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#26
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Buffy, this therapist doesn't have a clue what she's doing if she's referring to your attachment to her as a conflict of interest. I don't see anything alarming about any of your emails. I'm not sure what the boundaries are that you referred to in the first, but if one was to not email, then it wouldn't matter what you wrote. I'm not saying that's even a valid "boundary" (hate that term) but if it was an agreement between you, then that's a different thing. Overall though, I'm more concerned about you having to bow and scrape for a little bit of humane treatment.
(ps. you might want to remove all the names mentioned in your post, including your own. Just go back and edit your post to delete the names.) |
![]() AllHeart, LonesomeTonight, mostlylurking, Out There
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#27
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I was also wondering what that "conflict of interest" refers to. Was that clarified in session or in any other form? Is it your interest causing conflict, or the therapist's?
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#28
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Btw, correct me if I'm wrong, but I thought they changed the time limits for friendship and intimate relationship with the T. Didn't it used to be 7 years for an intimate and 2 for friendship? And now it's 2 for intimate and no time limit for friendship? I know a T can set the limit longer if they choose though.
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"Odium became your opium..." ~Epica |
#29
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![]() ruh roh
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#30
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#31
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This is really strange. If she doesn't want to work with you because you broke boundaries then that is one thing. To call it a conflict of interest isn't even true. She doesn't understand what a conflict of interest is or transference or....ugh. She sounds so poorly trained or extremely inexperienced. I don't see anything in her communications that defines the conflict of interest she is talking about. Very strange.
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![]() AllHeart, kecanoe, LonesomeTonight, mostlylurking, Out There, ruh roh
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#32
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![]() growlycat, LonesomeTonight, mostlylurking, Out There
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#33
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![]() growlycat, LonesomeTonight, Out There, rainbow8
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![]() rainbow8
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#34
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![]() growlycat
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#35
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Apologizing for my earlier post. Somehow it got on the wrong thread. I wasn't trying to derail the discussion here.
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![]() mostlylurking, unaluna
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#36
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I hope your t has a supervisor. She is going to be referring out a lot of patients because transference is very common. Sorry you are hurt by a badly trained t.
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![]() awkwardlyyours, LonesomeTonight, mostlylurking, Out There, ruh roh
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#37
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![]() growlycat, LonesomeTonight, mostlylurking, Out There
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#38
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I think a major death in your T's family could affect her practice but it doesn't excuse her behavior. If my Ts had been like yours, they would each have terminated me for the same reasons. I openly told them I had crushes in them and/or was obsessed by them. Fortunately, they each chose to work with me rather than kick me out. My current T knows part of me is/was in love with her but she accepts my feelings.
So, I agree with others who think your T is inexperienced in handling transference. Having a crush on a T is not a conflict of interest! Your emails sound intelligent and maybe even overly accommodating to her. She obviously can't handle a client's normal feelings. I think it will be interesting to hear what the other T says about her reasons for termination. Please don't blame yourself. You did nothing wrong unless it was emailing when she told you not to, but that is something to be discussed, not a cause for immediate termination. I'm sorry this happened to you and I hope the new T will be helpful. |
![]() growlycat
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![]() growlycat, LonesomeTonight, mostlylurking, Out There
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#39
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It really upsets me to read about therapists who only talk about boundaries in relationship to their own that the client must observe. I only had one therapist use this term and it was in relation to the need for me to set boundaries with other people. The therapist I see now doesn't use the term, but she does talk about the need to protect myself. There is no talk about her boundaries.
Honestly, if you really do have a hard time observing other people's boundaries, it's not showing up in the emails you shared. I would hate to see you pathologized for something that's normal in therapy. My therapist once asked if she reminded me of my mother (as a way to better understand a bad patch I was going through with her). She didn't call it a dual relationship because it wasn't. (btw, she didn't remind me of my mother, but my siblings, so she was right about the transference, just got the who part wrong.) Anyway, I share that so that you can see how crazy it looks to call transference a dual relationship (if that's what your therapist meant by conflict of interest). |
![]() BudFox, growlycat
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#40
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To be honest, I wouldn't be keen to see the T she's referred you to if that's the colleague she's been consulting with about her work with you. Inexperience is ok - that's why Ts have supervision and consultation but I'd expect the person she consults with to help her understand the difference between transference, dependency, dual relationships and conflicts of interest. If the person she's been consulting doesn't understand that and hasn't helped her work through it, it's fair to think you'll have the same problem with her.
If you want to stay in therapy, could you find an entirely new T? |
![]() growlycat, MobiusPsyche, mostlylurking, scorpiosis37, SilentMelodee
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#41
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#42
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![]() kecanoe, mostlylurking, ruh roh
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#43
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She's got her own practice but is sending me to her colleague, who apparently is the one with experience and hopefully more tact than my ex T. Cutting the apron strings with such sudden brutal force was the most painful part. I have no way to get closure other than to write her a letter that would probably be treated as harassment and not taken seriously. I've legitimately hit every emotion in the past three days.
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![]() kecanoe, rainbow8
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#44
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I guess the ing is you'll never know, so you could keep trying to figure up what she meant, and what you did etc but you won't find out what it was actually about. I hope the consultation goes well - I'd go with a list of questions, the first one of which would be what she knows about your case from ex-T and whether she recommended the termination. |
![]() Buffyfaithlvr86
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#45
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What a nightmare. I'm sorry for your pain. Your ex t sounds highly inexperienced and lacks basic therapy 101 knowledge. Her "conflict of interest" label further proves her idiocy and incompetence. Hard as it is right now, this will hopefully end up being a blessing in disguise. I hope your new t works out for you, whomever you decide to go with. Have you asked the transfer t what her out of session contact boundaries are and what her experience is with attachment issues?
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![]() Buffyfaithlvr86, growlycat
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#46
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#47
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![]() kecanoe
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![]() AllHeart
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#48
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If the client is expected to talk about their deepest fears and needs, but only for an hour, and then they are forbidden from contacting the therapist outside that, even if in great distress, then in a way the therapist is trampling the client's emotional and psychological boundaries. If OP was emailing too much, it's probably because therapy has triggered an overpowering need. If the therapist feels it's a problem, first thing they need to look at is the very process they are overseeing. Instead many of them shame the client. When they forcibly restrain the client, to me that is an acknowledgment that the process is working against client needs. Also in a relationship between two adults, it is wildly presumptuous to think that one can or should teach the other about boundaries. |
#49
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![]() kecanoe
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#50
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![]() LonesomeTonight
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