I have a hyper-awareness of exactly what this shift is, for myself. It's very important, first, that you simply slow down.
This makes sense. I can do this with friends, but in therapy, I just keep going and going.... It's very habitual. We actually agreed that if I get to the point of asking her to stop laughing, that we will pause, and she'll check in with me.
If that's really true, then she's a really shitty therapist. I doubt that's true, given everything else you've said about her. I think that it's 100% appropriate for her to modulate her own responses - that's part of her job. The fact that you've told her to stop and she hasn't, is weird to me - weird like, I wish I could see a videotape of an exchange that went that way, so I could see if she's really that callous and clueless, or if it's more complicated than that.
Fair point. She's not generally a jerk, and I'll own I don't trust my own perception. It really is super confusing of an experience. I think "I can't help it" is what went across the line for me. It *feels* unregulated, on both sides, and that probably contributes to some of my fear about it. But it's not cruel, it's really like contagious giggles. I'm laughing too. It's not like it goes on and on. I do ask for it to stop as soon as it feels bad. Fast. And I keep asking, until it stops. I've never had to ask more than twice.
We've had a number of "state of the union" types of talks. Right at the get go, she set the pattern of regularly asking what's working, what's not, how is the relationship going, and it's generally doable to tell her these things, and she's pretty clear what works and doesn't work for her. This has been the first repeated issue that we haven't entirely been able to move past or resolve.
I honestly have no idea what "soft vulnerability" IS, so you've got me there. Both of those words sound dangerous and combined they sound like a really bad idea. Be curious about where this is going, I'd bet you're going to learn stuff. (Then, maybe, report back so the rest of us can too.)
Soft vulnerability does sound dangerous! A year ago, I would have said it is strange to say vulnerability builds connection, and sometimes safety. But now? It's actually something I want. I guess it's all about the "i" word: intimacy. In this case, emotional intimacy. I guess?
All I can say is that I tried shutting down my usual defences entirely in one go and that was messy. I literally couldn't talk.
This actually turns out to be why she isn't redirecting it more...
Whenever I’m thinking... f*ck it, I’m done with therapy, I quit (and similarly, there’s no one else I can see, locally)... My therapist goes on vacation :facepalm::hilarious:
LOL. This so happens for me too! She's always trying to prep me for the vacay, and typically, I'm like, "Yes! See ya!"
someone else gets to walk in and have a session that you had on your books--I'd be asking why isn't this other person be told, "sorry I overbooked this appointment and JustMeHere had it first" Why does she not make the other person take the brunt of her mistake? If she really did not communicate with you about the standing appointment changing.
Yeah, it was jarring, but demanding the other client leave didn't even seem like an option to me. It didn't come across as a negotiable matter. Plus, they were right there and they had intake paperwork. First session. It wouldn't have been a good business practice on my end to throw a fit that would make a third person uncomfortable. It was better to leave and come back. It was 1 mistake in many, many appointments... it's better than some therapists.
I went in to see her. I figured it was better to sort out things face to face. That was the right decision. She ended up offering to talk for 30 minutes and it was productive. She apologized, and I blubbered something about how I don’t know how to deal with all that I’m running from in my life, but that getting stuck on blame for scheduling snafus isn’t going to help. We found a halfway decent solution to scheduling. The conversation started off about contagious giggles and scheduling snafus.... and we turned it into a conversation about shame, sexual abuse, vulnerability and grief.
She explained she tries to redirect me back to the issues, but she doesn’t shut down the humor, because sometimes, that’s the only way I’ll connect with her right now. Otherwise, for the past two months, I've been pretty numbed out to the degree that's unusual for me. I totally have even spaced how this all came up in a different way just a few weeks ago. (This whole thread should have probably been in my trauma diary....ugh... thanks for bearing with me...)
She said most people get really angry and/or quit therapy when the humiliation of past trauma comes up, especially when it comes to sexual abuse and etc. This old humiliation is why I’m stressing out about contagious giggles in session, and about having more success in life. My recent successes are very small, but weirdly stressing me out more than usual. More success is more exposure. More exposure then fuels my sensitivity to being triggered to feeling humiliated. She has a plan, but I was too brain-dead-tired to fully process it. For now, I think we are headed in the right direction.