Full disclosure is a big thing. Trauma rolls up like a ball of twisted, snarled ball of twine adding knotted strands as we do what we do to survive the trauma then act out our symptoms until we learn to live better with our personal ball of twine. You can't throw a therapist one or two small strands and expect them to unravel the whole ball.
Full disclosure takes time. The stuff you have buried at the core of your twisted, snarled ball of twine will take a lot of uncomfortable time to get to. When I was first in therapy I used to plan what I was going to talk about and rehearse it in my mind prior to each session. I controlled the information I shared. I didn't make any real progress as far as learning to live better with ptsd goes.
I eventually learned to go to therapy unprepared, armed only with my ongoing flow of intrusive thoughts and feelings. I would greet my therapist, settle comfortably into my chair, check her out. She would allow the "pregnant silence" to continue for a moment or two. Sometimes an intense thought or feeling would jump into my consciousness and I would just blurt it out at her not worrying how it came out. If not, she would announce she wanted to follow up on something from last session and proceed to gently trigger something. It almost always involved talking about stuff I didn't really want to talk about.
Once disclosed, each knot was examined, re-examined, related to triggers and stuff, re-framed and integrated into my understanding of my personal ball of twine. In the process I learned how I might respond when that specific knot was triggered, and given support in practicing in real situations. That part is really uncomfortable, by the way :)
Once I found a CBT oriented clinical psychologist I felt safe with, full disclosure took around 6 years including and intense inpatient 90 day program. 9 months just gets you ready to begin to get the baby out :)
Ted
Full disclosure takes time. The stuff you have buried at the core of your twisted, snarled ball of twine will take a lot of uncomfortable time to get to. When I was first in therapy I used to plan what I was going to talk about and rehearse it in my mind prior to each session. I controlled the information I shared. I didn't make any real progress as far as learning to live better with ptsd goes.
I eventually learned to go to therapy unprepared, armed only with my ongoing flow of intrusive thoughts and feelings. I would greet my therapist, settle comfortably into my chair, check her out. She would allow the "pregnant silence" to continue for a moment or two. Sometimes an intense thought or feeling would jump into my consciousness and I would just blurt it out at her not worrying how it came out. If not, she would announce she wanted to follow up on something from last session and proceed to gently trigger something. It almost always involved talking about stuff I didn't really want to talk about.
Once disclosed, each knot was examined, re-examined, related to triggers and stuff, re-framed and integrated into my understanding of my personal ball of twine. In the process I learned how I might respond when that specific knot was triggered, and given support in practicing in real situations. That part is really uncomfortable, by the way :)
Once I found a CBT oriented clinical psychologist I felt safe with, full disclosure took around 6 years including and intense inpatient 90 day program. 9 months just gets you ready to begin to get the baby out :)
Ted