Quote:
Originally Posted by just2b
No she doesn't do that. She has said before, would you like to end early, and at times I sit in silence and may take a while for me to talk for not sure what part of mind I am in. That is the first time she walked out. Inside I was calling for her to not go, yet I sensed relief, and was also shocked she actually left. I was like wow, she walked out.
I sat in silence in her office, grabbed a pen and paper and started to write and the scribble it all out then walked out only to come back in, she was still in other office so I went back to her office where I was sitting and sat back down to write. I had about 10 min left of my regular session so I wrote. Then looked at clock, and a sense of pure anger came over me, and I ripped up the letter and from the corner of my eye I saw she was standing in the doorway. Just watching. I picked up the pieces of paper off the floor threw them away and walked by her as she called out see you next Thursday. I didn't say a word.
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I'm not sure I'd even be able to go back after that happened. How are you feeling about it now? That doesn't seem like something a therapist should do. I sit in silence in session and my T has never ended the session or left the room. He might try to prompt me to speak, but he's there with me. I think therapists should know that sometimes when you're in pain you just can't speak. I'm sorry this happened to you.