![]() |
FAQ/Help |
Calendar |
Search |
#26
|
||||
|
||||
I don't want to hijack this thread, but it seems to me that a very valid point is that I should have the ability to talk about what in therapy ISN'T working for me without it being automatically about my RESISTANCE! Therapy fatigue (this is a new term that is sticking, I think
![]() |
![]() Asiablue
|
#27
|
||||
|
||||
Quote:
Hijack away ![]() I am a complete coward and terrified of rejection, so I wonder is this is why I am so submissive with T and desperate to get it right in that room for fear of failure and rejection. And why I feel unable to challenge things and identify my needs. Yes maybe I do need to listen to that voice that is saying to take a break, take stock, reflect, time to get over my therapy fatigue, then push forward again. But it is so hard to leave and as you say easy to stay. I sometimes also wonder whether this T will be my practice ground and then I will take those skills to another T who will be unaware of the pathetic "patient" I was with my current T. I think I have become this "me" in therapy with T and that is now my label / persona that I display to this T - like I am a certain person with my mother, another with my friends and that is the role I adopt with each. Your posts were worth more than 2 cents by the way - thanks - Soup
__________________
Soup |
#28
|
||||
|
||||
Thank you so much
![]() I don't feel particularly strong today, and had actually been feeling a little puny...so your comment made a big difference! I think part of my problem with this most recent T was that I wanted to "do a good job" in therapy, and that was really really problematic . I think I imported a lot of my achievement mode, which I was raised with, into the process and it really didn't have much of a place in therapy. The very things that made me a good "patient" made me stumble sometimes in therapy, and I felt like I was flunking And then, the idea of leaving the process was kind of like taking an "incomplete" in a class. But,I thought so what? One day, while fully in the role of hapless patient sitting across from my silent, unaffected T, I asked myself: what would "doing a good job" in here look like? What, exactly, would success-- really look like? How will I know beyond trusting my inmost feelings, which are telling me to LEAVE? And I couldn't answer that question. Each time I felt that I had answered it, a new question would crop up. And one day, I was sitting in therapy and my T said, we need to have another issue to work on..., and I thought, really? Maybe not! Maybe there are other ways for me to access those parts of me that I want to expand, rather than raking over and over those parts that I wish would contract....My T talked alot about "cleaning the wound," and one day, I thought, what if I no longer conceptualize myself as being fundamentally wounded but instead as fundamentally WHOLE? How would that feel? Why aren't we talking about healing rather than wounds all the time? I'm just really really tired of being across the room from someone who sees the glass as half empty..and I got tired of picking scabs...sorry to be graphic here but hey... And yet, every time I raised issues with the direction of therapy, I was treated with condescension (I know best how this should proceed) and labeled "resistant." Isn't it my therapy? And if I need it to change, and it can't, then therapy fatigue (depression about the therapy itself?) by its very definition sets in. And staying makes absolutely no sense unless being depressed is what you're after, rather than what sent you there! I'm not implying that there were no discoveries along the way or that the process was a total wash, but my therapy fatigue got worse and worse, and the issues WITHIN the therapy started to eclipse the issues that I came to deal with, until, finally...the end. Now I'm taking a break (while still hanging out online on the therapy forum, go figure!). And having friends here helps! Blessings....MCL ![]() |
![]() Asiablue, SoupDragon
|
#29
|
||||
|
||||
MCL- you speak with such clarity about therapy. I completely agree that constantly picking over scabs isn't helpful or healthy in my opinion. Also, why is it resistance when you are taking charge of your own health and recognising when you need a break from therapy?
I love that you decided to approach yourself as fundamentally whole, which it sounds like you are. Recognising when something isn't working for you is mentally healthy! |
![]() SoupDragon
|
#30
|
||||
|
||||
Quote:
__________________
Soup |
#31
|
|||
|
|||
Quote:
It is just like ending a problematic relationship- eventually one can get to the point of letting go and being uninterested. Eh, who am I kidding- ending relationships hurts, even when you do manage to get somewhat detached. I remember reading somewhere about a positive ending to therapy where the person felt they had gotten some things out of it and just suddenly felt /knew that they didn't need therapy anymore. That sounds similar to loosing interest, just without feeling disappointed. Well, my t said he believes in breaks. Maybe the breaks you all are talking about on here are a good idea. Except Soup said she might not be able to get back in with your t? Your t doesn't do breaks? Quote:
|
#32
|
||||
|
||||
Quote:
I have mentioned breaks to my T before but again on reflection T's advice not to take them was probably the right advice as I think I was trying to run away. T is tough isn't it and sometimes the reasons for it being tough / boring / a waste of time are not clear?
__________________
Soup |
![]() learning1
|
Reply |
|