I feel conflicted like this with my T too sometimes....I both want her to be kind to me and her being kind also makes me feel panicky and fearful and also sort of angry...I want to feel close to her and I want to create distance....I can think about her before a session and feel comforted by picturing her kind smile or remembering something supportive she has said or done and I’m looking forward to our next session and then I sit in the room with her and can’t even look at her and just want to leave.
I think that push/pull in therapy is quite common, especially with trauma clients.
It is probably the thing I struggle with most in therapy because it’s so intense and confusing. I’m sort of in that place now, though not as intensely as I have been before. I’m not yet at the stage where I’m seriously planning my exit...constantly fantasising about firing her or wondering what I could do to make her fire me (a thought that is both terrifying and exhilarating) But I’m noticing that the conflict is surfacing and that I need to monitor it and consider mentioning it to her.
If it helps at all, I kept this stuff to myself for ages. But when my fantasies about firing her (like your therapist, she hadn’t done anything bad/wrong either) became such ever present ruminations between sessions it just became so exhausting and stressful and distressing...I bit the bullet and blurted that I kept thinking about firing her, even though I didn’t think she’d done anything wrong. We had a brief but good chat about it. It felt fairly excruciating to tell her, to be honest, but it was worthwhile...pretty much straightaway, those thoughts/anxieties calmed down. Telling her seemed to really take the power out of it.
I hope you’re able to express this to your T - either face to face in a session or in writing. It doesn’t even have to be a massive conversation at this point, if you don’t want it to be. Something really brief and simple so he knows what you’re experiencing at the moment and so he might be able to either help you work on it or else just step back and put some space around it for you for now. Just something like “I’m having a hard time with something and just wanted you to know. Part of me really wants to feel cared for/to have people be kind to me/whatever best fits for you here but when you say caring/nice things to me I always feel very panicky and it makes me want to run.”
And you could leave it like that and see where the conversation takes you. Or you could finish by saying something like “could you please stop doing that because I’m finding it too difficult and I don’t want to end up terminating or trying to make you terminate with me.”
And I’m using parts the same way as
@NightSky - not to suggest you are doing formal parts work but just to acknowledge the inner conflict that we all experience from time to time, as NightSky gave an example of.
Good luck!