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Old Jan 02, 2015, 01:26 PM
scallion5 scallion5 is offline
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Member Since: Oct 2014
Location: USA
Posts: 156
I like this.

One question though, how do you decide whether something will be useful or not?

Quote:
Originally Posted by stopdog View Post
I have found taking breaks quite useful as well as telling the therapist to stop, in no uncertain or equivocal terms, doing the things that are not useful or that I dislike. There are times when a client simply must, in my opinion, clearly set the rules for the therapist. If the therapist brings up something I think is not useful - I give them a chance to explain why they are bringing it up - if they fail or cannot or refuse to explain in a satisfactory manner, I tell them I am not going to do so. And I move on. Without explanation and my consent, I do not let the therapist do whatever they want. I cannot compel the therapist to explain, but I can refuse to go along if they do not.
It has been quite useful for me.