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- #25
Yes, I think when the time comes, this will be helpful. He's clammed up now about anything that has to do with "why" he is reacting this way. He just can't go there right now. Used to, so that gives me hope for the future (also he tells me he wants to.) But right now, I'm laying off any questions that veer into that area...And, he may not want to talk about specifics of his childhood. But you might be able to explore what he expects from people and what experiences have led him to believe what he believes.
Funny enough, we've had this conversation too! I do understand a lot more about his behavior than he realizes. But at the end of the day, it doesn't matter what I tell him or what I know. He needs a good T to get him there.Another thing he keeps telling me is that all of this stuff was "adaptive" at one time.
That's the approach I usually end up taking (which is difficult when he's having a panic attack over something I supposedly did.) But I do try telling him examples to prove his distortion, well, distorted. Sometimes it helps. Sometimes he'll just find other distortions. So I've tried just not engaging them. Really it's a lose-lose. It's starting to feel like there is nothing I can do, but sit on the rollercoaster and watch it happen (or get out, of course, always an option, but man :( )Do you have examples of times when something he said or did WAS enough?
Ugh...I feel like all of my questions on this forum lately always end up with one answer: He needs to go back to therapy. One of the few things I have absolutely no control over (nor want to.) I can walk out, engage, disengage, if he's not in therapy, it's all useless :(