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Old Aug 10, 2021, 10:01 AM
Brown Owl 2 Brown Owl 2 is offline
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Member Since: Sep 2020
Location: Scotland
Posts: 186
Quote:
Originally Posted by stopdog View Post
I don't understand how a relationship with a therapist does anything. I have read it is what those people say. But it absolutely is like mandarin to me.

"Norcross's second finding makes you stop and think: "When therapists treat patients, they follow the prescriptions of their theoretical orientation. But the amazing thing is that when therapists treat themselves, they become very pragmatic. In other words, when battling their own problems, therapists dispense with the psychobabble and fall back on everyday, commonsense techniques—chats with friends, meditation, hot baths, and so on. In a survey by Guy and James Liaboe, Ph.D., for example, therapists said they were hesitant to enter therapy "because of feelings of embarrassment or humiliation, doubts concerning the efficacy of therapy, previous negative experiences with personal therapy,..."
That’s interesting that therapists reported that they experienced having therapy as humiliating. I too found it a little humiliating. Near the end I raised it with my T that I felt shame at specific times when she spoke to me a certain way (which involved her taking the stance of expert). I was made to feel like an anomoly.
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SlumberKitty
Thanks for this!
Quietmind 2