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#51
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I hope my t is in the later camp not the former. I want to be allowed to grow up at my rate knowing that my t is there each step of the way, being supportive and caring. Then again, it might all be based on what the t thinks the client needs, which might be where some of the inconsistencies come from with some t's. |
![]() growlycat, LonesomeTonight
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#52
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![]() Elio
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#53
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Marriage counselor is from the other camp. He knows I'm very attached to him and have some strong paternal transference. But he hasn't tried to push me away, and understands that sometimes I need reassurance from him. I'm still attached (the intensity waxes and wanes)--and last month had a phone call with him where I was like, "How can I stop being so attached? What do I do?"--but I definitely feel much more secure in our relationship than I did, say, even 6 months ago. So I think that's progress. He just seems to think that time and building/strengthening more outside relationships will help to lessen the attachment. I definitely respond better to this style, though I think it can make attachment more intense. So if a T uses this style, they need to be able to handle clients becoming attached without then pushing them away. I think the big problems come, like in your case, Skies, when a T seems to be more from the latter camp, then suddenly shifts to a tough love approach without warning. That's naturally going to be jarring and painful, especially if it repeats a pattern that happened at some point in a client's life. |
![]() Elio
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#54
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![]() LonesomeTonight
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#55
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Also, I had a therapist once who stopped doing something kind when I said I appreciated it. It was horrible and shaming and put me on notice not to tell another therapist things like that. With the one I see now, I have tested this out and so far she has not reacted the same, but who knows if that will change. It's just awful how a therapist can worsen existing wounds so easily and without any apparent regret. |
![]() atisketatasket, Elio, LonesomeTonight
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#56
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Yes, that is true. The difference is-going in with a goal of making the relationship work with someone who is supposed to be an expert at facilitating that.
So this is a good point. I always thought the rockiness and getting over the bumps; working things out, was part of the therapy, as it was with my prior therapist. But since way back, if I had a problem or concern, he sometimes would say to the effect of-if you don't like it, you could always find another therapist. Which really fed my insecurities for a long time. I told him a couple of times that those statements impede our work/alliance. But I do recall saying to him later-I thought this [relational issues/ruptures] was part of the therapy, and he thought and said I was right, that it is part of the therapy. I wonder if he had insecurities about my leaving from the beginning too, and if he lost clients when things got tough. I used to tell him-how much it impeded our work for him to talk about 'ending' anytime things got rough rather than expecting to work through them. I guess I was naive feeling committed to working things out back then if he wasn't committed that way. Either that, or his insecurities fed his behavior which conflict with with mine.. I don't know how to answer your last part. I don't feel this is primarily related to wishes. My concern is if his actions are therapeutic or anti-therapeutic. I dont' think competency and harm are mutually exclusive, but in thinking of a venn diagram, that little part in the middle should be relatively small. Quote:
I've always admired your therapist. I've even wondered if she was Nancy McWilliams IRL. If an ideal exists out there, your therapist is sure close to it. Quote:
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![]() LonesomeTonight
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#57
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Echos- thanks so much for sharing your experience with me here. You are inspiring. I admire people who know what they want, set a goal, then do what they want despite all the adversity.
My therapist said there are no personal issues involved, so I have to believe him. What you asked here is one of my primary struggles-is this therapeutic? That matters the most. Even if it doesn't feel like it, this it what it comes down to. It feels the same for me-trauma. And I sit here and think it has nothing to do with him. Intellectually, I can separate this out as not having to do with him personally, but that doesn't change the trauma feelings. And I wonder-if your brain is feeling the same trauma feelings from childhood, does that mean your brain doesn't know the difference; hence, you are actually being re-traumatized by feeling the original trauma feelings? Quote:
I've told him I couldn't afford a 2nd session. He realizes this limitation but has asked me if I could take a loan out. I did tell him recently that I am taking a consolidation loan out to pay medical costs and other past debt. I can use some of that loan money, very little, but it's already stretched too thin and I have no savings or disposable income. Your advice about getting to the details is really, really helpful. We have been talking about the abstract, which causes my mind to fill in the blanks. I will ask for details next time. I don't think there's much i can do instead. I have schizoid anxieties, so just a quick touch base with him can really make a lot of difference. Quote:
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![]() LonesomeTonight
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#58
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I agree with you that your situation is re-traumatizing. For me, walking away was the best choice when I was being re-traumatized. But I had other ts to support me through that. I'm one that also presents a challenging diagnosis. That is no excuse for a t to mess with your head. I agree that asking t to explain his reasoning until it makes sense to you seems like the only way to go. and I am appalled that your t wants you to take out a loan to see him more. |
#59
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Sorry your therapist told you that you were the 'only" one too.
