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#51
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I paraphrased the stuff from the book. And in some books they were giving examples of their clients (or a mix of their clients) responses. I did not mean to imply I was copying from the book verbatim. Last edited by stopdog; Jul 23, 2012 at 01:45 PM. |
#52
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__________________
![]() "Don't say I'm out of touch with this rampant chaos-your reality I know well what lies beyond my secret refuge The nightmare I built my own world to escape." ♥evanescence♥
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#53
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Stopdog- how are you defining empathy?
Do you think you've ever felt empathetic towards anyone? Sorry for all the questions- just trying to figure things out. |
![]() stopdog
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#54
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I was using the definition from the books. They all keep using phrases such as empathic responses or the therapist expressing empathy leads to x in the client etc. and then give examples.
IT is not the only part of therapeutic communication I find aversive or baffling - I find most of it that way whether they are attempting empathy or not. This is just one aspect of it. And I was struck how all the books characterize it (my type of reaction to it) as not the usual response that clients have (which I would have thought was not all that unusual)- so I thought I would see how others here experience it. I feel empathy but had to learn how to express it to others - when I do express it I do not understand how what I am saying in the way I have learned to say it is useful - I do see how it is by how others react - but it is foreign to me in the sense of why it works. It is like the opposite of what would help me. I simply had to accept that if I said to others what would make me feel better, it did not help them and so I simply caved and now talk in a way like what sounds to me as completely idiotic - but I do recognize it works with interacting with others. When others do it back to me - I try to remember they are trying - but it can irritate the snot out of me and often controlling my frustration and irritation at people (friends I mean - I do not always bother trying to control it with the therapist) who are sincerely trying to be there for me is simply not worth telling them anything. Last edited by stopdog; Jul 23, 2012 at 01:57 PM. |
#55
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Not sure about "normal" as I don't think there's any such thing. But for me anyway, and I'm the only one for whom I can speak of course, is that it's validating - validating that how I feel is real - in my particular case because of constantly having my feelings belittled, made fun of, put down, punished, dismissed etc. as I was growing up. It's helpful to me to have someone compassionately acknowledge that my feelings are real. Sorry if I went off on a tangent.
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![]() rainboots87, stopdog
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#56
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![]() pbutton
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#57
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Do you acknowledge that you are not alone in the room, and that therefore you are saying "me validating me" is not enough?
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#58
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![]() rainboots87, stopdog
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#59
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In therapy? I realize the therapist is there. I do not understand what you mean.
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#60
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Maybe that's my problem. If me validating me isn't enough, what the hell am I going to do then?? I have no desire for outside approval.
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![]() stopdog
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#61
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Trigger for mention of CSA...
Quote:
Having T empathize with me and validate what I say helps me to understand when what I'm feeling is actually appropriate. If I'm feeling something irrational, he'll empathize (e.g., I can see how you would feel that way) and then immediately point out other ways it can be viewed. His empathy lets me know that feeling the way I do isn't crazy. May not be perfectly logical to someone who hasn't had my experience, but it's logical in my case. For example, when I told T about my CSA, one of the things I was concerned about was whether I had made a bigger deal out of it than it really was. When I was finally able to tell him exactly what happened and he validated my perceptions (actually, he thinks it's even bigger than I had let on), it made me feel like I wasn't being a drama queen. All of what he does in this area is building toward having me validate me be enough. It hasn't been so far, since I couldn't trust my own perceptions. |
![]() stopdog
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#62
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I trust my own perceptions until I tell other people. Then I think up ways that they are going to try to prove I am wrong. Then I see how I could possibly be wrong & misinterpreting.
Somehow in my head, this translates as "telling other people makes things untrue". Which is pretty jacked up, when I really think about it. Weird. |
![]() pachyderm
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#63
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I guess I'm not expressing myself well. I don't know how to say what I mean. I grew up in a household where I was told what I felt and what I didn't feel, and if I tried to say I felt something different from what they wanted me to feel, I was told how wrong I was. As in, "you're not sad about THAT. That would be stupid." "You CAN'T be mad that happened; you brought it on yourself." Or my personal favorite, "Why are you crying? Where did you get that mark?" right after she had been just whaling on me with a belt. Maybe I'm just dumber than you guys, but I started doubting myself all the time. Did that really happen? Is that really how I feel? I did this checking procedure before I even allowed myself to have emotions about things. So, in therapy, for the first time, there was another human hearing what happened and saying, "You GET TO BE MAD about that. That sucked and you DIDN'T bring it on yourself. You were eight. Eight year olds act like that all the time!" And I find that helpful. It gives me a place to air out my doubts and misgivings. a reality check on what normal is. |
![]() pachyderm, pbutton
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![]() critterlady, pachyderm, stopdog
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#64
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![]() rainboots87, rainbow8
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#65
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MKAC - I do get where you're coming from. The things you are saying make sense to me.
![]() I'm trying to figure out what my problem is. I don't think I understand my issue yet. ![]() ![]() |
![]() Anonymous37917
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#66
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pbutton, I think we sometimes invalidate ourselves as a survival mechanism. It's easier to survive something if you convince yourself that it's no big deal. At least that is what I did, in addition to others invalidating me. Just kept telling myself it's not so bad. I can live through this. This is nothing really. I can live through this. It's no big deal; I was overreacting before. I can live through this. And I did, so clearly I was right and it was no big deal.
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![]() pachyderm, pbutton
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![]() critterlady, pachyderm, pbutton
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#67
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#68
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Last edited by stopdog; Jul 23, 2012 at 02:51 PM. |
#69
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Just last week, T blew that "no big deal" out of the water on me. He turned some things totally upside down and gave them names that I'm struggling to accept. He's only been able to do that because I was able to tell him things no one else knows. I was only able to do that because I knew he would empathize. |
#70
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#71
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bahaha that is soooooo me too! except i still do the eye roll! ![]() |
#72
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Call me a wimp, then. Call me a wuss. But csa just pisses the hell out of me. |
![]() peridot28
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#73
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Bunny -I did not say csa is not a big deal. I said my response to the response by the one I see to MY csa was that the therapist over-reacted (big drama queen) to MY experience.
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#74
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I don't mind when t emphasizes with me. It doesn't help at all, but it doesn't bother me either. It does bother me when he makes mountains out of molehills though.
__________________
never mind... |
![]() stopdog
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#75
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I am laughing and kind of weeping at the same time at this message, Bunny. I cannot imagine telling the rest of you what I tell myself about the CSA thing. Not sure why I keep laughing. The crying kind of makes sense, but laughing. Oh, maybe because I realize how ludicrous it seems to me to say to you or stopdog, 'Oh quitcher whining you stupid pansy . . .' when I say that to myself ALL the time. Quitcher is one of my favorite words from around where I grew up. Along with gorna. Are you gorna keep going on and on with that drama queen whining about abuse? hahahahaha. Man. I think I'm losing it this afternoon. I just told my husband how much I want to punch him in the face also. I don't think I've ever done that before. Maybe I need a break from my life for a bit. |
![]() pachyderm
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![]() stopdog
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