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Old Sep 11, 2020, 05:18 PM
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Fuzzybear Fuzzybear is offline
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Member Since: Nov 2002
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Gabyunbound View Post
I tend to question therapy in which the therapist digs and digs and digs for trauma where there might not even be any. I think it can be dangerous in that once we have defined ourselves as having been abused/having suffered great trauma, it utterly changes how we see ourselves, our world and those around us. I think therapists should tread lightly and allow patients to bring forth what they need to and not define too neatly what is shared.

That said, I did have a therapist who told me that something was abuse which was blatantly so and which I had always remembered but rarely thought about. I mean I hadn't considered it abuse because I just never categorized it as anything in my head. I didn't even dislike the person who perpetrated such a heinous act and in fact, idealized him. In my case, I needed to recognize it as such to come to any sort of healing from it. It affects my relationship with this person to this day, but at least now I understand why it always has, in one way or another.

Thank you for bringing this up, Fuzzy. It is, indeed, a very vulnerable topic, but I am glad that such things can be shared here, I hope it won't be moved.
Thanks Gabyunbound (I agree that therapists are wise to tread lightly and to be sparing with unneccessary neatly boxed definitions). For me, I think recognising some things as abuse are necessary to come to any sort of healing too (a shrink who listened (one session only though ) described the ''family'' of origin as ''disturbed''... a label but I don't really think it is inaccurate)
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