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  #51  
Old Aug 07, 2016, 02:29 PM
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rainbow8 rainbow8 is offline
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Originally Posted by brillskep View Post
I'm sorry you're so affected. I think your therapist's response is quite gracious, even though she does indeed really "get real" talking about sitting with your feelings before sending them away. Still, I think she combines that with empathy and good wishes for you. I say this because I know that, when I am feeling triggered or otherwise affected by something my therapist does, everything he says to me starts feeling much worse than I would otherwise think (and I perceive it as being okay after a while).

Did your therapist usually respond in a detailed manner before? As far as I understood your situation with what she was wearing, this was about your feeling triggered, not about a therapeutic mistake she made or a misunderstanding to be clarified. I think the different clothes in and out of session sound like a symbol as well as a path to exploring your fantasies about her role in your life, the needs that are fulfilled by this fantasy, the rejection and grief you feel. It seems to me that all this is way too complex for an email. It is deep therapy work. So perhaps her not acknowledging it might have to do with the need to explore more. At least this is how I think about it.

I hope you can clarify this the next time you meet and have a good session.
I'm sorry this thread is getting so long. I want to reply to everyone and it's easier to do one post at a time. Thanks brillskep. Yes, my T always makes her emails positive and focused on my doing something for myself. Early in therapy she used to respond more to the content of my emails but for a long time now she has answered more briefly. If I send a photo of my artwork or my grandchildren, she'll usually say she likes it or how cute the kids are, and wishes me a good weekend.

We've talked about her appearance and it's effect on me before. Also about my feeling rejected and wanting what I can't have from her. I think it was a combination of triggers this time. Another time after a session she saw me sitting on the bench looking sad, and she had a couple minutes to talk to me. She was still in therapy mode. I didn't like seeing her out of therapy mode . That's the bottom line, I just realized. That's what hurt!
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  #52  
Old Aug 07, 2016, 02:31 PM
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BayBrony BayBrony is offline
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Originally Posted by atisketatasket View Post
Actually I think it's not a rhetorical question, and does have an answer - which is that the qualification comes not from any intellectual merit, but from the authority invested in therapists by society, by clients, and by therapists themselves.

It's kind of like whoever gets elected president has by virtue of being voted in access to nuclear codes, however qualified that person might or might not be objectively.

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Wait....I mean my T has a PhD in psychology.
Are you saying she learned NOTHING in all that training?
Because she knows a good bit more about psychology than I do.
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kecanoe
  #53  
Old Aug 07, 2016, 02:38 PM
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rainbow8 rainbow8 is offline
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Originally Posted by Xynesthesia View Post
I have struggled with emails between sessions with both of my Ts. The first one handled it really poorly I think, in a very inconsistent and messy way. He would go through cycles of telling me no email communication, then other times inviting it and getting engaged in it in ways that were far beyond a therapist's role. It really did not help me and often would drive me nuts.

Current T allows emails as much as I want to send them, and encourages it somewhat, but he keeps a minimalistic and practical stance in a very consistent, predictable way in the quantity and quality of responses. However I desire more interaction with him, I like this much better in the context of therapy. I also find it much more helpful than previous T's messy ways to foster positive change in my habits. Of course it is not always pleasant and far from linear, I go through cycles of writing lots to him about random stuff and then tempering it and keeping it focused and minimalistic myself. The key element for me that, I feel, facilitates progress, is his consistent behavior. I think that if he fed my desire for more (and more varied) email interaction, that would do more harm than keeping it low key and practical. The way it works for me, I think, is that it allows me myself to regulate my emotions and expression rather than trying to influence me externally. So I get to examine my feelings, reactions, desires etc on my own most of the time and we can discuss anything in sessions. But my T is not there to provide constant attention and companionship, is more a guide and a person who maintains a certain kind of relationship with me in order for me to discover stuff about myself using the relationship. Of course sometimes the maintenance of the relationship involves that he purposefully triggers me with some words or gestures. One thing I've noticed is that I am much less reactive to these things than I used to be, not only in my expression and contact but also internally. I feel that I have become more stable and less affected by my environment and events, or at least do not project my feelings into those so often. It often takes white knuckling but after a while it has become much more even and manageable.
Thanks for sharing, xynesthesia. I hope that I will be able to manage without emailing my T. She wants to leave it open, that I still can email her but I agree with her that I need to start settling myself if I get triggered after my session. Sounds like you're doing well with the email situation.
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  #54  
Old Aug 07, 2016, 02:40 PM
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atisketatasket atisketatasket is offline
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Originally Posted by BayBrony View Post
Wait....I mean my T has a PhD in psychology.

