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Old Jul 20, 2016, 08:09 PM
Anonymous50005
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Quote:
Originally Posted by BudFox View Post
I don't know why someone would become (or continue to be) a therapist if they are not comfortable with clients exhibiting obsessive behavior, especially given that the structure of therapy provokes this kind of response with regularity. If a therapist has stalker fears, they ought to see their own therapist about that, so it's not clouding their judgement. Or find another line of work. I don't think this is unreasonable.

The only expectation I see here is that therapists not rush to judgement or pathologize the client's behavior (as people seem to be doing in this thread), whether due to their own fears or ignorance.

By virtue of payment, clients have earned the right to get the benefit of the doubt, within reason. Therapists are held to a higher standard because that is their job.
But . . . if the fears are not just fears, but a reality (and it can become a reality unfortunately in some cases), they are perfectly within their rights professionally and legally to do what they need to do for their own safety and that of their family. The law will back them up on that; stalking, no matter who it comes from, no matter what a person's profession is, is against the law.

Again, don't at all think that is what is going on with the OP.
Thanks for this!
AncientMelody, rainboots87