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B
Bafof
Mmmm, good point.Remember, its like dating. These are serious and intimate relationships.
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Mmmm, good point.Remember, its like dating. These are serious and intimate relationships.
s in all things,when you find something good against the odds its usually excellent. They're very good when they're good.
Most PTA members at the school are bored and dysfunctional parents trying to find a purpose in their lives that looks meaningful.
Not all, but most are a shade of Desperate Housewives.
It's about the same odds, and just as obvious if you pay attention.
The good ones are great, I bet you'd instinctively know who to avoid and who to sit next to in a PTA meeting.
I mean "crazy" as in: ill intent towards patients who've done nothing wrong; sits through sessions with any and every objective except to serve the patient; emotional and/or mental clusterf*cks to the point where they are out of touch with reality; shamelessly lying or manipulating the patient for...entertainment, laughs, to feel powerful? Who knows?
^^^^The good ones are great, I bet you'd instinctively know who to avoid and who to sit next to in a PTA meeting.
I have seriously, and recently, regretted not using my own common sense.
Wow, I detect some real defensiveness and possibly projection here. When you chose a doctor, did he graduate at the to...
Wait, what? $150 to $300 an hour is peanuts? On what planet?Why else would they work for peanuts with a masters degree.
I don't know what you think I meant by therapists. I'm talking about people who sit on their asses in an air conditioned office all day, (perhaps on an upper level of a high-rise with a skyline view) and charge at least $100 an hour. You apparently are talking about county social workers -- and I know those people don't have to have a master's degree. Where are you getting your information from?A hundred thousand dollar education earns them about $32,000 in most states as beginning wage per year.
So then why do some therapists have full book of clients who pay $275 per hour, while others scrounge by in medicaid ghettos? Are the right "matches" simply falling into the laps of the former, but mysteriously not the latter? Or are there right ways and wrong ways to do therapy just like anything else from scrambling an egg to making a left turn?Everyone is not a good match for a variety of reasons. That does not mean the client or the therapist is defective, things just do not click for a variety of reasons.
The totality of traits I mentioned were present in just one therapist I've seen. The others exhibited maybe one or two.I know many T's, socially, professionally, and through my own treatment, and I have not encountered what you are speaking of.
The first time I started seeing a therapist someone warned me that they're all crazy, b. ut I thought he was being flip. Y...[/QUO
OMG ARE YOU SERIOUS?
Good lord, codependency is required for someone to get a masters degree and then want to work for peanuts.
IMHO you sound quite elitist and very condescending. Educational level entitles one to just about nothing. I get annoyed by the attitude of people must have something wrong with them if they have a higher degree but choose not to enter a high paying field.
I'd hate to be one of your kids. All the pressure to just work for money and not actually follow your calling. (Yes, your sort of attitude can be devastating to the mind of a child; I should know.)