Are you saying she learned NOTHING in all that training?

Because she knows a good bit more about psychology than I do.


No, of course I'm not saying that. I don't know why you would think I would. I was not making the point that all therapists are unqualified, I was saying that objectively qualified or not, at least part of the qualification comes from the authority other people grant them.

It's the same in most professions. A doctor could be horribly bad, but is still vested with authority because they wear that white coat.

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  #55  
Old Aug 07, 2016, 02:41 PM
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BayBrony BayBrony is offline
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Originally Posted by atisketatasket View Post
No, of course I'm not saying that. I don't know why you would think I would. I was not making the point that all therapists are unqualified, I was saying that objectively qualified or not, at least part of the qualification comes from the authority other people grant them.

It's the same in most professions. A doctor could be horribly bad, but is still vested with authority because they wear that white coat.

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OK yes, I get you now.
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  #56  
Old Aug 07, 2016, 02:48 PM
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rainbow8 rainbow8 is offline
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Originally Posted by ruh roh View Post
Emails can work great when both people see the value in them and they don't cause misunderstandings--so it is possible. In rainbow's case, it looks like her therapist is deciding that emails aren't helpful, so she doesn't make her email responses very useful--it's almost like negative conditioning. The messages have been mixed. At first, r8's therapist said she did not have to stop, and now she is encouraging it. I find it troubling, but I'm not there to know the in person dynamic.

It's worth being curious about--trying to sit with feelings--but this email is more directive and parental. So it has the opposite effect of empowerment, placing r8 in the child role. Seems confusing to me. Maybe I'm reading it all wrong. I just hope you work it out with her, rainbow.
My T STILL says I don't have to stop but that was during my last session. I don't think it's confusing because it's something I've been working on. I just have trouble because I either need to email or want to. I don't want to give it up but I agree that it would be better for me if I do. I fought it for a long time. Asked her what's wrong with emailing my processing of my session. It boils down to me being able to sort through it without her. The Self being in command of the parts! Not a child role at all. I appreciate your concern. This is hard for me because I like my T so very much and I hate that she's "just my T" but I have to accept it. Hardest thing I have to do in therapy because I want to hold onto her forever but I can't.
  #57  
Old Aug 07, 2016, 02:59 PM
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rainbow8 rainbow8 is offline
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Originally Posted by BudFox View Post
If it's common sense, why pay a therapist to give it? When I wondered out loud about how a T is qualified to do this, I was asking a rhetorical question. There is no answer. A person cannot be trained to have more common sense or wisdom about life.

Also, the hypothetical example you give above, as well as the real examples given by Rainbow, sound to me very much like an adult talking to a child. Adults in healthy relationship just do not say such things. Her T did not acknowledge the original difficulty that prompted Rainbow to write, which is also patronizing.

If Rainbow feels hurt and rejected, that speaks for itself. Why rationalize this as a necessary step to some future enlightenment? I've been talked to this way in therapy a little, and it felt quite damaging to self-respect and autonomy, unless I protested.