![]() It reallly hurts. I do wonder if this is defensive more than anything else, or maybe said out of frustration. I have been giving myself much of the blame. Less for my actions, but more for just for being me. Like this is how I am expecting to be treated, as no one could care enough to stay with me when I am at my worst. Only when I have something to give. Quote:
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#60
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My therapist offers a sliding scale too--he is pretty generous I think. I haven't found other qualified therapists that offer the same.
I think there's limitations with both systems, but it also pays for a lot of people who don't have major mental health issues, which effects supply-demand. I'm not sure if insurance causes bloating fees as the charges are still 2 or 3 times more than any insurance pays. Maybe, but the more demand the higher the fees that can be charged. Quote:
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#61
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I have so many ambivalent thoughts about this. I'm with you-I can be ok with it in a heartbeat if I know it has therapeutic purpose. That is where I"m torn.
Because--the timing. Why decrease support when someone is in a crisis? I don't see how that points to caring. On the other hand, maybe that is the best time to do it. I'll see. I would feel like he cares if done for the right reasons, so maybe I'll get more clarity. I lot of this ambivalence is related to how my parents raised me-no parenting; no rules. I was a quiet responsible child, but by the time I was 12, i was out of control hanging out with 20 and 30 year olds, doing what young adults did. So it feels caring if he did something to help me sort of stay in control. If that is his purpose. But given the timing, and his not disclosing feelings, along with the details, it's difficult to trust his motivations, that this is related to something 'good'. I don't know though, what you wrote below does sound cruel. It's difficult to see that as a positive thing, but if you feel it was positive, that is what matters. Then again, how can one tell if it's masochistic or not? I suppose you would know, but what about me. Hmm. I do think that this type of therapy can help change the way my mind works for the better. Not sure what the cost is for that, though. One of the reasons I believe this is because of others who went through this therapy. They seem to be more content with life, and live and work really long. And have less health problems, like everything is extracted from your system. Not sure if others have thought about this. Perhaps it is 'magical thinking' that's relatively mild so goes undetected by me. (I know it doesn't mean the therapy is the cause but this is one of the reasons). Quote:
Hope it never happens to you! Quote:
![]() I wonder sometimes if we have trauma bonds. I do think my therapist is a lot safer than how yours sounds to me. I''ll check out your post when I get a chance. Quote:
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#62
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I still have some more replies when i get time to come back but hope you all aren't sick of seeing my name at the top of the screen.
Just wanted to say thank you all kindly for the helpful support. It really means a lot to me. ![]() |
![]() Elio, growlycat, ruh roh, unaluna
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![]() Elio
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#63
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Sorry, I'm a little lost to your questions. Why is what and lack of patience around what?
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#64
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This has to be on of the nicest post anyone has ever written to me here. You really shifted my outlook, just with these words. You are drawn to mentors, but maybe you have than mentor thing going yourself.
