Please do not create feelings that go against what you feel. Precisely why would you do that? That was not my intention at all. However, I will take the fault of not expressing myself clearly. I can be more fixing than helping sometimes (or most of the time) - my own fallacy which I am working on.
My point is this whenever there is a dissociation during therapy (and this is based on my personal experience as well as reading upon it on few articles), you are dissociating from a fundamental split in your psychic. Something that is deeply embed in your body/mind...and it has to be a intense feeling, otherwise it does not require to disintegrate you now. It could be hate or rage or abandonment or extreme need for rescue or shame or many other original (not a residue of something else) but original emotions based on biology....meaning even a new born child could experience.
I am not a therapist nor do I know your life anymore than what you post here, I only gave you an angle I thought may be beneficial. I am sorry your mother passed away recently. A lot of adults go through extreme regression after such a loss of a parent and usually come to realize more about their relationship and love and a lot of other things. Grief is tough because it challenges the core.
Dissociation in a child or young adult is usually a great defense of extreme situation but a dissociation in adult-form is resistance to an extreme emotion from the past not the present (unless again you are in war zone like experience) which you are not. I hope you find whatever that is and feel safe.
My point is this whenever there is a dissociation during therapy (and this is based on my personal experience as well as reading upon it on few articles), you are dissociating from a fundamental split in your psychic. Something that is deeply embed in your body/mind...and it has to be a intense feeling, otherwise it does not require to disintegrate you now. It could be hate or rage or abandonment or extreme need for rescue or shame or many other original (not a residue of something else) but original emotions based on biology....meaning even a new born child could experience.
I am not a therapist nor do I know your life anymore than what you post here, I only gave you an angle I thought may be beneficial. I am sorry your mother passed away recently. A lot of adults go through extreme regression after such a loss of a parent and usually come to realize more about their relationship and love and a lot of other things. Grief is tough because it challenges the core.
Dissociation in a child or young adult is usually a great defense of extreme situation but a dissociation in adult-form is resistance to an extreme emotion from the past not the present (unless again you are in war zone like experience) which you are not. I hope you find whatever that is and feel safe.