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Re: therapy is stressing me out » bent

Posted by Tamar on June 13, 2006, at 3:52:30

In reply to therapy is stressing me out, posted by bent on June 12, 2006, at 13:02:06

> I am about to either call my T or send her a letter explaining that I will not be at our appointment next week. I only left her office an hour ago but I am not sure I can go back. Maybe just not next week or maybe not ever. I had to stop on my way back from my appointment because I was crying so much. Thoughts of never seeing my T again were crushing my heart. I managed to tell my T about learning that my cousin and her daughter were friends and graduated from HS together (see post from a few days ago). It was so hard. She didn’t say anything. She didn’t change her expression or anything.

I hate it when they don’t say anything and don’t change their expression. It feels non-human.

> I felt that she was uncomfortable. So I was uncomfortable. Maybe we were both projecting on to the other. I managed to say that this was a weird coincidence that really shook me up for a while but that it dissipated. She seemed to understand that much.

I guess you don’t know unless you ask… that’s the problem with the blank expression. I know it would be difficult to ask, but it might be helpful for you to have that discussion with her, because what really matters is *your* feelings about it.

> She seemed kinda normal the rest of the session but I wasn’t. I had really thought I was going to be able to tell her about knowing where she lives but I couldn’t. I felt that just the daughter thing made her uncomfortable.

Even if she felt a little uncomfortable, I would suggest that her job is to help you figure out what knowing this stuff means to you. Do you want to be part of her family? Do you feel jealous of her daughter simply for being the daughter of your therapist? Do you feel safer knowing where she lives, so you can picture where she is when you’re feeling low or anxious?

I don’t know if my therapist has kids, but I realised a few months ago that it’s possible for him to have a 13 year-old daughter, and just the idea of it made me feel wildly jealous. And I don’t even know if such a person even exists! But I realised that I really wished my father had been more like my therapist – more sensitive and more concerned and stuff like that. So I guess the point for me was to think about what I felt I’d missed as a teenager. And maybe you can work through this stuff and figure out why it matters to you.

> Maybe I know too much. Maybe that is what’s ruining my therapy.

I don’t think that knowing too much could ruin your therapy. But feeling you have a secret from your therapist might make your therapy very difficult.

> I now know who her daughters and her husband are (not in person), I know where she lives, I even know her daughter’s myspace profile. The myspace thing was the only one I ever went looking for. Everything else was just random.

Maybe it would help if you tell her that. It sounds to me as if you have never tried to make inappropriate contact with her, so I don’t think she has any reason to feel too uncomfortable.

> I watched my T as she wrote out my appointment card. Looking at her I thought, I can’t do this anymore. I can’t even tell her what I feel has come between us. At the same time I could be totally throwing a relationship away because I am blowing out of proportion. I think about the real issues we are in the middle of working on right now and how hard it will be to just drop it all.

I tend to think the important thing is to try to figure out with her how knowing these things about her relates to the other stuff you are working on. It sounds as if it is important to you, and that’s a good reason to try to talk about it with her. And if she was at all uncomfortable, I imagine that talking it through with you will help her feel less uncomfortable.

> It feels like I have to. I hate her right now. And I hate me too for ever letting my self attach.

Do you feel rejected by her because of her lack of response and her possible discomfort? That’s how I would feel, but I don’t know if it’s the same for you. Perhaps you feel she regrets your attachment to her, or that she doesn’t want it. But if that’s how you feel, I imagine they are probably old feelings. And if you try to work through them with her you will probably find that it isn’t the catastrophe you think it is.

Therapy is so hard, isn’t it? We lay our most secret feelings on the line and then we’re expected to work on them. But the most important thing to remember is that good therapists don’t judge clients for their feelings. They accept these feelings and they help us to understand them and change them where necessary. I hope you manage to work things out with your therapist.

Tamar


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