![]() Speaking of mentors, when I was in my late teens, a business teacher talked to me a few times, sort of took me under her arm and told me I would do bigger and better things than those I was in the class for. Strange, I did do those things. Strange, I mean, because it didn't cross my mind that I could do them. She also taught me about assertiveness. It was an exciting new concept for me, perhaps the first 'social' thing an authorative adult ever taught me. Ever since then, I became naturally assertive in business, and ended up with several promotions before i was 22. It gave me social power, so it served as a catalyst for more things later, much more. Your post was like that--thank you. It really helped that you genuinely talked about 'good' parts of me (strengths), that my therapist leaves out and showed me I could believe in them. After reading what you wrote, I re-read some of my posts at the beginning, and they suddenly sounded ridiculous. I was making myself responsible for all that had gone wrong, yet, he is the expert. At least some could be his fault, if not more. Now that is how I was feeling at the time, no doubt, but I feel almost like a different person now. So a little can go a long way. Now if my therapist would do that from time to time, imagine what we'd accomplish. ![]() So I have some new ways of thinking:
Thank you for your kindness and helpfulness Xynesthesia. ![]() (I had taken my Ambien already, so I hope I'm not writing as loopy as I feel. ![]() Quote:
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![]() Elio
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#65
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I see great value in long-term psychoanalytic treatment. I agree that it might not be necessary for some, and perhaps even in most, cases. If the problems come from present day reality and the person just needs to learn to cope with them then I believe that many short-term goal-specific approaches are in order. However, when the present day problems actually come from a traumatic childhood, and not even from one or two specific traumatic events, but the whole situation was just inherently traumatic then I think it just takes time to get to the roots. For me it has for instance taken more than 3.5 years 4 times a week and only now I'm starting to approach the traumatic emotions that have been completely split off of me. These emotions are not related to any specific memories, they just come like floating from somewhere. I just know that they come from a very early age because I just have no words describe what is happening to me when they come. And they all surface in the transference. I don't think they would be surfacing without transference, transference is the agent or catalyst that enables me to get to those feelings at all. And it has taken a long time. I don't think I would have gotten there without the long psychoanalytic work I have been doing with my T. The second aspect is whether to continue with a certain therapist or not. Being a psychoanalyst doesn't necessarily mean that the therapist is good or suitable for a particular patient. Also, there are crappy psychoanalysts out there and if you're seeing one then it is definitely better to leave as soon as possible. I think that a very good test for any therapist/analyst is to test the defensiveness. If the therapist becomes defensive of anything you say then I would question the ability of that therapist to do deep work with patients. Also, not everyone fits with everyone. I believe there must be some basic, intuitive trust that this therapist can help me, even if I'm not really able to trust him yet. I hope I did not sound too harsh but to my mind to say that the psychoanalytic model is outdated shows just misunderstanding what psychoanalysis is really about. I'm sorry though that the analyst you saw was rigid in his methods and views. This is the problem of a particular person and not the therapeutic model per se. |
![]() Elio, growlycat, taylor43
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#66
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That's been 5 months ago. I went through agony processing it on my own -- PC has definitely helped with that because I basically feel accepted here even with my flaws. Which was what hadn't happened in the family of origin. Accepting/realizing that without there being someplace where I was OK was not possibly, not tolerable emotionally. I could never be OK to my last T, because of her stuff, which I didn't really see when I was caught up in mine. |
![]() Anonymous37926, atisketatasket
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![]() Elio
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#67
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Yes, my therapist seems to push me, like you describe here. There were a couple of times where he almost pushed me too far, like now. If that is what he is doing-I'm still not sure.
I'd given up my childlike needs for nurturing the last time he 'pushed' me. After giving up that, it seemed to turn into a need for support. Now he seems to be pushing me out of that. Which I don't feel I'm in a place for now. I think it should be more of a mutual decision, not based on what a therapist thinks I need. But when you don't agree, you can "find another therapist". I think this way of thinking is damaging. Quote:
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I do think that after time, anyone can feel secure after being continually reassured and validated by a therapist. But people aren't like that outside of therapy. That's where I don't agree with that approach (for me). Because as soon as i develop a new relationship with a therapist or otherwise, my insecurities are going to surface as most people do not relate like this. However, if you are forced to be the one to change, accept yourself, and change your cognitive style, then it's not as much of an issue. My therapist didn't actually suddenly shift, necessarily, but he did take it away when I needed it most. Really bad timing. I guess it seems like a sudden shift because he said to stop emailing, but there have been other things, like withtholding things i need. Quote:
Yes, but not always healing. Sometimes destruction. I think i'm supposed to put the text after, not before. Hope my responses aren't confusing. |
![]() LonesomeTonight
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![]() Elio, LonesomeTonight
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#68
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From that perspective, what stands out to me in your post -- and it was definitely something that I needed -- is the "twinship" or "alter ego" function. It's like grandiosity + idealization + twinship draws me out of myself into the (human/tribe) community at large. Then, it didn't happen for me b/c of a trauma at 13, peer relationships during adolescence. Then -- healthy ego functioning in a community with others! I can kind of feel when my Kohut self functions are "on" and the peer relationships for me are just starting. But I can tell I'm doing better even though some days are still just awful. |
#69
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It's in the trauma books. There is discussion about "gently" withholding what a client needs to allow things to be worked through. And what a client needs is usually the stuff they were deprived of in childhood. That's what draws transference feelings out the most.
