It's like how am I going to open up and be vulnerable with someone who's obviously not my ally?
I can't imagine why anyone would anyone want to. Sounds like an exceptionally bad idea.
(threw shade at me, maybe?).
What does this mean?
Nope. :)
Even if you kick this therapist to the curb, the only thing you'd be losing is either a bad therapist or a bad fit. Not the end of the world :) There are both other therapists out there
and while therapy is absolutely an easier/faster way towards learning to manage your PTSD. Also not the only way.
If your therapist is actually a
great therapist, and the loss of trust is just you being symptomatic? Might well not even lose the therapist.
***
I think the major red flag here is her being judgmental -- that's a huge no no.
This is actually a super huge YES, for me. I need to be able to trust their judgement, which means they need to both exercise it & let me in on it. When I'm doing something right? Them telling me so is important. When I'm doing something wrong? Equally, if not more important. And when they see me in a grey area? ((If, in their judgement, they see something is somewhere in between right/neutral/wrong, or layered both right and wrong, or neither right nor wrong nor neutral nor anything in between but something else altogether (dangerous, hilarious, something to be wary of, etc.)?))... Knowing that, and the pieces that go into it, are freaking invaluable. Useful on so many different levels.
Trusting their judgment doesn't mean that I'm always going to agree with their estimation of things, nor that they'll always be right. Every good therapist I've ever had I've both argued with, (and sometimes I'm right / they're wrong, or we agree to disagree) and have had different opinions than they do (no one is right or wrong).
I've run into a few truly "no judgment" people, and they are beyond useless. Abuse isn't wrong, victories aren't celebrated, good habits aren't encouraged, bad habits aren't drilled down on... They're like bowls of oatmeal. As in I'd get just as much help talking to a bowl of oatmeal as I do talking to them. :banghead: The only thing worse than talking with a "I don't judge" therapist... ((Please. Dear. God.
Use your judgement. If I'm doing something right? Tell me. If I'm doing something f*cked up? Call me on my bullshit!!!)) ...is talking to a "Yes Man" who will cheer me on as I nuke my life with just the same excitement & vigor as when I'm actually doing something good in my life. :wtf:
I either felt were not listening to me or did not respect me
Very much agreed. These are huge with me, too. The not listening thing is both impossible and a waste of time, the not respecting / disrespecting me dovetails very neatly into the judgement piece; I need to be able to trust their judgment... And their judgment clearly sucks and is not to be relied upon! The listening piece just always blows my mind, though. Talk about not making good life choices if your job requires listening to people, and a brick wall has better comprehension :facepalm:
At the end of the day, it's your healing process, your well-being and your time/money that goes into this, so you should find someone who is on the same level as you. It might be hard and take a while, but it can and should be done.
Agree completely.