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#1
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Often my therapist tells me I'm going through "a lot." I find this puzzling since whatever it is is almost never what I define as "a lot."
So like work stress is "a lot." Getting celiac disease was "a lot." Being upset with a friend or family member is "a lot." Even all three together, "a lot" to her but not to me (others may disagree). The only thing I would agree was "a lot" was the fall when in a space of a couple months my older cat died, I left my abusive husband, I got sick and lost 1/3 of my body weight, and I had two surgeries, during one of which the ventilator broke. That's a lot, I think. What she says is "a lot" is normal life stuff to me. I don't argue with her about it, it's not important to what she's saying. I just roll my eyes inwardly if I find it irritating and get what I can out of the session. But it seems like over-validation (again, to me). So I'm curious: what would your therapist define as "a lot"? Do they talk in those kinds of terms? |
![]() LonesomeTonight, SlumberKitty
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#2
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Theres an app for that!
Well idk about an app, but that life stress calculator thing? Altho for me, a lot nowadays is an amazon delivery. |
![]() atisketatasket
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![]() atisketatasket
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#3
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Quote:
You mean the Holmes-Rahe scale? https://www.stress.org/wp-content/up...nventory-1.pdf I was off the charts on that for a couple years there, but I don’t think I could clear fifty points on it now. Not being married is the easiest way to eliminate stress. Last edited by atisketatasket; Nov 30, 2020 at 10:49 PM. |
![]() unaluna
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![]() unaluna, zoiecat
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#4
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Yes, my T says this to me periodically. I run the spectrum of feeling validated/supported to feeling like she is trying to pacify me or something. I think that has more to do with how I am feeling than what is actually going on that constitutes "a lot".
Sometimes it takes her saying that several times about whatever it is I'm going through before I accept that maybe what I'm feeling is appropriate given what I am going through at the moment. Maybe in those situations it's more about saying it's ok to feel whatever I'm feeling because of what I am experiencing rather than about the quantity of things I'm experiencing. |
![]() atisketatasket, LonesomeTonight
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#5
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Current T tends to say that, whereas former T rarely did. I think with current T, it's her way of expressing sympathy. Not a very convincing way, to my way of thinking. When former T said it, it meant something. But I think it was objectively true, even though it didn't really feel so to me at the time. I think a consequence of dealing with a lifetime of heightened stress, especially as a child, probably predisposed me to discount anything short of life-threatening as no big deal.
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![]() *Beth*, atisketatasket, LonesomeTonight
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#6
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My T says it frequently, for her it seems to mean that u am going through a lit of emotional things. I also think it is her way of saying it is normal that I am feeling overwhelmed, sad, or whatever because for many people it is a lot. She does typically say something like between x , y , and z happening right now you are dealing with a lot.
__________________
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![]() atisketatasket, LonesomeTonight
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#7
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Yes - both of the women I hired were over the top. I usually thought they were messing with me or just not listening and throwing it out as a phrase they learned in the big book of stupid therapist things to say.
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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. |
![]() atisketatasket, SlumberKitty
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#8
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My T often says "that's a lot" (as in a lot to cope with) and I don't think she knows what she's on about.
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![]() SlumberKitty
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![]() atisketatasket
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