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#51
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Quote Argonautomobile: "I think you mentioned that life advice possibly makes more sense if the client is relatively young and the T a generation older, and maybe that’s where my blind spot is—that I AM relatively young and my T the next generation up. I’m pretty accustomed to relationships where I am in a position to be instructed by the other person."
I was in my early 50's, and the therapist in her early 60's; I was far from being blind. The therapist was giving her best professional suggestions, and it was up to me to accept or reject, and learn how to deal with my feelings if they did not sit well with me. The therapist was always willing to explore those feelings as long as I needed, and I was never forced to match my feelings with hers. This was a big part of my healing process, and had implications on other forward movements in my current life. Last edited by Anonymous37785; Jan 30, 2016 at 08:58 PM. |
![]() Argonautomobile, Gavinandnikki
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#52
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I suppose for advice in therapy to be helpful the client has to feel comfortable bringing those responses to the table in the first place. And, for some people, the nature of therapy might discourage that--if the therapist is the "expert," then why question his/her advice? I know I've held my tongue before (Because he's the expert; he must be right) and that could have burned me badly if T were unethical or incompetent with his suggestions. I'm glad your T's professional suggestions and everything surrounding them worked for you! It's an interesting topic. |
#53
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I do realize that another person can have greater objectivity about one's issues. But yea I do think life advice is inherently condescending and creepy to a degree. I guess it depends o the situation, but in therapy it seems extra creepy. I find it to be an autonomy killer and a dependency generator. I guess I figure people need support and connection rather than advice. |
![]() Argonautomobile
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#54
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![]() Argonautomobile
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#55
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#56
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I was. Sorry I did not make that clear. I was probably mistaken who was going to look into it. I too, suffered from fatigue and periheral neuropathy from head to to toe for decades, so I hear you in not being in condition to do things. For me psychodrama allowed me to be a part of the audience (other group members), which is a vital part of the process for the protagonist and everyone in the group. Also, the pain and physical ills that I let sideline me have abated tremendously, and now allow me to do most anything. The medical doctors had me blind and in a wheelchair within a few years, and mental health professionals counted me out decades ago. I beat their odds. Your time will come. Good luck to you. |
![]() BudFox
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#57
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Thanks for this. I appreciate hearing your POV and think I have a greater appreciation for the difficulty you're facing here. I think support and connection are often more useful than advice, and therapy shouldn't become all about receiving advice (since, comparisons aside, a therapist is a therapist and not a teacher, parent, or mentor), but it's difficult for me to imagine what therapy would look like without some level of advising, instructing, telling the client what s/he already knows. I also think it must take a lot of discipline on the therapist's part to refrain from offering advice. I think it's a pretty natural response to someone's pain--you want it to end, the solution seems clear, how can you not share what you think ought to be done? I know I have a lot of difficulty holding my tongue when I hear something I think is wildly off-base. (Hello, people in line at the post office. Sorry to butt in, but I just wanted to point out that you can not, in fact, get HIV from a toilet seat, even if it is covered in pee. Urine is actually quite sterile and...etc. etc.) Anyway, thanks a lot for your response. You're right that advice DOES imply the advisor has something the advisee does not (and I'd do well to keep that in mind!) |
![]() BudFox, missbella
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#58
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I find advice-giving a delicate transaction in any circumstance. (Googling "unwanted advice" shows strong advice against giving advice. However "solicited" advice can be just as tricky.)
I once was in a career transitions group that mandated only to offer opinions through accounts of our own struggles. It's the difference between saying "Boy, I need sunscreen on a day like today" and "Get on some sunscreen; you're asking for cancer!" It leaves the other person to decide if my situation applies. I get quietly livid when I hear or read someone playing a therapist's role(or an imagined therapist's role) in a non-professional context. I see it as good intentions turning selfish, sanctimonious and presumptuous. I see someone else's life, creations and problems as her house, and I think it important to be a thoughtful, careful guest. |
![]() BudFox, Out There
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#59
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Like misbella, I learned more from bad therapy than any other therapy. And one thing I learned was just how easily I deferred to others. And how little I trusted myself. I guess that was the gift of therapy. However, I don't credit therapy for the gift, since I had to sort this out on my own. |
![]() Argonautomobile
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#60
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ps: The famous psychoanalyst Ferenczi (contemporary or protege of Freud cant remember which) came up with something he called "mutual analysis" which was where client and T spent time both as analyst and analysand.
As someone wrote: "The patient is not always distressed or regressed, the analyst is occasionally impaired and needy. Patients are just as capable of accurate attunement as their analyst; analysts are just as capable of mistaken judgment as their patients. Ferenczi was more willing to openly state this than many others." |
![]() Argonautomobile, Lauliza, missbella, Out There
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#61
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I think, in general, that therapy is based on the presumption that change is desired (or needed) on the part of the client. With that comes the view of the therapist as an "advisor". Not an infallible authority, just an advisor or even mentor. It's not a requirement, and this applies to some types of therapy more than others, but I think it's often that case. So when a client seeks out therapy without this desire or need, I think the purpose of therapy and the role of the T can get murky. I'm not saying an individual's reasons for going to therapy is right or wrong, just that the therapy process becomes much more clouded in mystery under certain circumstances. What exactly it is the therapist is doing, and how exactly they can be of help is very vague and open to interpretation. And the danger of anything being vague and open to interpretation is that everyone's interpretation is different. I really think this is where the use of smoke and mirrors occurs and the greatest harm can occur.
