FAQ/Help |
Calendar |
Search |
Magnate
Member Since Jul 2013
Location: United States
Posts: 2,741
11 365 hugs
given |
#1
Well.....has anyone successfully told their T about their type of transference (maternal, paternal, erotic) and the T was able to work with it, understand it and help you get past it? That is if they did not transfer you to another T or terminate you.
__________________ When a child’s emotional needs are not met and a child is repeatedly hurt and abused, this deeply and profoundly affects the child’s development. Wanting those unmet childhood needs in adulthood. Looking for safety, protection, being cherished and loved can often be normal unmet needs in childhood, and the survivor searches for these in other adults. This can be where survivors search for mother and father figures. Transference issues in counseling can occur and this is normal for childhood abuse survivors. |
Grand Poohbah
Member Since May 2017
Location: USA
Posts: 1,734
7 542 hugs
given |
#2
I have strong paternal transference for my T. He embraced it & it is a big part of our therapy. Definitely no referral elsewhere.
|
Magnate
Member Since Jul 2013
Location: United States
Posts: 2,741
11 365 hugs
given |
#3
__________________ When a child’s emotional needs are not met and a child is repeatedly hurt and abused, this deeply and profoundly affects the child’s development. Wanting those unmet childhood needs in adulthood. Looking for safety, protection, being cherished and loved can often be normal unmet needs in childhood, and the survivor searches for these in other adults. This can be where survivors search for mother and father figures. Transference issues in counseling can occur and this is normal for childhood abuse survivors. |
Grand Poohbah
Member Since May 2017
Location: USA
Posts: 1,734
7 542 hugs
given |
#4
My T is older - almost exactly my father's age, actually - off by a couple of months.
He has expressed his own paternal countertransference, and we freely talk from these places a lot. Meaning he will express that his paternal & protective feelings are quite strong at times. (E.g., when I have shared about a trauma). Although in much warmer terms than what I just stated...I'm not sure I'm comfortable expressly sharing some of what he's said verbatim. I'm slightly embarrassed by what I find comforting, I guess. |
kecanoe
|
Most Dangerous
Member Since Feb 2017
Location: UK
Posts: 2,920
7 7,642 hugs
given |
#5
Nope, not at all. I'm not sure that I believe it can be done any more.
|
may24, winterblues17
|
Guest
Posts: n/a
|
#6
This was a good thread on similar topic, I also posted in it about mine in a link to yet another thread:
https://forums.psychcentral.com/psyc...t=transference I think I've definitely worked through my main pattern, but not with a therapist. I actually believe that it can be more effective to do this using ordinary life experiences and relationships and examine them deeply and honestly in the context of both psych literature and our own life and personality. I think often trying to do this with and though a person we experience transference for can hinder the process and make it really messy, painful and ineffective. Doing it alone does require a good dose of detachment from the actual experience and looking at the larger picture, IMO. But it can be better sometimes, especially if one's pattern does not fit well in the common, textbook cases. When I tried to do some of it with a T, it went in all sorts of wrong, because they T was somehow unable to detach himself from his own pet peeves and fave theories and just kept projecting those onto me, which made me mad because it did not fit at all. I would definitely suggest doing it with a T who is pretty open-minded, creative and can deal with the unknown and evaluate individual patterns in their own context, not just the common literature. For me personally, this process has been highly beneficial because my transference pattern was not really related to a desire for care and love not received in childhood, but a form of youthful identity search and finding/developing my own values, though associating myself with people who seemed to carry those things - maybe parental in a sense that my parents did not meet some of those quality expectations, not as parents but more as human beings. This is part of my I could do most of the examination on my own and use the findings for self-improvement. I am not sure how it could work with transference that is strongly parental in its nature other than maybe learning to "parent" ourselves and become more self-sufficient and having better self care. Last edited by Anonymous55498; Dec 02, 2018 at 10:09 AM.. |
koru_kiwi, MoxieDoxie
|
healing from trauma
Member Since Dec 2017
Location: Alberta
Posts: 30,441
(SuperPoster!)
6 24.4k hugs
given |
#7
No, my t does not understand it or is trained to help me. He does try to understand and helps me know what supports i have in my life. I think in the next year or so i will be seeing another therapist at the clinic my therapist is near to retire
|
Poohbah
Member Since Jun 2014
Location: Belgium
Posts: 1,179
10 471 hugs
given |
#8
In my experience and from the dozens of accounts I have read about it, no it’s not possible to work through something like that.
