@joeylittle - thanks for sharing your recent situation. I'm sorry it has been a difficult few months for you in terms of communication with your therapist. It can certainly be incredibly stressful.
It is also reassuring, in a way, to know that other people still have these kinds of challenges in longer term therapeutic relationships. I'd never had therapy before I started seeing her and I think I sometimes (often!) worry that I have been working with her for three years or so and that I should be over this stuff now and be able to "just trust" that we're good.
You know, I'm going to say this - I do still think you and she need to work on your therapeutic alliance.
I think the challenge for you in that team building process is to change the pattern of needing to adjust to her in a way that leads to you thinking you can't really be honest with her.
After a rocky end of 2016/start of 2017 with her, I actually feel that we have been in a really good place together since then.
This issue doesn’t come up very often.
We have talked several times about the intimacy of therapy/being in relationship with her and how I find that very difficult and it creates a lot of anxiety for me. And conversations like that go fine. I mean, I find them excruciating and anxiety-making! But, relationally, it goes ok and she doesn't get defensive about things like that. Presumably because it's not me pointing to specific things related to her. When I’m saying something that’s more about her, that’s when she gets defensive and then it somehow all seems to end up on me, even though I am always careful to identify how I have contributed to a certain situation/what I have brought to the dynamic in this instance and I always name and own that really explicitly.
I guess, when she gets defensive in the way I described in my earlier post and when I feel impacted by that...I either shut down and just want to leave or else I tend to apologise and rush to assure her that I wasn't being critical and that I'm not blaming her for anything because I don’t want her to be annoyed with me or for things to not feel ok between us.
So...yeah...I suppose that, even when things feel good between us as they have for most of the past year, that is still lurking somewhere in the dynamic...that I fear her getting angry/defensive and that I then sometimes become quite grovelly to try to make things feel ok again (but then somehow resent her for that).
I think it's hard to get to the place of communication where you can believe often enough that you are on solid footing with the therapist, and therefore can express it when you are having trouble with the interpersonal aspect of the work.
Ain’t that the truth!
the NHS and it's philosophies on the relational aspect of therapy came up
She’s in private practice, not an NHS therapist. She is very relational and I know that she sees the therapeutic relationship as key.
I wonder if that's because there seems to be a rift in the relationship which you're trying to mend by yourself?
I don’t know... I don’t sense a big rift between us at the moment. And the original purpose of this thread wasn’t because I was annoyed with her and wanted to vent about her because we were heading for a fall out or something. it was to check whether my hope that she could help me reduce my anxiety in a session was realistic or whether I was expecting something that was unrealistic. Also, her normalising/validating/rationalising approach didn’t help that session but I wasn’t sure what - if anything - would have. So, I was curious about what other people’s Ts did in those circumstances.
So...I don’t feel that we are anywhere near rupture territory (though you may not have meant full-on rupture when you said rift) at the moment. But I suppose, I do have a lurking worry about potential future ruptures happening...
The last major one was this time last year around fees and it was awful and went on for a long time. It was a very bruising experience and, if I’m honest, I still don’t think I have fully got over that, even though we moved on and things have been good since. So, that it something that still nags at the back of my mind a bit. But that’s my fault for holding on to it.
That, I imagine makes it very difficult for you to raise an issue with her and so you end up down playing, minimising or ignoring things that don't feel ok.
Yes, I think this happens. Because, in the end, I did say last week about how, the previous week I had hoped I’d leave session feeling less anxious and the opposite happened so it had got me thinking about what I could do differently in future to reduce my anxiety when it is so off the scale etc etc. But I was very aware that I was walking on egg shells and being very careful about not making anything sound directed at her. In fact, I think I put the onus on me - “what can I do differently” - and I think I even told her that I wasn’t saying anything about her and I wasn’t meaning anything she did was wrong. Sigh...
When she says "lets go back to it, I won't be defensive", are you able to say that her initial response means you aren't able to talk about it.
No, I don’t ever do that. I just shut down/shut the conversation down. Or, as mentioned above, I grovel around trying to reassure her that I wasn’t meaning to criticise her so I’m sorry if it came across that way...
God, I sound like such a pathetic wimp!
And I’m really not like this in other relationships. I am so not a groveller!
Your T sounds like they want to offer you a therapeutic relationship with their T self, not their actual person if that makes sense. I wonder if when you challenge or offer feedback you come close to the person your T is
Maybe...I’m not sure. I think I know quite a bit about her personal life - as much as anyone who has a good therapist with good boundaries is probably likely to know. And I get the feeling that she has shared those things to help build relationship with me. So, I have some glimpses into her life and, I think, into how she is as a person, even though she is clearly in T mode with me.
I think that feeling criticised and getting defensive about that is perhaps her stuff getting jangled. Hence, yes, on reflection she can put her therapist hat firmly on and think that it may have been a little blip in her self-management.
I do think it's worth asking your T what their position is about the therapeutic relationship, e.g. is it a relationship of equals, is the relationship the vehicle for using methods and techniques to help healing or do they believe the relationship in and of itself is healing.
She definitely sees the relationship as key and that we are working in partnership.
And, ironically, she will sometimes encourage me to say how I am feeling towards her or will invite a discussion about what’s happening in our dynamic. But I think, when she does that, she is approaching things from a “therapist as object” approach where my feelings wouldn’t really be about her. When I’m a bit more like “no, it’s actually about you in this situation right now” - not that I would ever say it like that - that’s when things get very rocky.
The Gift of Therapy by Irvin Yalom
I’ve just looked it up on Amazon and have seen that I bought it three years ago! It was probably you who recommended it then! Thanks for the nudge - I’ll have a read.