Last edited by Lauliza; Jan 31, 2016 at 03:30 PM. |
![]() Out There, unaluna
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#62
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I also disagree that a therapist is a person "in authority" to me. Not only have none of my Ts ever acted that way, but I as a client specifically reject the idea that someone I pay is my authority. I do understand that Ts, like doctors and lawyers and accountants and my kids' teachers have power in their setting, but unless I'm court ordered to T, it's my choice whether to engage them at all. I understand that your perspective may be derived from your experience in therapy, but I think it is important to acknowledge that your experience does not mean that's the way therapy is. It was for you, I get that, and I don't have a problem with believing anyone who has had a negative experience. But all this cloaking that you claim therapy has, it doesn't. Your experience is your experience but that doesn't translate into some universal problem with therapy. The reality is complex-- therapy can be a good experience for some, not so much for others. A certain kind of therapy works for some people, not for others. And so on. |
![]() atisketatasket, Out There, pbutton, unaluna
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#63
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I like Ferenczi too but isnt he regarded somewhat as a black sheep? Wasnt he having sex with his patients or stg? My t always gives me the stinkeye when i mention him.
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#64
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I find myself continually surprised by how many people don't see their T's as an "authority" of any kind and don't receive or want instruction/advice from them. I was stunned by how many people (thinking back to a thread about power in the therapeutic relationship) didn't feel there was a power disparity in the relationship, either.
Again, maybe it's my age (nearly 26) but I feel the world is absolutely overflowing with all the things I don't know, I feel a very keen desire to learn absolutely everything I can before I drop dead, and I'm hungry to absorb wisdom and information from other people, including my therapist. In fact, I feel that most of my problems are the result of not knowing--not possessing information--and I really don't know why I'd continue to see my T if I didn't feel he knew things that I didn't. Not knocking anyone else's desires or experiences--it's not like there's one right way to do therapy--I'm just surprised more people don't have the same sort of therapy experience I do. It's interesting, though. I like reading about it. Last edited by Argonautomobile; Jan 31, 2016 at 04:36 PM. |
![]() BudFox, growlycat, Lauliza, Out There
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#65
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![]() Argonautomobile, Lauliza, Out There
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#66
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I believe he became estranged from Freud and therefore didn't get the recognition he should have. He believed more in the mutual relationship between therapist and patient and believed clients claims of abuse (which Freud did not).
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![]() Out There, stopdog, unaluna
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#67
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I have never looked to the woman for advice or guidance on my life or how to be. The woman might have information on the subject of therapy due to her schooling, but nothing about me.
__________________
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. |
#68
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![]() Argonautomobile, missbella
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#69
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I do think there is a bit of a power disparity, but it is only in my head, and it lessens as time goes on. With my past T, I spent FIVE years convinced she hated me/was always one step away from "firing" me because she was so frustrated with my lack of progress. I still feel this a bit with my current T, but I am much more honest and actually tell her when I feel this way, and she is able to tell me that I am not frustrating or annoying, or she doesn't hate me, and that I am at where I am at and it is ok. |
![]() Argonautomobile
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#70
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Seems that some schools of thought see the T as primarily pseudo-parental figure who will repair attachment wounds via a controlled attachment/disillusionment/autonomy process. Sounds good. Don't know if it works. Last edited by BudFox; Feb 01, 2016 at 01:16 PM. |
#71
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Not sure. I just admire his apparent honesty. I think he pissed off Freud and/or some others with his suggestions that the analyst doesn't know any more than the patient, and for saying that analysts are frequently bored, annoyed, disgusted, etc by their clients.
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#72
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Seems endemic in my experience. Maybe not explicit advice always, but sometimes it's the T furnishing insights and interpretations. In my view this can feel like an imposition or even an act of aggression, as someone wrote. The client expresses a thought or emotion, and the T interprets for the client what it might mean. I know they have training in this and some can do it skillfully… but I can no longer get past this troubling image of T guiding the client "toward the light".
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#73
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As far at the therapist being some kind of authority figure: How much authority can someone who meets with you for maybe one hour per week exert over you? Even if they promote themselves in that manner, it seems it would be an illusion as the client spends much more time out of their purview than with them. Hope you find what you're looking for. |
#74
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I'm certainly not going to say that all therapists as a group have some sort of special knowledge that clients as a group lack. I don't think that's true and it's a dangerous sentiment. But for me, in my particular case, I suppose I do see my T as having knowledge that I don't when it comes to human psychology/why people do the things that they do. (that's what they go to school for, right? and, anyway, I think you'd have to be pretty dense not to know something about people, if you've been providing therapy for a decade or more.) Sometimes I'll ask about it, or we'll talk about it in the abstract, and, while I don't exactly take his opinion as written in stone, he usually has something mildly interesting/insightful to say, or simply some information that I can work over and digest and apply to my life (or not, depending). Other times it's sort of nice to be able to talk to a grown-up type who seems to have his **** together. (Whether or not he actually does, is, I suppose, irrelevant--as long as it's together for a fifty minute stretch, it works for me). I mean, I don't need to pay someone $100-plus an hour to give me common-sense advice or information that I could easily Google, but if it comes up I appreciate that he'll take 2.7 seconds to explain WTF it means to rotate your tires. |
![]() BudFox, Out There
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#75
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I don't get any sense that my therapist sees himself as wiser than I am. We are both well-educated people and have expertise in our own fields. He gets paid for what he knows, but so do I. Last edited by Pennster; Feb 01, 2016 at 04:29 PM. |
![]() Lauliza, Out There, unaluna
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