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Old Sep 09, 2016, 04:33 AM
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ThisWayOut ThisWayOut is offline
Grand Magnate
 
Member Since: Jan 2013
Location: in my own little world
Posts: 4,227
Quote:
Originally Posted by Trace14 View Post
You are very fortunate to have that T. But I do think she/he is an exception to the rule. Not only from my own experience but by working with T's on a professional level I was very disappointed in their true feelings about working with clients and I guess that has jaded my perspective of them for the most part.
Everyone needs to be heard. Thanks for posting.
Yeah, I do think my t trends to be the exception these days. I've found t's in private practice, and ones with a good sense of self-care are the ones more likely to genuinely care. I've worked with a fair amount of t's who were burnt-out or jaded. Actually, a former boss is the biggest reason I question a t's genuineness. We worked in a congregate care setting together and the things that were said behind closed doors made me cringe. I get the need to decompress and joke about certain things, but some of the general attitudes embodied all that is wrong with mental health care these days... I ended up quitting for a number of reasons, but the attitude towards our clients played a role. I must admit, I fell into the trap while there, mired in the day-to-day of it. I'm hugely ashamed of that. The clients deserved better... but I have seen the happier side of things also. I've seen staff and therapists who go the extra mile to help their clients, and I've seen the worry when their clients are struggling...