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#51
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I do have problem with people requesting love and hugs.
grandmother from father's side did this. very manipulative creature.
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Glory to heroes!
HATEFREE CULTURE |
![]() rainbow8
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#52
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It's important for many of us to learn to ask for what we need....so asking for love and hugs may be a huge step for someone who doesn't typically put themselves out there, who strive to deny their needs and be totally independent. As with most things, they fall on a continuum. It takes a lot of work and risk taking to work towards finding our place in the middle.
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Don't follow the path that lies before you. Instead, veer from the path - and leave a trail... ![]() |
![]() Miswimmy1, rainbow8, Sannah, stopdog
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#53
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I am sry that this happened to you. And I respect that. And it is your choice whether you give or ask for them.
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Life isn't about waiting for the storm to pass. It's about learning to dance in the rain. ![]() ![]() |
![]() rainbow8
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#54
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Quote:
Pema Chodron has a new book (or at least new this year) and she references what I think is an amazing book written by a brain researcher who had a stroke (My Stroke of Insight). She studies the neurobiology of emotion, and she reported that the life of an emotion (in the brain itself, from trigger to where the brain lets it go) is 90 seconds. So if you get angry, that emotion does its neurological cycle and is over after 90 seconds. If it's lasting longer, then we're doing something to reactivate it, like pouring gasoline on a fire. I've found this concept to be really useful for me lately. If I notice what I'm feeling, I attend to it, maybe think about what it's about, try to drop the "storyline" (typical interpretation about what it means), I find it goes on its way and leaves me alone. I can usually wait out those 90 seconds. But, going back to your T, that piece of how you felt that she left you thinking about sex and feeling shame, that seems like it doesn't belong to you. Or your T. That seems to belong to your brother. It just sits squarely on my CSA bones, if that makes any sense. Not your shame, that is what was put upon you. And you feeling (not acting) sexual towards anyone is not anything that any of us can control. Shame is not something that we are born with, with respect to sexuality. Anyone who's had a kid knows that kids are NOT ashamed of their bodies, quite the opposite, shame about our bodies and feeling good is what is put upon us. It's taken me a long time, but I think of my lust (my word for feeling sexual towards someone) as something that is really important to me. I like to count on my lust. I like to know that if I am still lusting, I am still pretty much alive. Even though I've been married a long time, sometimes my more subtle feelings for my H wax and wane, but I can always count on my lust. And before I was married, people came in and out of my life, but my lust was always with me. I guess I'm saying that lust, feeling sexual, is a healthy and very human response. Lust isn't the problem, feeling sexual towards someone, T or not, isn't the problem. It's what we think people do about with their lust (what we've been taught people do, or what we've watched people do) that's the problem, and that's what people often have something to be embarrassed about, not the feelings themselves. I think this incident with your T has brought up something very important for you to work on, and it seems to go back to your brother, and the aftereffects of that. I'm just really sorry that you had to experience that growing up, and that you have to heal from it now. But you are really on your way, don't give up. |
![]() dinosaurs, rainbow8
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#55
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I am not a big believer in others deciding what someone else needs or needs to do or should do, or what is in someone else's best interest or for their own good.
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![]() rainbow8, ~EnlightenMe~
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#56
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Mr Ambassador, alias Ancient Plax, alias Captain Therapy, alias Big Poppa, alias Secret Spy, etc. Add that to your tattoo, Baby! |
![]() Anne2.0, Miswimmy1, rainbow8, Sannah
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#57
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My thoughts on this, Rainbow, is that your therapist might have made the mistake of stating HER interpretation of the situation before first diving in and exploring what you felt. I'm not saying that you would have been able to recognize any erotic/sexualized feelings, especially because this area seems so sensitive and shameful to you, but it might have given her a better reading on what was going on for you "in the moment" if she had explored this a bit before stating what "she" felt was happening.
Perhaps your therapist misread the moment. Heck, that happens! Our therapist's are human and don't always get it right . . . hence the term, countertransferance. All therapists would like to believe that they have a firm and steady hand on their countertransference feelings, but reality is, those feelings are slippery little suckers and they misinterprete all the time. I hope that you and your therapist are able to work this through! |
![]() healed84, rainbow8, stopdog, ~EnlightenMe~
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#58
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rain she seemed to be more concerned that you were trying to get your needs for human comfort (non-sexual or sexual I'm not sure) from her instead of your H ... maybe you need to focus on that more? and then the wanting hugs here seems to be an extension of that ....
nothing unusual about this ... or uncommon since so many of us are comfort starved ... but your t is the one person you are paying to help you get that need met through your h and through people other than her .... so calling you out on this was to try and help you ... isn't that part of why you are in therapy? ![]() |
![]() rainbow8
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#59
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in response to a question Rain asked...
I can understand not wanting your thread hi jacked, but to reprimand people for NOT liking or hugging or commenting on your thread? Or getting upset they liked what someone else said? We all gather support through each other, various ways. Be it via others comments, OP threads etc. We in turn respond to those people with thanks or hugs or additional comments. People create threads to share their stories or look for advice or to get a nod of understanding from someone going through the same situation. I think a good thread evolves into a round table discussion that will help the OP as it may help others. But comments like the one above lead me to believe that your intention when creating a thread is to have everyone stop what they are doing and respond to and acknowledge only you and only what you have to say.... and ,I am not trying to be mean here, but can you not see where it makes you come off a little selfish and entitled? PC is a team sport. It only works if we all play together. ![]() |
![]() adel34, Miswimmy1, mixedup_emotions, rainbow8, taylor43
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#60
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Okay, so maybe I am a bleeding-heart liberal here but I believe that behaviors occur for a reason and that the way to reducing the behaviors is to find the root cause. Getting stuck and reenacting the past over and over is not a place I would want to be (been there, am there sometimes), and rainbow, I truly feel for you
![]() My wish for you is that you could find validation and acceptance within yourself (also a wish for me). You deserve to be kind to yourself, you deserve to accept yourself. Best of luck on your journey.
