or arent healthy in the way they deal or dont believe in what they preach.. just something to think about