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Member
Member Since Jul 2011
Posts: 353
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#1
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How did/do you know your therapy was working? What signs in your life showed that therapy was working? |
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Elder
Member Since Jan 2014
Location: USA
Posts: 5,248
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#2
Life started moving in the direction I wanted it to.
__________________ HazelGirl PTSD, Depression, ADHD, Anxiety Propranolol 10mg as needed for anxiety, Wellbutrin XL 150mg |
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#3
My thinking started being clearer.
I started living my life again. My symptoms of depression, etc. started reducing. |
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iheartjacques, tealBumblebee
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underdog is here
Member Since Sep 2011
Location: blank
Posts: 35,044
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#4
It has not worked for me in the usual sense. I found a way to make the woman useful, but it is not, from what I can tell, because therapy is working. I did not go because my life was not working or because I wanted to change anything about my relationships - they were fine with me how they were.
__________________ Please NO @ Selfishness is not living as one wishes to live, it is asking others to live as one wishes to live. Oscar Wilde Well Behaved Women Seldom Make History - Laurel Thatcher Ulrich Pain is inevitable. Suffering is optional. |
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Poohbah
Member Since Dec 2013
Location: Europe
Posts: 1,256
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#5
The fact that I was feeling differently about things which used to be issues and the moment I did something I had been told all my life I couldn't and shouldn't do (it was something good for me ... I did something for myself in spite of the fears and myths in my family of origin).
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Young Butterfly
Member Since Jan 2012
Posts: 7,574
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#6
I am alive, not in a hospital, and not having multiple daily panic attack!!
I still deal with issues, but I have to say my symptoms of lessened over time! As well as having "light bulb" type moments of clarity, and understanding why this behavior developed because of this situation. __________________ "You decide every moment of every day who you are and what you believe in. You get a second chance, every second." "You fail to recognize that it matters not what someone is born, but what they grow to be!" - J.K. Rowling. Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire. |
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Elder Harridan x-hankster
Member Since Jun 2011
Location: Milan/Michigan
Posts: 40,890
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#7
I can tell by my interactions with other people. How i act with them. I used to be sooooo much more needy and desperate for attention. I happened to ride the bus yesterday with a female friend/coworker from over ten years ago, and a young male student i met when i was riding to my stroke-related appointments two years ago. I thought about mentioning my stroke to my ladyfriend, but i have fully recovered so didnt really see the need. The young man, though - im pretty sure he spilled the beans to her as soon as i got off the bus! He had a need to be seen by her, to be seen as important - even tho he had just met her minutes before. We are both old enough to be his grandmother, btw. I OTOH was on my way to my t's to be SEEN, so i was pretty calm and self-contained. But yeah, ten years ago i was just like him (that female friend would tell you). And old enough even then to be his granny, so i am not bragging, just saying this is how i know im different now. When i told my t about the incident, i said, "so it was worth all the torture." And he's like really? Its been torture? I was like, well yeah. Theres a lot of stuff.
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Magnate
Member Since Jul 2013
Location: United States
Posts: 2,741
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#8
I don't want to die the minute I wake up. Only the second minute now
__________________ When a child’s emotional needs are not met and a child is repeatedly hurt and abused, this deeply and profoundly affects the child’s development. Wanting those unmet childhood needs in adulthood. Looking for safety, protection, being cherished and loved can often be normal unmet needs in childhood, and the survivor searches for these in other adults. This can be where survivors search for mother and father figures. Transference issues in counseling can occur and this is normal for childhood abuse survivors. |
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Perna, tinyrabbit, unaluna
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Perna
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#9
I have been able to do a LOT more than i used to, i am braver and more confidant, I am able to handle things in my life so much better, i have good relationships now, i can set boundaries
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#10
My T is my superficial only friend that I see every 3 weeks.
She asks whats my goal? I say "to find a reason to live, rather than find a reason to die" I'm still here, so something is working, I reckon. |
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Grand Poohbah
Member Since Mar 2011
Location: Middle of Nowhere
Posts: 1,806
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#11
Well, I'm not actively SUI, don't do SI and other self-destructive behaviors, am back at school- finally getting my degree, able to deal with male authority figures, med free... most days I consider this a proof therapy's working. And then there are days (well, nights mostly) when I think it's just taking so long that I'll die before I'm healed- yeah, I'm having one of those nights right now, sorry to be such a downer.
Back to your question- sure it's working but man, so very slowly... |
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Member
Member Since Nov 2013
Location: USA
Posts: 321
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#12
I haven't self-injured in nearly a decade.
I'm not depressed. I know how to catch incipient depression early, and what to do to keep it from moving in and planting its butt on my mental couch. I no longer have flashbacks, intrusive memories, or regular nightmares, and very rarely have anxiety attacks. I am better able to communicate in my relationships, I have better boundaries and am comfortable holding my boundaries. I've got a lot of work left to do; I'm actively challenging my unresolved attachment pattern in therapy, and that is certainly causing some bleed-over waves in my daily life, but I'm learning a lot about why I react the way I do in relationships. Progress happens gradually. It's only looking back I can see just how much I have done, and people who have known me the whole time see it and affirm it, too. |
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ShaggyChic_1201
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Grand Wise Rabbit
Member Since Feb 2013
Location: England
Posts: 4,084
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#13
Quote:
I'm starting to be able to recognise and name my own negative emotions and be with them instead of pushing them away. I don't feel despair all the time like I used to. |
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Grand Poohbah
Member Since Mar 2013
Location: US
Posts: 1,708
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#14
I'm not sure /: but my boss at work told me she noticed that I'm different (unsolicited and she doesn't know I'm in therapy). She couldn't quite pinpoint it, but said it seemed like I was more positive or more content or something like that.....that's big for me. Work is one of those things I tend to get fixated on as an external blame shifter.
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Member
Member Since Jun 2014
Location: The Shire
Posts: 355
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#15
I don't cry after every session anymore and I am doing things that I was unable to even contemplate doing before I started therapy.
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Magnate
Member Since Apr 2014
Location: world
Posts: 2,200
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#16
Stopdog, are you in therapy because you have to? I just wondered if you were a psych student in training where they have to do x number of hours under supervision before they're qualified.
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Magnate
Member Since Apr 2014
Location: world
Posts: 2,200
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#17
Therapy worked when I stopped wanting to die and started to feel like I could tackle my stuff and everything going on around me.
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underdog is here
Member Since Sep 2011
Location: blank
Posts: 35,044
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#18
No, I do not have to be seeing a therapist. I am a lawyer and college prof.
__________________ Please NO @ Selfishness is not living as one wishes to live, it is asking others to live as one wishes to live. Oscar Wilde Well Behaved Women Seldom Make History - Laurel Thatcher Ulrich Pain is inevitable. Suffering is optional. |
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#19
The first time I realized I was happy for no reason, that it was coming from inside me - that was when I knew that my third try at therapy was working. Since then other things like getting a new job that I've had for over a year and a half now, going on a year ago I started making friends outside of work which I'd never done in my entire adult life, friends with similar spiritual interests, and I began setting healthy boundaries with my FOO on the rare occasions I see any of them.
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Veteran Member
Member Since Nov 2013
Location: USA
Posts: 673
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#20
I have a ways to go but my social life picked up. It's still difficult for me to "do people" but I'm more gentle with myself. I can look people in the eye a bit longer and it's not as hard for me to talk about myself (this used to pain me.) the voice in my head that bashes me and degrades me is a bit quieter.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk __________________ As wolves love lambs so lovers love their loves - Socrates |
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