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"I became insane, with long intervals of horrible sanity." Edgar Allan Poe |
![]() Anonymous35535, ECHOES
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![]() Anne2.0, Miswimmy1, rainbow8, Sannah, stopdog
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#61
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Being new here and not being familiar with a history, I really can't comment on the appropriateness of the thread, nor its intentions.
But responding to the session event, as it's been described, does bring up some thoughts. The therapy situation can be emotionally charged by definition. What the emotions are and how they're shown can vary from time to time. But examining how all those emotions resonate within both client and T can be valuable. Ts can be highly observant and empathic. They can, and do, often sense feelings in us that we are not consciously aware of. In part, I think it's because of both their knowledge of how the mind works, and having examined themselves to know where their own sensitivities are and are not. This can allow them to be intuitive in an emotionally clear way. That's one version of counter transference. It's a benefit to us. The other kind of counter transference comes from a sensitivity that the T is unaware of or has not resolved in themselves, and this is not beneficial to us. I don't know if your T's "reading" of this experience as sexual was right or wrong. But it's possible that she is feeling a general emotional arousal in you, out of scale with what is going on in the therapy, and focused upon her, which is perhaps distracting from therapy. That heightened emotional "pull" toward therapy and your T may be dysfunctional in that it could be resulting from an unhealthy, distracting need in you. And that may be the same need that some here are reacting to, as well. With this sort of situation, the felt gratification of therapy and interaction with T becomes the focus of your attention--rather than self-understanding and discovery being central. It's a fine line between getting formerly unmet needs met, and traumas addressed so that we can move on, and remaining in a child state of endless gratification to avoid moving on. The latter is often experienced by others as an inappropriate neediness. A good T will be alert to this sensed perception, and will adapt so as to not continue to encourage that need. And will slowly try to bring it to a client's attention. Sometimes the client quits therapy at that point, or finds another T who may begin the "honeymoon" phase all over again. Sometimes, the client interprets these behaviors as a rupture. Sometimes, the client remains stuck. And sometimes, client and T are a good enough match of readiness and expertise to use the experience productively. I hope this will be true for you. |
![]() Miswimmy1, PreacherHeckler, rainbow8
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#62
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I am going to reply to the posts one at a time so it may take me a while.
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#63
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#64
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![]() Anonymous33425
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#65
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#66
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#67
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I'd better do a few responses at a time here:
Thank you, lostin08. You brightened up my day!!!!!! [quote=Readytostop;2712636] Quote:
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#68
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#69
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I think it is insensitive for you to say "at your age", Venus. When you are my age maybe you will see that age is just a number. We really have the same kinds of feelings inside of us no matter what age we are. When my aunt was in a nursing home when she was in her 90's, she would say "I just want someone to touch me, to hold my hand". Clicking the hug button means that someone read my thread and cared enough to respond with a hug. It means "I may not have time to respond, but know that I'm thinking of you." That feels good AT ANY AGE.
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![]() Miswimmy1
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#70
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![]() anilam, Miswimmy1
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#71
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I do not think it's totally safe to ask for what I need on this forum anymore. I've gotten criticized too much. But, yes it helps me to write and write, but if that's called ruminating, then my T and DBT T don't think it's good for me. ![]() I don't know exactly what you mean by transferred response but for me, it's the intimacy/intensity/good feelings that may get confused and seen as sexual. Holding T's hand has always felt good and not sexual. That's what I have a problem with. I disagree with my T but I guess I see her point that the whole session may have been about me wanting more than safe hand-holding but those needs weren't clear to me and still aren't. Quote:
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#72
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#73
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![]() I'm in yoga to "quiet my mind" and I do find it helps. That's probably why T recommended it, as well as meditation, and being mindful, but a person can't do those all of the time. |
#74
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In all honesty, it feels incredibly manipulative. Sort of like saying "Well, I can't really change (because I don't really want to and always find an excuse not to), but you should all feel bad for me anyway. And if you don't, you're just mean." Bottom line, we're all struggling to get it right, and I know as much as anyone that it's not easy. I don't think it does you any good for anyone to say "Oh, Rainbow...it's OK that you did X for the 100th time." Because really, it's not. When you know better, you're supposed to do better. When you ask for support for things you've done directly in opposition to your healing, why on earth would people tell you it's OK? I mean, we all slip up from time to time, but it feels like a little bit of a farce coming from you at this point. I really do say this in the spirit of loving honesty, not harshness, though I know it may be difficult to hear. My best to you. |
![]() Anonymous32516
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![]() rainbow8
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#75
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I think someone pointed out to me on PC years ago that people tend to get one response for every 10 views, on average. I don't know if that's true still, but at the time, I checked and it was about right. I do care about you and lots of people here, but I have really limited time on the computer. So I read a lot, but don't get to reply often. That doesn't change my caring, I promise! Anyway, just wanted to send you some hugs ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
![]() rainbow8
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