If I were the T, I'd say -- pay no more attention to the horses**t coming out of my mouth than you do your own inner wisdom. Trust your gut first. Of course that would be giving advice...
Bud, I don't want to argue about it. Your opinions are welcome! But my T is not going to do therapy via email. She knows that she sometimes triggers me and what it's about. She wants me to learn how to comfort myself. I'm a slow learner. She's been trying to get me to learn for 6 years. I will talk about feeling hurt and rejected IN MY SESSION. It's just that she doesn't want to do that via email . Yes, it made me feel worse but I should have known she'd reply like that. I don't feel like a child from her email. She wants me to be the adult and comfort my hurt child parts. I understand your disagreement.
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  #58  
Old Aug 07, 2016, 03:02 PM
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What helped me a lot with the email thing is that my current T does not discourage it at all. When I expressed my ambivalent and conflicted feelings about it to him, he said but it seems like I am doing well in the areas that were my main therapy goals (true) and the email thing does not cause harm, so why change something that seems to be working even if it causes a bit of discomfort. And said it's okay for me to email whenever. He keeps the same minimalistic style with responses.

I have found this more helpful than my previous T's trying to control it, because it's left for me completely how much and what I email and how to progress with it. It also reminds me that I am my own person and responsible for whatever I do. I feel it encourages independence far better than the more parental, "this is what I recommend..." style of former T, which made it much worse. I can question the emails myself, change my behavior or not, and discuss it as much or as little as I want in session. I experiment with it as I feel like and not as I am told. The beauty is that this approach of his has achieved that now I feel much less desire to email him and often I just write (journal) for myself, email someone else or do something useful instead. I think that often when we are told that we are not supposed to do X, we just desire X all the more -- basic human nature, yes it originates in childhood but still works in most people as adults. The attraction of the unavailable. I really don' think it's always just because some of us had unavailable parents... it's also curiosity and a desire to go beyond what's acceptable and conventional.
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  #59  
Old Aug 07, 2016, 03:15 PM
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xynesthesia, that's great! I started out like that with my T too but then after a year I started getting disappointed with her replies. Email wasn't helping then, so that's why we changed it. In fact, I brought up how bad I felt because she couldn't answer everything I wrote! Still, she wants me to decide. She's not forbidding me to ever email her but to first try to soothe myself. Last Tuesday I emailed her about 10 minutes after I walked out of the building. I reacted. It would have been better to sit with my feelings. She didn't email until Friday anyway! It wasn't urgent. It just felt that way. I have a drawer filled with my emails to and from my T. Things changed. I have to depend more on myself now.
  #60  
Old Aug 07, 2016, 04:02 PM
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Lauliza Lauliza is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by BudFox View Post
If it's common sense, why pay a therapist to give it? When I wondered out loud about how a T is qualified to do this, I was asking a rhetorical question. There is no answer. A person cannot be trained to have more common sense or wisdom about life.

Also, the hypothetical example you give above, as well as the real examples given by Rainbow, sound to me very much like an adult talking to a child. Adults in healthy relationship just do not say such things. Her T did not acknowledge the original difficulty that prompted Rainbow to write, which is also patronizing.

If Rainbow feels hurt and rejected, that speaks for itself. Why rationalize this as a necessary step to some future enlightenment? I've been talked to this way in therapy a little, and it felt quite damaging to self-respect and autonomy, unless I protested.

If I were the T, I'd say -- pay no more attention to the horses**t coming out of my mouth than you do your own inner wisdom. Trust your gut first. Of course that would be giving advice...
I tried to word the example neutrally as I could and it still sounds patronizing to you, so I apologize- there's nothing else I can do. You can only argue something that is so subjective and personal so much.
conversations are tough to convey in writing, so I think we can end up going in circles here. What looks condescending written here may not be in the context of the conversation and the relationship you have with that person. It's how people relate and why it's so much harder to communicate effectively ,by text or email.

