Yesterday, we spoke about the effort needed for me to arrive promptly, which I always do. I told her I set three timers, to ensure I meet deadlines in getting ready to go. That day I'd arrived, one minute early, to find her entrance gate still locked. It was a tough day in a tough week for me, and I'd been tempted to go home, though I didn't tell her the latter. She was ready within two minutes, and seemed to have a plan for what she wanted to cover, so I'm confident she had prepared for the session.
Then we moved onto some hard stuff about traumas. Neither she nor I realised we overran by more than 20minutes, until her next client apologetically knocked at the door, saying she wondered if she had the wrong day. I joked that I need to set another timer there, and rushed out. T apologised, saying she wasn't having a good day.
This is the second or third time she has not been ready promptly. One was when she overran with the preceding client,and I was the one barging in. She has often gone over time with me, saying she felt we needed to finish the topic, and I'm grateful for that time.
I can't cope though with messing up someone else's appointment, and I'm quite inclined to try a timer to warn me at 50 minutes, and also to tell T that if I arrive and the gate is shut, I'll assume she is having a bad day and go home. I'd need to phrase that carefully, to indicate that it wasn't a criticism but a realistic acceptance that she isn't going to be useful on such a day. I'd always rather go home than attend, but that's just me being dismissive avoidant.
I'm also aware that my desire to take control can sabotage therapy, and I'm working on changing that.
This is a distraction that I've already wasted three hours on today. I've got more useful therapy stuff to be looking at, and I'd rather use my energies on pursuing my own thoughts on why I'm not as recovered as I'd like, and on the therapy work on inner child and trauma stuff.
What would you do to put the timekeeping issue to bed? I'm pretty confident she is the right person for me to be working with at the moment, so suggestions of finding an alternative will go nowhere.
Then we moved onto some hard stuff about traumas. Neither she nor I realised we overran by more than 20minutes, until her next client apologetically knocked at the door, saying she wondered if she had the wrong day. I joked that I need to set another timer there, and rushed out. T apologised, saying she wasn't having a good day.
This is the second or third time she has not been ready promptly. One was when she overran with the preceding client,and I was the one barging in. She has often gone over time with me, saying she felt we needed to finish the topic, and I'm grateful for that time.
I can't cope though with messing up someone else's appointment, and I'm quite inclined to try a timer to warn me at 50 minutes, and also to tell T that if I arrive and the gate is shut, I'll assume she is having a bad day and go home. I'd need to phrase that carefully, to indicate that it wasn't a criticism but a realistic acceptance that she isn't going to be useful on such a day. I'd always rather go home than attend, but that's just me being dismissive avoidant.
I'm also aware that my desire to take control can sabotage therapy, and I'm working on changing that.
This is a distraction that I've already wasted three hours on today. I've got more useful therapy stuff to be looking at, and I'd rather use my energies on pursuing my own thoughts on why I'm not as recovered as I'd like, and on the therapy work on inner child and trauma stuff.
What would you do to put the timekeeping issue to bed? I'm pretty confident she is the right person for me to be working with at the moment, so suggestions of finding an alternative will go nowhere.