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#151
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I was confused about the day, apparently I thought it was Wednesday. My appt is tonight. I'll update.
Sent from my SM-N910V using Tapatalk |
#152
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![]() Agree 1000%
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Pam ![]() |
![]() Mondayschild
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#153
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![]() growlycat, missbella, stopdog
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#154
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Well, yes, if you think therapy is inherently bad, it makes sense you would disagree. I don't know why you need to call my posts creepy or disturbing though. If that's your idea of venting then fine but it feels mean spirited to vent at someone about their post just because you disagree. I feel like you can easily express an alternate viewpoint without that verbiage because to me it feels hurtful. |
![]() AllHeart, pbutton, RedSun, Rive.
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#155
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I am a therapy junkie, a big fan of therapy, yet I would never blindly trust someone "just because I may never get better". A heathy sense of skepticism and self protection isn't a bad thing.
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![]() BudFox
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#156
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It went okay. Part of the destruction is the allowing myself to feel it, to unstuff it and attach the feelings to the events. As I spent years numbing. He says the scar will still be there but it will be less painful than it was 3 months ago. Which has been true so far but also tells me that therapy can move at a snails pace.
But he did agree that the limitations to therapy can feel cruel as we move through the work. It does. We are currently taking a break from trauma therapy because I was at the breaking point. Working on dbt stuff for now. Sent from my SM-N910V using Tapatalk |
![]() Out There
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![]() Petra5ed
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#157
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![]() Anonymous37827
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![]() AllHeart, magicalprince
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#158
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![]() Mondayschild
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#159
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Can you clarify what you mean? Are you questioning why someone would both berate their therapist AND keep seeing them? Or are you questioning why they would do this AND claim to not be attached?
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#160
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It's the 3 things together: complain about your therapist-a lot Pay them money And most importantly, claim you are not attached or in love with your therapist ???????? What's the point?
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Pam ![]() |
#161
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Or do you mean hypothetically? Hypothetically, I could imagine someone might be ambivalent about the individual one goes to for therapy, or be not attached or in love with them. I don't even think that's unusual, or that it would necessarily stop them from being useful. Paying them money isn't really an optional part of the deal - you engage them, you pay. And I complain about a lot of people. My landscaper for example- he sucks, but I continue to pay him money as he does a job that I don't feel like doing myself, but I wish he would do it better. |
![]() atisketatasket
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#162
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Don't know who the comment was directed towards but I'll bite.
I do complain about T on here -- it is my way of gathering my thoughts and concerns before bringing the material to him directly. A way of mulling things over. |
![]() unaluna
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#163
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For that reoson I gave up on therapy. I hate myself and no matter what T or anyone else tell me, it wont change. And a lot of things they tell me, I can read in a book.
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Dx: Mix anhedonia with Bipolar II. Add some insomnia and chronic stress. Season with paroxetine and a pinch of ADD. Stir well to induce a couple of hypo/manic episodes. After the excess of energy is gone, remove the Paroxetine and serve chilled with some C-PTSD and GAD. Ready is your MDD. Mx: To clean up the mess use lamotrigine, risperidon, mirtazapine and sertraline. Let it soak in for a while but keep a close eye on it. Meanwhile enjoy your desert of oxazepam/temazepam prn. |
![]() BudFox, growlycat
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#164
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I also think it's possible to use therapy for a purposes that might seem inexplicable from the outside. Maybe one enjoys or benefits from an adversarial relationship, finds in the therapist a sparring partner, wants nothing more than a dumping ground to vent, or simply doesn't want even the possibility of attachment (and so stays with a therapist they dislike because attachment won't ever be an issue) Those seem like legitimate, if somewhat unconventional, uses for therapy. I can imagine some unhealthy reasons, too. Maybe the client doesn't know how to be anything but martyred--I certainly know people like that--or doesn't feel they deserve a warmer relationship. Maybe the client is just so stuck they don't have the agency to leave. Maybe an unethical therapist has robbed them of their agency. Anyway, it's an interesting question.
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"Fantasy, abandoned by reason, produces impossible monsters; united with it, she is the mother of the arts and the origin of their marvels." - Francisco de Goya |
![]() Gavinandnikki
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#165
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Actually now that I think about it I probably had several therapists that I had that kind of relationship with - part of it for me was that I just couldn't find the right therapist and didn't really know how to fix that. But I'm the type that likes to love my therapist so I found one that I really get on with and I'm sticking with him!
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#166
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Sorry you feel that way. I do too sometimes. I agree about the book thing. It's one of the obstacles i cant get past. Books are much cheaper and wont abandon you halfway through.
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#167
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I have an AWESOME T and even I complain about her in the "Dear T" thread. This IS an internet forum on psychotherapy so I would guess that it would make sense that people come here and express their ambivalence about their therapist. Its a highly charged relationship. I think lots of people have mixed feelings about their therapist even when they realize the therapist is helping. For other people it may be they don't necessarily like the therapist but they need someone to unburden to and the T does the job well enough that it is not worth the hassle of finding a new T |
![]() Gavinandnikki, Mondayschild, Out There, Petra5ed
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#168
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I think one reason people might stay with a T despite having issues with them or not even liking them is that people die, virtually or literally, without human connection.
