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Old Sep 24, 2018, 05:11 PM
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nottrustin nottrustin is offline
Grand Magnate
 
Member Since: Jan 2014
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ElectricManatee View Post
My T basically allows however much outside contact I need. I can send an email or leave a voicemail, and she almost always responds with 24 hours, unless I tell her that I don't need a response. My T says that she trusts me to self-regulate when I can and she knows that I use other coping strategies too, so she hasn't felt a need to impose any limits around outside contact with me. I think maybe it is relevant too that the contact usually helps me calm down rather than escalating the problem or creating new problems (i.e., it is rare that I am upset by her response).

My T says that she wants to be there for me when I feel like I need her, and she wants for me to learn that it's safe to reach out to people for help. I reach out semi-regularly and always appreciate being able to do it, but I still feel a lot of fear and anxiety around contacting her. She genuinely doesn't seem to mind spending the extra (unpaid) time on me, but maybe I feel like I'm not worth it. A lot of the things I am in therapy for center around being able to feel like I belong and that it's okay for me to take up space in the world, so I can see the link to how my T finds outside contact therapeutically important. I just feel uncomfortable about it.

I think my anxiety is compounded by reading posts here about people who emphasize self-reliance and try to avoid contacting their therapists at all costs or people who have therapists who arbitrarily shift boundaries. I am wondering if there are people out there who have had mostly positive experiences with outside contact. Did your feelings about reaching out change over time? Does your T encourage you to contact them? In what circumstances? How/why does it help? Do you think of outside contact as a central part of therapy or just a nice little bonus?
98% of the time emailing T was very beneficial. There were a couple of times it to big misunderstandings but we worked it out. I always had a fear of being too much of being a burden. It got somewhat better but not 100%. At one point a few months ago she mention me cutting back but reassured me she wasn't saying I couldnt do it just less often. After discussion we realized her reasoning was because of a misunderstanding in an email. Email was very beneficial especially when I disclosed my CSA. She was the first person I told. The only other person who knew was the abuser. I was wreck and literally had nobody to talk to.
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Thanks for this!
DP_2017