Ecdysis
Diamond Member
I am seeing a trauma therapist and I want to request physical touch (him putting his hand on my shoulder) when I cry, to help process very early childhood trauma.
I find that this pre-verbal trauma (ages 0 - 3) is not accesible in normal talk therapy and I would like to try accessing this trauma material by just me silently crying, and him placing his hand on my shoulder in a soothing, comforting gesture.
I'm unsure whether he even offers this.
I feel weird asking.
I'm not sure how best to approach it.
I'm very "professional" about therapy... Never cross any boundaries, never get "emotionally over-attached" to therapists, I'm very matter-of-fact, always stick to appointment times and other agreements...
So this doesn't feel inappropriate/ weird from my side.
I just have no idea whether he's done that kind of work in the past or would even be open to considering it.
Also, if I ask and he's visibly uncomfortable, it may feel weird to me...
I'm thinking of asking him at the end of a session and specifically saying "I do not want an answer today. Please take this question with you and think about it the next couple of weeks and talk to your supervisor or whoever about it to work out whether this could be workable for you and then give me an answer next time, with a good explanation either way."
I'm considering offering for him to video tape the therapy sessions in case he's worried that any physical touch in therapy (especially in trauma therapy) could be risky for him in a professional setting - for example, in case I theoretically at some point would say that it was inappropriate. If it would give him a layer of safety to be able to present videos of all of the sessions to prove that it was just the agreed hand-on-shoulder-while-crying, then that would be okay for me.
Also, I'd be willing to sign a consent form specifying the exact agreed upon modalities and that it was a request by me to process pre-verbal trauma.
Any advice?
I'm not worried at all that it will be triggering for me - if it were, I wouldn't be considering asking about this.
I find that this pre-verbal trauma (ages 0 - 3) is not accesible in normal talk therapy and I would like to try accessing this trauma material by just me silently crying, and him placing his hand on my shoulder in a soothing, comforting gesture.
I'm unsure whether he even offers this.
I feel weird asking.
I'm not sure how best to approach it.
I'm very "professional" about therapy... Never cross any boundaries, never get "emotionally over-attached" to therapists, I'm very matter-of-fact, always stick to appointment times and other agreements...
So this doesn't feel inappropriate/ weird from my side.
I just have no idea whether he's done that kind of work in the past or would even be open to considering it.
Also, if I ask and he's visibly uncomfortable, it may feel weird to me...
I'm thinking of asking him at the end of a session and specifically saying "I do not want an answer today. Please take this question with you and think about it the next couple of weeks and talk to your supervisor or whoever about it to work out whether this could be workable for you and then give me an answer next time, with a good explanation either way."
I'm considering offering for him to video tape the therapy sessions in case he's worried that any physical touch in therapy (especially in trauma therapy) could be risky for him in a professional setting - for example, in case I theoretically at some point would say that it was inappropriate. If it would give him a layer of safety to be able to present videos of all of the sessions to prove that it was just the agreed hand-on-shoulder-while-crying, then that would be okay for me.
Also, I'd be willing to sign a consent form specifying the exact agreed upon modalities and that it was a request by me to process pre-verbal trauma.
Any advice?
I'm not worried at all that it will be triggering for me - if it were, I wouldn't be considering asking about this.
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