I think it's been made pretty clear by almost everyone that Ts don't know what's best for everyone. Regardless of what anyone else thinks, Rainbow finds her Ts approach helpful and doesn't find her patronizing. Since Rainbow is the only person qualified to make that judgement, how is it not patronizing to disagree? Her T's email may very well be patronizing to another person, but that's not the point - the email was for Rainbow. Sometimes things sting when you first hear them, then after some thought, it becomes helpful. I know Ive experienced this before (with and without a therapist). I think I'm adult enough and strong enough to handle such things, however, and when it's helpful I can appreciate it. Everyone gets their feelings hurt and feel rejected sometimes and there's not a lot that can be done to cotrol it. The difference is how one tolerates it and I think this is where Rainbow struggles and wantsd help (please correct me if I am wrong). This may not be something you'd ever want, and if so it's probably impossible to imagine how it would be useful to someone else. Honestly though, it doesn't have to make sense to anyone else if it makes sense to the people involved.

Last edited by Lauliza; Aug 07, 2016 at 04:17 PM.
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  #61  
Old Aug 07, 2016, 04:58 PM
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Originally Posted by rainbow8 View Post
Bud, I don't want to argue about it. Your opinions are welcome! But my T is not going to do therapy via email. She knows that she sometimes triggers me and what it's about. She wants me to learn how to comfort myself. I'm a slow learner. She's been trying to get me to learn for 6 years. I will talk about feeling hurt and rejected IN MY SESSION. It's just that she doesn't want to do that via email . Yes, it made me feel worse but I should have known she'd reply like that. I don't feel like a child from her email. She wants me to be the adult and comfort my hurt child parts. I understand your disagreement.
Ok, I certainly do not mean to cause you any more distress. I think part of what troubles me to no end is that it seems from the outside like some people are getting hurt and rejected by their therapists over and over and over. And then they are encouraged here to keep tolerating it and to rationalize the pain in various ways. And I just want to shout -- therapy is causing you to suffer! I don't see that you are doing anything wrong or that you deserve to be suffering because of therapy. Anyway good luck sorting through this.
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  #62  
Old Aug 07, 2016, 05:48 PM
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BayBrony BayBrony is offline
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Originally Posted by BudFox View Post
Ok, I certainly do not mean to cause you any more distress. I think part of what troubles me to no end is that it seems from the outside like some people are getting hurt and rejected by their therapists over and over and over. And then they are encouraged here to keep tolerating it and to rationalize the pain in various ways. And I just want to shout -- therapy is causing you to suffer! I don't see that you are doing anything wrong or that you deserve to be suffering because of therapy. Anyway good luck sorting through this.

Except for me at least, tolerance for low level of rejection/disappointment in relationship is a skill I need to learn

Growing up.in an abusive environment I created a sort of perfect archetype of love in my mind. Anything that deviated from that was potentially dangerous.

So say my wife forgets something I needed her to do. I take it as a personal rejection and the safety of the entire relationship is called into question for me. Its an awful feeling. It happens in all my important relationships.

My T sometimes hurts me or disappoints me or can't be there in the way I want her to be. But the relationship is still secure. It's still safe. AND I don't have to deal with her hurt feelings, her dashed expectations. That's allowed me to explore that archetype and how it affects my relationships and sense of self.

If she ALWAYS met my needs, gave me what I wanted etc well for one, NO relationship is like that and 2, I wouldn't be able to learn how this archetype affects me, and through that learn that people and relationships can be both imperfect AND safe and loving.
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  #63  
Old Aug 07, 2016, 05:49 PM
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My T hasn't set a limit on emails, but it could change if I email too much or too long. So I set limits on myself. I try to only email when I really need it and I ask for exactly what I need (encouragement, reassurance, etc.) I usually get maybe 3 to 4 sentences reply. One sentence is usually "I'm sorry you're struggling", another "Everything will be okay", and lastly "See you Wednesday" or "Have a good weekend". And then she might include something that specifically addresses my issue or a reminder of a coping strategy. So really, I don't get that much of a reply. But it helps. Now if I know something is going to ve rough, I ask her ahead of time for an email check-in. Then I'll usually get a little bit longer of a reply.

