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View Poll Results: Can you tell your therapist anything? | ||||||
Yes, there is no topic that is off-limits in therapy | 29 | 46.77% | ||||
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I can say anything about my life but not about my therapist or the therapeutic relationship | 5 | 8.06% | ||||
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No, there are certain limits to what one can discuss in therapy | 11 | 17.74% | ||||
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I don't know | 8 | 12.90% | ||||
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Other (please explain) | 9 | 14.52% | ||||
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Voters: 62. You may not vote on this poll |
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Magnate
Member Since May 2017
Location: Earth
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#1
Inspired by a recent post, I am interested in whether people feel that certain topics are off-limits in therapy. Certainly most people in therapy have things that they choose not to share. But do you feel like you could share anything if you wanted to? Are there certain comments or questions that you think your therapist would find inappropriate? Have you had a therapist tell you that a topic was off-limits? Would your therapist be offended if you asked an intensely personal question about their life?
ETA: The question is more whether you feel free to talk/ask about anything, not whether you find yourself willing or able to do so. Last edited by ElectricManatee; Jun 21, 2018 at 04:53 PM.. |
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LonesomeTonight, SalingerEsme
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Always in This Twilight
Member Since Feb 2015
Location: US
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#2
I was actually thinking of creating a similar poll (since I'm pretty sure) this was inspired by my post. Will post an actual response in a bit (though you know what I'll say!)
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ElectricManatee, SalingerEsme
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Poohbah
Member Since Mar 2014
Location: PNW
Posts: 1,394
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#3
I said "other" thinking that although my T says nothing is off limits, there are things I generally don't bring up with him.
If I asked my T a question that he did not want to answer, he would probably a) not answer and b) want to discuss why I asked the question. |
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SalingerEsme
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Tweaky Dog
Member Since Aug 2011
Location: England
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#4
I voted Other. In theory, yes...but it's entirely dependent on whether I can open my mouth and use my words. When I am having a particularly hard time, I will reach for her hand like a life raft.
__________________ 'Somewhere up above the great divide Where the sky is wide, and the clouds are few A man can see his way clear to the light 'You have all the grace you need for today, and today is all that matters.' - Steve Austin |
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SalingerEsme
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Grand Poohbah
Member Since Apr 2017
Location: In a land far far away
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#5
I also put other. Not because I couldn't talk to my T about certain topics (actually quite the opposite, he makes sure to mention that I can tell him whatever I want), but I think it depends on wording. As in it's okay to tell your T you are mad at them or that you are jealous of their wife or children. But it's not okay to yell at your therapist because you are mad, or to insult the ones they love and so on. As long as it is worded in a respectful manner, everything is okay to be talked about.
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SalingerEsme
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Poohbah
Member Since Sep 2016
Location: Europa
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#6
Yes, I'm totally confident that no topic is off-limits in my therapy. It does not mean that I'm able open my mouth and say those things though.
Mostly I'm unable to talk about myself because I don't seem to find myself in therapy session. I have no problems in bringing up questions about my T and letting him carry the full weight of me demanding the answer and figuring out whether I really want/need the answer or I'm just testing him. Sometimes he gets it wrong and answers and then I feel that he shouldn't have done it and then I hurl against him with accusations and complaints how he should not have answered. Also, I have yelled at my T and cursed him and also said some very mean things about him and his family and no - it is not off-limits in my therapy. The only things he does not allow is aggressive or self-harming behaviour - throwing or breaking things, threatening or attacking him physically, slamming the door, hitting or harming myself in session. How do I know that these are off-limits? Because I've done them all and always a discussion initiated by T has followed about whether I am able to tolerate the treatment or whether I should start taking medication or even stop seeing him altogether because if I can't control my behaviour in these aspects then he can't help me. |
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Anonymous45127, SalingerEsme
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#7
Yes. we talk about anything and everythihg. i cant think of any topic that would be off limits or odd to talk about with her.
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SalingerEsme
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Roses are falling.
Member Since May 2017
Location: Seattle.
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#8
I don't like talking about sex and periods because makes me feel dirty, but where I am right now I feel like I could share anything with him that we've gone through the cringe fest that was/is erotic transference complete with a sexual fantasy that involved him. When I was trying to provoke him I said a lot of weird stuff like: I bet I could **** him better than his wife could and that I wondered what kind of kinky **** he was int, but he didn't shame me about any of that and was cool as a cucumber.
