• We are a multilingual website again. Read the notice about this.
  • Understand AI use at MyPTSD: all AI use is explained in our AI help page. AI use is by choice here. It exists if you want it, but does nothing unless you choose to use it.

Do you feel like therapy has actually helped you?

Status
Not open for further replies.

UnicornSightings

Platinum Member
I've posted a lot about my experience with my old t. I feel like I got a lot out of the 2 and a half years with her but my life doesn't look much different. I'm slightly more ok with it and for sure with myself but not a lot of shifts have happened. I emailed a bunch of new therapists and one replied and we are setting up and appt and while that's all well and good, I can't help but wonder if it's all a waste of time and money to continue. My biggest issue at present that I want to address is my general disdain for people. I can't form connections with people (except those attachments to people with some authority) and generally don't care about others. Now I'd LIKE to and sometimes I feel like I do but overall, I just don't care. Now I'm sure that makes it really hard for anyone to care about me. But I don't know what I'm doing wrong out there. And talking about this in therapy... well, I can't imagine anything a new t could say that would suddenly make me care or make me likeable. But I also owe it to myself to not just give up but I wonder if therapy is the right course of action. I guess I'm wondering if anyone has ever had their depression/motivation/etc lifted with talk therapy.
 
I'm going to go with a big fat, YES, on this one. It can be annoyingly hard to be in therapy, and even more to see the progress. It's mostly the things we scoff at when suggested that are the areas we need to work on most. Yes, sessions/goals need to be client directed, but we also need to respect and appreciate that these trained professionals can help us carve out a plan to get us there. It's similar to a personal trainer. I can show up, go through the motions and have her plan a million and two workouts for me. But, unless I'm giving 103% effort it's not going to work. On the other hand, keep in mind it's not a fast process. It is common practice for people to show up in a therapists office when shit isn't going so well, so it's going to take quite a bit of time to go through everything. Be patient with yourself, continually evaluate how much effort you think you're putting in, and be honest with your therapist. You two are a team working towards a goal. If you can focus on that, I have no doubt you will succeed.

Personally, I've felt super lost lately and then I had an amazing session with my therapist where something clicked and things she had been saying before totally made sense to me. I've now seen progress in the way I am slowly getting better at managing when I'm emotionally activated. It may be small, but given what we have to live with after trauma - that's HUGE.
 
Yes for me as well...for I've greatly benefited from therapy and EMDR and I could not have made it this far in my ptsd recovery without the nurturing and motivation from my therapists...each and every one of them had something to offer me...even if it wasn't always what I needed or wanted to hear at the time. I've learned so much about my self in trauma recovery therapy. Wishing you the best.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
I am recently just back for a tune up in therapy and honestly wished I had gone back now months ago really. She has really been working with where I am at and we are a good team too. I only see her about once a month and is has speeded up my recovery and healing process. I spent years in therapy with the wrong kinds of therapists and yet remained stuck in the mire and did not move forward hardly at all. They mostly just supported me through some very rough times for which I am grateful but this therapist I have is a CBT therapy and it has been causing some real shifts with in myself.

So maybe your needs have changed and it is worth a shot to keep on looking until you find one that is a better fit for you. Good luck the therapist that can help you is just waiting to be discovered by you. Try not to be discouraged I know easier said than done. You are really smart and seem highly aware so I know that if you stay the course you will begin to make some of those shifts you want to see happen.
 
Yes, yes, a thousand times YES!

I started working with my therapist last summer. She understands trauma and dissociated parts. (She used to work with traumatized kids at Sheppard Pratt——yes I got hella lucky when I found her.) Without her guidance I wouldn’t have made one of the biggest breakthroughs in my healing. (It’s so new not even she knows about it yet!)
 
I'm going to agree ... yes! Keep going. I went to a bunch of therapists as a child but it never really helped for three reasons: 1) It didn't feel confidential and my mother had too much input, 2) They were mandated reporters so I was afraid to talk about the abuse I was experiencing, and 3) They weren't goal-oriented. At the age of 29, I am in therapy for the first time as an adult and finding it so much more helpful than I did as a kid. But I think that I lucked out in getting a therapist that is pretty goal-oriented. By this, I mean that she doesn't just focus on talk therapy, but there is also a big focus on assignments and holding me accountable for taking action in my life (albeit gently and with understanding if I fail to do something or procrastinate). She takes a very what-can-we-do-to-work-on-this approach which I find extremely helpful and motivating. I would definitely suggest looking for this quality in a therapist.
 
I'm a big fan of effective therapy. That being said... I've rarely found that talk therapy alone helped me change my life.

