turtlemoon
Bronze Member
I love my CBT therapist, I really do. From me, that is saying a lot. I had some really horrible experiences around counseling and the like as a teen and the whole process is intensely triggering for me in itself as an adult. Finding myself able to work with a counselor is sort of an achievement in and of itself.
With that said, she is really big on "Thought Stopping" as a behavioral excercise. Even to the point of having me draw stop signs as a physical exercise to remember later. And ok, maybe this works for some people. But it is not working for me. I mean... if I could just make myself stop having these thoughts, I wouldn't be there right? Uggh. Trying to stay open minded and coachable here. I really am. But then, tell yourself not to think about pink elephants and let me know what your next thought is.
Last session I brought it up again, and she thinks it may have to do with the word "stop" itself. I was sexually assaulted, and she thinks there may be some kind of triggering thing going on with me around that word. I do not really think this is the case. ***this may be triggering for some people*** I tried getting an IUD last week, and it was a horrible awful mess. I had to have them stop. They did, naturally. She also seems to think this is empowering for me... having my "stop" heard. Maybe I need to think about it that way.... but there was other stuff there that was the problem. Like, having a complete flashback meltdown during the process, and then feeling betrayed by my mind and body at the end. The word has nothing to do with it.
Anyways, I digress. Jeeze it is so hard not to ramble on about some of this. But yeah, thought stopping. Does this work for anyone, and if not... what kind of trigger controling cognitive stuff do the rest of you guys use?
With that said, she is really big on "Thought Stopping" as a behavioral excercise. Even to the point of having me draw stop signs as a physical exercise to remember later. And ok, maybe this works for some people. But it is not working for me. I mean... if I could just make myself stop having these thoughts, I wouldn't be there right? Uggh. Trying to stay open minded and coachable here. I really am. But then, tell yourself not to think about pink elephants and let me know what your next thought is.
Last session I brought it up again, and she thinks it may have to do with the word "stop" itself. I was sexually assaulted, and she thinks there may be some kind of triggering thing going on with me around that word. I do not really think this is the case. ***this may be triggering for some people*** I tried getting an IUD last week, and it was a horrible awful mess. I had to have them stop. They did, naturally. She also seems to think this is empowering for me... having my "stop" heard. Maybe I need to think about it that way.... but there was other stuff there that was the problem. Like, having a complete flashback meltdown during the process, and then feeling betrayed by my mind and body at the end. The word has nothing to do with it.
Anyways, I digress. Jeeze it is so hard not to ramble on about some of this. But yeah, thought stopping. Does this work for anyone, and if not... what kind of trigger controling cognitive stuff do the rest of you guys use?