Today was suicidal feelings and SH 101. But when we first started I found even admitting the parental transference hard. Because I don't have to walk on eggshells in the fear that he's going to flip out at me, I can tell him things like I feel his interpretation is wrong, he's being defensive and tell him that perhaps he should examine his countertransferance towards me with his own therapist . all of which I couldn't do before.. And I haven't really asked intensely personal questions about his life. |
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LonesomeTonight
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LonesomeTonight, SalingerEsme
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Grand Magnate
Member Since Aug 2012
Location: yada
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#9
Former T, yes. Current T, I haven't made up my mind. She's said several times that I can say anything to her, and I have no concerns about confronting her if the need arose. I can ask her anything personal--I'm just not usually interested in doing so. What I'm undecided about is gory details of abuse; I'm not confident that she could tolerate it. And I don't want to have to take care of her. But since I don't feel much sense of needing to get into it, it hasn't posed a problem.
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awkwardlyyours
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underdog is here
Member Since Sep 2011
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#10
Theoretically the idea behind therapy seems to be one can, may and should tell the therapist anything they want. It is the line those guys tout the most. It is the big selling point they tell all the clients.
Realistically, in practice, I have never found it such that those guys are competent enough or mentally equipped to hear anything or everything from a client. More like when cell phone companies say you are buying unlimited data but really it is only 20 gb (or whatever - just an example) - Taking such a statement literally leads to disastrous results for the client in my opinion. __________________ 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; Jun 21, 2018 at 05:36 PM.. |
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Anonymous45127, atisketatasket, awkwardlyyours, ElectricManatee, feralkittymom, Lemoncake, LonesomeTonight, msrobot, SalingerEsme
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Grand Poohbah
Member Since Jul 2017
Location: Neverland
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#11
__________________ Living things don’t all require/ light in the same degree. Louise Gluck |
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Grand Poohbah
Member Since Jun 2014
Location: Sweden
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#12
I woted "no" because there are things I wouldn´t share with my T unless they become to bother me or interfere with our therapeutic process. To me, thinking of her in relation to sexual/romantic scenes in movies is one such thing I wouldn´t tell her. Also, I wouldn't tell her that I´ve thought about how her sex life is and when/if she has had sex recently.
I think those things are quite normal in a way, I think my T has had thoughts about if I´ve ever had sex for example and for both of us and for others those thoughts are normal. But I wouldn´t share it with her unless those thoughts took too much of my thinking which they don´t. To me, I share things I know stop me from living a good life and I would also try to share if there´s something in our therapeutic relation that bothered me. |
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katydid777
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Magnate
Member Since Feb 2016
Location: Appalachian Mountains
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#13
Yes I think I could talk about whatever I wanted to with my T.
__________________ "I would rather have questions that can't be answered than answers which can't be questioned." --Richard Feynman |
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Wise Elder
Member Since Nov 2013
Location: US
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#14
Yes, I can tell my T anything. And I do tell her most everything. I haven't talked to her about religion yet. And I personally hate talking politics. The only thing off limits is talking about her personal life. But we talk about our relationship a lot.
__________________ "Odium became your opium..." ~Epica |
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Moderator
Community Support Team Member Since Dec 2015
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#15
I voted no. I did have one t I could tell absolutely anything to and I miss that. Most ts I feel I can't, I just don't trust them enough. Current t actually seems to set some topic limits herself; she doesn't seem to like talking about sex too much and seems to steer me away from those conversations.
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Grand Magnate
Member Since Jan 2014
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#16
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88Butterfly88
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Grand Member
Member Since Aug 2017
Location: United States
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#17
I haven't figured out how to ask if I can go to his funeral...
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ElectricManatee, Lemoncake, LonesomeTonight, Out There
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Grand Magnate
Member Since Aug 2017
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#18
Yes but I don't. Many things are not that important
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Guest
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#19
I thought I could, now I'm not so sure. *sigh* I'm so confused. :P
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LonesomeTonight
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Magnate
Member Since Feb 2015
Location: USA
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#20
Yes, I can tell and ask my t anything so long as it's beneficial to my therapy needs.
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