And i wonder how often this is overlooked in all the termination stories, where T is focused on progress-oriented measures and all the other rationalizations, totally clueless about this most basic thing. |
![]() Gavinandnikki, growlycat, Hopelesspoppy, Out There, Petra5ed
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#169
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Pam ![]() |
![]() growlycat, Pennster
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#170
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#171
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Psychotherapy is just as inherently flawed as is humanity, quite simply. Which is plenty, as it exists where it only can in a wonky and sick modern society. There is always a vast amount of room for error, because as Alan Watts taught us, there are exponentially more ways for things to go wrong than there are ways for things to go right, hence all the crap we deal with on a daily basis. The world of psychotherapy is hardly exempt from this, and it takes far more than institutionally developed standards to make occur the magic of positive and progressive human interaction and healing in the face of sustained psychological trauma.
One relies on so many variables delivered by providers: their competence, their attention, their logic, their cultural influences... the chances of getting good and helpful psychotherapy are chancy at best. A similar amount of screening probably ought to go into selecting a psychotherapist as is believed to be necessary for selecting a spouse or companion, but the general rhetoric doesn't suggest this, and as a result many vulnerable people end up hurt by therapy experiences that happen to be ineffectual for their needs. Why I have stayed with therapists beyond the point at which I believed there were good possibilities at hand: I hoped I was wrong. I thought they might know something I didn't (and I couldn't know if this was true because of the cagey way they avoided discussion of what secrets they may or may not have about their diagnosis, prognosis, or treatment plans for me). I wasn't confident I could find anyone better based on what I'd seen to date in the industry. Mainly though, it's the cognitive dissonance. It is so very hard to accept that a person who is charged with helping you, whom you are paying to help you, whose ability to help you is something that you have spent considerable time, effort, and heart on already, can't or won't. It can be absolutely monumental heartbreak, and if one already arrived at the therapist's door in a state of heartbreak, of breakdown, dealing with acceptance instead of dissonance can represent a shot at a breakdown the likes of which one has only limited chances of overcoming. This I know.
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“We use our minds not to discover facts but to hide them. One of things the screen hides most effectively is the body, our own body, by which I mean, the ins and outs of it, its interiors. Like a veil thrown over the skin to secure its modesty, the screen partially removes from the mind the inner states of the body, those that constitute the flow of life as it wanders in the journey of each day.” — Antonio R. Damasio, “The Feeling of What Happens: Body and Emotion in the Making of Consciousness” (p.28) |
![]() awkwardlyyours, BudFox, Gavinandnikki, here today, missbella, Out There, scallion5
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#172
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And owing to the therapist's inscrutability, the client has a difficult task in judging the truth of this or anything really. |
#173
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![]() AllHeart, Out There, pbutton
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#174
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![]() vonmoxie
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![]() Gavinandnikki, Out There, vonmoxie
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#175
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There's nothing that sells better than a dream. Just look at Anthony Robbins ridiculous wealth made on the selling of hope alone, or that priest that tells people they should send him money because a higher power wants him to have a 65 million dollar private jet. We're conditioned from a young age to invest in dreams that are not even our own, that exist in the collective consciousness, like the American Dream: ever elusive, and imbued with all our hope (and sometimes, all our money).
Honestly, is there a product we know less about when purchasing it, of which we have less ability to assess usefulness, than what a psych professional is thought to be able to provide? At least with a medical doctor there is some possibility of knowing their success rate, by being able to look up if they have had malpractice lawsuits, or by them actually losing their licenses in worst case scenarios. There are no such comparable failsafes in the psych industry, or at least it's highly unlikely that psychologically injured individuals will have it in them to go through the process of suing for anything like malpractice especially with the less likely possibility of closure that's involved. In the world of business, conversely, there are metrics sometimes at every turn: every success and failure is measured, with project teams conducting post mortem examinations where plans are made to incorporate what was learned from every success and every mistake into next projects. I'm not suggesting this could be entirely recreated in the psych industry, but it would be nice if it wasn't nearly its polar opposite. In lieu of mental health industries imposing any serious metrics to measure their outcomes, we need to be educated and watchful consumers on behalf of ourselves and our communities. We need far more advocacy. I'm glad we can accomplish at least some piece of that here, advocating for one another's best possible outcomes.
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“We use our minds not to discover facts but to hide them. One of things the screen hides most effectively is the body, our own body, by which I mean, the ins and outs of it, its interiors. Like a veil thrown over the skin to secure its modesty, the screen partially removes from the mind the inner states of the body, those that constitute the flow of life as it wanders in the journey of each day.” — Antonio R. Damasio, “The Feeling of What Happens: Body and Emotion in the Making of Consciousness” (p.28) |
![]() here today, missbella, Out There
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