A lot of these « transference » cases are straight up addictions. The only way to stop an addiction is cutting off supply. Was that way for me. No amount of talking about it with my ex therapist was going to change anything except the state of my bank account. From what I’ve noticed people who say they have worked through it are always still in therapy. Not exactly a sign that things have been « worked through » imo. |
BudFox, koru_kiwi, scorpiosis37, winterblues17
|
Guest
Posts: n/a
|
#9
I think it's more a case of recognising it.
|
Guest
Posts: n/a
|
#10
Quote:
|
|
koru_kiwi, LonesomeTonight
|
Guest
Posts: n/a
|
#11
Xynesthesia, this has been exactly my experience as well. Thank you for expressing it so well.
|
Grand Member
Member Since Aug 2017
Location: United States
Posts: 950
7 962 hugs
given |
#12
No, because he died. I'm sure we would have worked through it if we had more time.
|
LonesomeTonight
|
Magnate
Member Since Jul 2013
Location: United States
Posts: 2,741
11 365 hugs
given |
#13
Yes I feel this in my bones. The only way this is ever going to stop is if I cut off all therapy. I have had this transference with every therapist because I have a massive hole that has never been filled. I never had a mother or father that took care of me and each therapist has become a surrogate. People that were raised with parents that filled their needs at least still have that parent to call on a daily basis and to talk to as needed (unless they passed away) but a therapist is a poor substitution because you can only see them or talk to them at session time and the ache becomes so bad between sessions but yet it is the closest thing to a loving parent you ever had. Even if it is a facade it is still something.
__________________ When a child’s emotional needs are not met and a child is repeatedly hurt and abused, this deeply and profoundly affects the child’s development. Wanting those unmet childhood needs in adulthood. Looking for safety, protection, being cherished and loved can often be normal unmet needs in childhood, and the survivor searches for these in other adults. This can be where survivors search for mother and father figures. Transference issues in counseling can occur and this is normal for childhood abuse survivors. |
Anonymous56387, koru_kiwi
|
koru_kiwi, may24, scorpiosis37
|
Poohbah
Member Since Oct 2018
Location: Canada
Posts: 1,073
5 70 hugs
given |
#14
Yes. Was a major issue with my last T. He told me a certain amount is necessary. I don’t have that issue with my current t.
|
Elder Harridan x-hankster
Member Since Jun 2011
Location: Milan/Michigan
Posts: 40,690
(SuperPoster!)
13 68.1k hugs
given |
#15
Geez, reading here, its like saying NOBODY ever meets x goal. I will say, stunted as i am, that yes i did. I may not be perfect, but im a lot better than i was. And working thru the transference was a biiiiig part of it.
|
Lemoncake
|
Bill3, feileacan, feralkittymom, SlumberKitty
|
Grand Magnate
Member Since Aug 2012
Location: yada
Posts: 4,415
12 1,974 hugs
given |
#16
Yes. In my experience there was no similarity to addiction processes at all. But I do think it takes a very astute T , a strong alliance independent of the transference, a client who is able to tolerate periods of extreme distress, and a therapy that can withstand those turbulent emotions.
Although I have returned to therapy after resolving the transference with former T over 20 yrs ago, it is for very different reasons, and there is no transference active in this therapy. |
feileacan, unaluna
|
Member
Member Since Sep 2018
Location: Uk
Posts: 424
6 250 hugs
given |
#17
I haven't worked through it but I do believe I'm working through it. Of course I'm still in therapy 3x a week but I can see the role the attachment has played and is playing in guiding me to ways to fill it the hole through lived example.
|
Grand Poohbah
Member Since May 2017
Location: USA
Posts: 1,734
7 542 hugs
given |
#18
*shrug* I don't consider my transference an addiction nor does it take away from my life.
I also don't know that I'll ever "work through" my transference in that I don't think I'll ever stop seeing my therapist as a father figure. I don't see anything wrong with that, though. I'm not in therapy for forever, and I will say goodbye someday. But I will always view him as having been a father figure to me. |
feileacan, feralkittymom, Salmon77
|
Magnate
Member Since Jul 2013
Location: United States
Posts: 2,741
11 365 hugs
given |
#19
Ok how do you even tell your therapist about your transference? What do you say?
__________________ When a child’s emotional needs are not met and a child is repeatedly hurt and abused, this deeply and profoundly affects the child’s development. Wanting those unmet childhood needs in adulthood. Looking for safety, protection, being cherished and loved can often be normal unmet needs in childhood, and the survivor searches for these in other adults. This can be where survivors search for mother and father figures. Transference issues in counseling can occur and this is normal for childhood abuse survivors. |
Member
Member Since Sep 2018
Location: Uk
Posts: 424
6 250 hugs
given |
#20
Well I did it in fits and starts by email cause am like a coward that way!! And I barely or only tangentially acknowledge it face to face but in email have been pretty clear, used 'love', referred to 'daddy', referred to wanting connection, comfort, non abandonment or 'well done/Good job', said expressly it's coming from 10 year or 2 year or baby me etc. He's following my lead in non or only tangential reference so far. Including to assure me it's normal, fine, a tool to heal.
|
Closed Thread |
|