Btw, I'm not supposed to journal... I obsess over the negatives. And I don't have any friends. So my only source of writing is here and my emails to T.

It's just a suggestion, but maybe give yourself some email boundaries? Set limits. Like you won't write your T until 48hrs after a session. Or your emails can only be 10 sentences long. Be the adult and set your own limits. You don't even need to tell T. Just practice it for awhile and see how it feels. If you're okay with the limits, then stick with it. If you need to adjust them a little, then you can.
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  #64  
Old Aug 07, 2016, 06:03 PM
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unaluna unaluna is offline
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Originally Posted by BudFox View Post
Ok, I certainly do not mean to cause you any more distress. I think part of what troubles me to no end is that it seems from the outside like some people are getting hurt and rejected by their therapists over and over and over. And then they are encouraged here to keep tolerating it and to rationalize the pain in various ways. And I just want to shout -- therapy is causing you to suffer! I don't see that you are doing anything wrong or that you deserve to be suffering because of therapy. Anyway good luck sorting through this.
Sometimes suffering is good. You go thru some pain to get rid of other pain. Or to get a greater gain. Life isnt all sitting on the couch and eating bonbons.
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  #65  
Old Aug 07, 2016, 07:37 PM
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Originally Posted by unaluna View Post
Sometimes suffering is good. You go thru some pain to get rid of other pain. Or to get a greater gain. Life isnt all sitting on the couch and eating bonbons.
Decades of suffering is not good. Sometimes a spade is a spade, suffering is suffering, and endless therapy which reduces fully grown, smart people to being unable to function over a tank top is unhelpful.

People in the thick of adoration and transference and need and dependence are NEVER going to admit that therapy is bad for them. They're going to say that suffering is important. They're going to make any excuse necessary to keep the transference going - until the therapist dumps them.

And that part is inevitable, because therapists tire of hyper dependent clients and inevitably wean, transfer, or outright terminate them. There's not a single story on this board of anyone who was super attached who worked through it. Not one. There are people who are still hyper attached, or people who were dumped. The only people I see here who claim that therapy really worked are people who came to therapy pretty independent, and left that way too.

If this pain and attachment meant anything, this board would have regular reports from people who became attached, worked through it, and are now independent. How many stories have you seen like that here? Seriously?
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  #66  
Old Aug 07, 2016, 07:50 PM
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Sometimes suffering is good. You go thru some pain to get rid of other pain. Or to get a greater gain. Life isnt all sitting on the couch and eating bonbons.
I guess one can rationalize anything. Dangerous game in my opinion. Inflict too much suffering in the supposed safe place of therapy, and perhaps the person is never the same or breaks under the weight of it. I imagine most people who wind up in long term therapy have endured plenty of suffering. If they have to endure more in therapy for some hypothetical benefit, then how much is too much, and who is keeping their eye on this?
  #67  
Old Aug 07, 2016, 07:56 PM
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I guess one can rationalize anything. Dangerous game in my opinion. Inflict too much suffering in the supposed safe place of therapy, and perhaps the person is never the same or breaks under the weight of it.
Youre not going to be the same either if you just keep eating bonbons. Change or die. Stay the same and die anyway.
  #68  
Old Aug 07, 2016, 08:29 PM
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Youre not going to be the same either if you just keep eating bonbons. Change or die. Stay the same and die anyway.
My incredibly useful two cents on the topic:

I just googled bonbons. They don't look remotely delicious (I have no idea why anyone would eat a single one, let alone eat them all day) -- no offense to the French of course. On the other hand, if you give me 70%+ straight-up dark chocolate, I could totally see it happening (read has happened).

