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Old Sep 07, 2017, 05:20 PM
MrsDuckL MrsDuckL is offline
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Member Since: May 2017
Location: USA
Posts: 138
Quote:
Originally Posted by Runcible Spoon View Post
I think it is possible to overthink this. How real is anyone in our interactions with them? I don't think therapists set out to be less real than anyone else. What they should be doing is keeping their crap out of their clients' therapy. This can be understandably jarring but it's important to allow space for the client to focus on themselves and their process.
I am in the somewhat unusual position of having seen my therapist interviewed on a number of occasions on video. I obviously hear more about him in those videos, so I learn facts about him that I wouldn't otherwise know. Because I'm not paying him to tell me about himself. But I see the same warm, thoughtful person in those videos as I see in front of me every week in therapy. I don't feel he puts on an act or a front. I think it's unlikely that therapists are less real than other professionals you might hire. Its just that keeping their stuff out of the way is an important part of the job.
I totally agree with this! I'm also in a somewhat privileged position of hearing a couple different lengthy radio interviews with my therapist--so fun to hear him speak and not even cut into my therapy time! I am also lucky that the media appearances aren't different than the person I see in front of me each week, he's the same kind, funny, inquisitive person in both settings. I've gleamed quite bit "unofficially" through google, background, his own website, etc. Officially I know a little, we talk off and on about both having small children at home. So for me, I feel it's enough. My therapist talks very little about himself, and I do appreciate it--that 60 minutes a week goes by so quickly!
Thanks for this!
RubyRae