Gently being the key word here. For example, if a client always seeks validation, then withholding it will get at that need, process deep emotions, and let a client understand why she needs it and how it affects her etc. It's a common technique, I believe. However, this doesn't mean you withhold all validation for weeks, months at a time. It doesn't even mean you do it an entire session. I know my therapist had been doing that with me for quite some time, though not "gently". And he withheld all at the same time, not just one thing at a time to work through something. Just blatantly withheld mirroring, validation, empathy for a period of time. That technique was not meant to be used that way, in my interpretation, just general common sense. So things got worse, and my therapist used a clinical term to show how things were worse because it was my fault, so I researched this. I found one of my therapist's papers about a technique in treating a child. The article was only in a psychoanalytic pay journal, and I couldn't access it, so i pulled up one of the articles he cited. The cited article was available in PDF on Google Scholar. I felt sick when I read the article. It was written by one of his colleague therapists who had a practice venture with him some time ago. It talked about 2 patterns in relating to power imbalance (as if the entire population is either/or), and it said for one way, the therapist should withhold mirroring, empathy, validation, and there were a couple more things I forget. I realized he had been using that on me!! I was horrified and confronted him. I told him that the paper that recommended the technique was Freudian, which was a time when people believed it was healthy to deprive oneself or children, and that the authors (his colleagues) did not use any sources within the last 40 years!! And that I hoped he was not using that technique with me. I said this in a really confrontational and confident way. He mumbled something to the effect of "yeah, I never really though that was [didn't make out the rest of the sentence]". The thing is, he's not even Freudian, so wtf? Anyway, since I called him out on that, he lightened up. That was extremely destructive. I can't believe he didn't see how dangerous that could be. I wonder what the outcome was with the child he used that technique on. I might pay to access that article. I've seen that article written by his colleagues cited only a couple of times in related literature, so I don't think that extreme method is even credible. It looked entirely fabricated, made up by someone who wanted to coin something 'new'. I just get that impression....But anyway, he seems to have quit doing that in such an extreme way. I told him he took that concept wayyy too far. I can really be a detective sometimes but need to expand my journal access. I have some institutional access, but most of the psychoanalytical articles are difficult to get. Quote:
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![]() LonesomeTonight
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![]() LonesomeTonight
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#70
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#71
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I think it's pretty common.
I don't think it's common to take it to the extreme that my therapist did. Why would a therapist tell you? It's not like they even mention the word transference. Sometimes, but it seems to be rare. Talking about real life experiences don't draw the feelings out. The feelings experienced between therapist and client is part of the therapy anyway, so the client feels the need for validation or whatever from the therapist. Transfers the childhood need onto the therapist. |
#72
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I would think they would tell me what they're doing because I am a paying client. I don't do work for my clients (different field) and not tell them what I'm doing in exchange.
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![]() LonesomeTonight, stopdog
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#73
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Exactly.
__________________
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. |
![]() ruh roh
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#74
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Maybe some who've been practicing so many years don't make enough of an effort to evaluate/re-evaluate what they are doing. I wish my therapist belonged to some sort of therapy group, where they discuss cases and exchange ideas. I know some exist.
Other therapists have supervision. I've ask him about having another to talk with or run ideas by, and he says he doesn't do that. The loan issue felt a little strange at first, but he does give me a reduced rate and therapy is an investment. I do feel really bad about not being able to afford what I need. I am still underemployed as a result of my issues, like ability to concentrate and have strong motivation for work I don't like, and have no disposable income with high medical expenses and other reasons. Anyway, he was trying to help me through a solution. Perhaps it would have been ideal if part of the solution was adjusting the therapy to make it more tolerable with once a week, but maybe it won't be as effective. I don't want to still be doing this 10+ years down the road.... I want to be done within 5 years or so. I will ask him to explain his reasoning more. He gave me another appointment, which felt containing and primary reason I am doing better. Quote:
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#75
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The first one I see has tried to keep knowledge from me - I thwarted her attempts to keep me in dark ignorance by seeing the second one who will explain, and by consulting others, including experts at the university where I teach, and by taking classes for those people myself.
__________________
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. Last edited by stopdog; Jan 13, 2017 at 11:49 AM. |
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