For me, for therapy to be effective, it has to include:
1.) Trauma specific techniques (along with general techniques.) Such as EMDR, Somatic Experiencing, Prolonged Exposure, etc. General talk therapy alone might help me feel better, but nothing much changes. With trauma specific techniques in the mix, things change a lot more - not just with processing trauma, but the therapists skill level and style of work with me when we would have talk-only sessions.
2.) Homework. I always ask my therapist what three things I should be working on or for other "homework" assignments. This is common in DBT, CBT, and less in other therapies like somatic work, but my therapist is always able to think of something. I have had diary cards and things to report back or etc to turn in. 1 hour of work a week just wasn't enough for me. I needed someone keeping me accountable to do work every day on my own between sessions.
3.) The understanding that effective therapy will often leave me feeling like sh*t sometimes. Sometimes the sessions help me feel better about myself. Other times, my therapist is kinda like... confrontationally kind? Or just well, says what I do not want to hear. And other times, we talk about the things I SO want to avoid. In fact, if I don't feel challenged and like I'm sometimes walking through the worst things with the therapist, then I wonder what needs to change.

Instead of going down the route of doing therapy or no therapy at all, which is a little black and white in thinking - I'd try something new. Try a new therapy. I'd suggest a trauma therapist who has one or more trauma techniques under their belt and some experience perhaps with advoidant attachment and interpersonal skills training.

Now I'd LIKE to and sometimes I feel like I do but overall, I just don't care. Now I'm sure that makes it really hard for anyone to care about me. But I don't know what I'm doing wrong out there. And talking about this in therapy... well, I can't imagine anything a new t could say that would suddenly make me care or make me likeable. But I also owe it to myself to not just give up but I wonder if therapy is the right course of action. I guess I'm wondering if anyone has ever had their depression/motivation/etc lifted with talk therapy.
I have had some major life shifts in how I relate to people, and even my motivation to relate at all with people, change through therapy. Was it due to something the therapist said? Not really. It was due to a lot of work processing the old trauma and leaning into really super uncomfortable skills in my relationships, every day, and reporting back to my therapist, and really developing a robust relationship with my own therapist that became what the therapy world calls a "corrective emotional experience" that changed my general way of being. And I have a lot of work yet to do...

This is just my experience and what I needed. For others, this would backfire and they need very different styles and types of therapy.

I am glad you have contacted a number of therapists and I hope you consult with a few, and give someone a try.
 
I agree w/ @Justmehere. Decades of talk therapy alone simply was not working and I continued to self-destruct...and only after I found a good trauma therapist and began to work on my sexual abuse and my warped sense of self (in process still) and also of the world did I begin to make any progress in ptsd recovery.

EMDR Therapy (for my brain literally had to be numbed from too many traumatic memories) and many additional therapeutic tools and techniques that help to keep me grounded and to live out and away from my traumatic memories.

And trauma recovery also helps me to continue to move away from my former traumatized little girl child self and I'm no longer being re-traumatized by my acting out, and am learning to stay away from stranger danger and toxic people.

And I also no longer self-destructively act out like I did for decades due to what the crazy-making perps/pervs did to my precious mind, body, and soul. I am no longer a participant of victim status and I have very stringent boundaries and use my time and energy so much more wisely and effectively now. And I am just beginning to learn to love my self. All of me. Warts and all.

I'm continuing to learn to live in the here and now and this at times is painful but no where near as self-destructively pain-filled as I was only existing, languishing, and mere-vegetating prior to trauma recovery because now I'm growing and becoming mentally and emotionally (as well as physiologically) stronger and so much more healthier.

And again I live in this present moment in time...whereas I used to always live in the past and in flashbacks and trauma memories and was triggered all over the place.

Everything about me and my thinking, feeling, doing has had to be addressed, changed and I am continuing to transition and grow and I am transforming from this broken little girl self into this wonderful, beautiful woman self.

I have not arrived and I am on this amazing and also very challenging journey of self-discovery of my little girl lost self and I am metomorphosizing from the broken and battered small little girl self into hopefully and prayerfully the beloved and cherished woman that I so want to become. I have many more acquaintances and a couple of good solid friends now whereas previous to recovery I was alone and destitute.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Five years of therapy and I still commissurate with “UnicornSightings” ...

I agree with others that IF you can find a good T - stick with the sessions even if you can only go once a month. For me twice a week (covered under benefits) was best initially. Then weekly for long time. Then took time off after 5 years.

therapy definitely strengthen my current relationships. Very thankful.

The Concern that was stated ... i will add that i can’t seem to build new relationships. Not caring - not interested. I don’t know what it is ... choosier knowing that I put up with such garbage. But I want a partner in life - I just sabotage every attempt

Still need work. Maybe once I retire and start some volunteer work - it will happen. Friends and that special someone. I just don’t know
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Donation drives

2026 Donation Goal

Goal
$1,800.00
Earned
$910.00
This donation drive ends in
0 hours, 0 minutes, 0 seconds
  50.6%

Trending content

Featured content

Back
Top Bottom