(Just a PSA in case anyone else was also caught up in the anxiety around the whys and wherefores of bonbons to the extent that I was)
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  #69  
Old Aug 07, 2016, 08:58 PM
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Sometimes suffering is good. You go thru some pain to get rid of other pain. Or to get a greater gain. Life isnt all sitting on the couch and eating bonbons.
I learned nothing from sadistic therapy except, eventually, how narcissistic and inept the therapist was. I've dealt with enough hateful, dishonest people in work and life I didn't need to hire one to "learn lessons."
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  #70  
Old Aug 07, 2016, 09:58 PM
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I learned nothing from sadistic therapy except, eventually, how narcissistic and inept the therapist was. I've dealt with enough hateful, dishonest people in work and life I didn't need to hire one to "learn lessons."
Its not because therapy is sadistic. My t could not be any sweeter. But effecting a change in yourself is still difficult. If only because of inertia. Honest loving inertia. There is an opportunity cost for everything. No free lunch, remember? We lost that when adam and steve got kicked out of the olive garden or wherever...
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  #71  
Old Aug 07, 2016, 10:07 PM
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Argonautomobile Argonautomobile is offline
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We lost that when adam and steve got kicked out of the olive garden or wherever...
Were they being too fruity or something? Ahahaha

I'm so sorry. I'll see myself out.
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  #72  
Old Aug 07, 2016, 10:13 PM
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I knew there was a joke in there somewhere!
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  #73  
Old Aug 08, 2016, 07:48 AM
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Originally Posted by SkyscraperMeow View Post
Decades of suffering is not good. Sometimes a spade is a spade, suffering is suffering, and endless therapy which reduces fully grown, smart people to being unable to function over a tank top is unhelpful.

People in the thick of adoration and transference and need and dependence are NEVER going to admit that therapy is bad for them. They're going to say that suffering is important. They're going to make any excuse necessary to keep the transference going - until the therapist dumps them.

And that part is inevitable, because therapists tire of hyper dependent clients and inevitably wean, transfer, or outright terminate them. There's not a single story on this board of anyone who was super attached who worked through it. Not one. There are people who are still hyper attached, or people who were dumped. The only people I see here who claim that therapy really worked are people who came to therapy pretty independent, and left that way too.

If this pain and attachment meant anything, this board would have regular reports from people who became attached, worked through it, and are now independent. How many stories have you seen like that here? Seriously?
I have thought about this a lot and I agree with what you're saying. This is what worries me about a lot of people (and i know it's stupid to worry about other people like this and they certainly don't want me worry about them). I just have never seen a therapist be able to end this type of attachment well. Maybe those people just don't post? I don't know. It seems so sad.

Rainbow, does it help you to know she doesn't do email with clients? That it isn't something she wants to do in general?
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  #74  
Old Aug 08, 2016, 09:10 AM
Sarmas Sarmas is offline
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It must be very frustrating and I can imagine that you must be hurting. I think that at times it's difficult to accept our Ts as just Ts. We go to session and share personal things and we have needs to be addressed. It's very easy to become dependent or attached to our T at times. Unfortunately, it's unrealistic for us to think that this therapeutic relationship will last forever. It becomes such a struggle for the client who not only is dealing with life's issues but then with attachment/dependent issues as well. i think she responded very professionally. I know in the past my T would only want to hold discussions in session and not via text or email. The one week wait was frustrating. I realized through my T that when I was getting dependent or attached that she became less "available". It was almost as if she was setting boundaries without saying so. It was difficult to sit with but what was the alternative? It's a tough, painful, and slow process to go through but really healthier for us overall.
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rainbow8
  #75  
Old Aug 08, 2016, 09:58 AM
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Originally Posted by SkyscraperMeow View Post

If this pain and attachment meant anything, this board would have regular reports from people who became attached, worked through it, and are now independent. How many stories have you seen like that here? Seriously?
What am i, chopped liver?
Hugs from:
rainbow8
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attentionThis is an old thread. You probably should not post your reply to it, as the original poster is unlikely to see it.




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