Hi Bloom,
It really helped to hear how you and your t manage therapy so thank you! It helps to know that you too are not a talker. And I can see why guidance from a t on how to manage ones activation levels and stress would help keep one present and able to interact.
Since I have realised that dissociation is part of what I am dealing with I have done a lot of work on it on my own. Learning what it is and then looking at ways to manage it better. On the whole in my life I cannot tell you how much better this all is. How much better I deal with it.
I am glad you had an informed and intuitive therapist as that obviously helped a lot with him treating you appropriately. I would have benefited hugely by someone asking questions and seeing the responses in the way he did with you. I have made a note of this as I am hoping it could help me in the future too.
I suspect this is why predators have such an easy time preying on people like us.
If I think back over the years I see what a sitting duck I was. Both for bigger stuff and lesser. Managing any relationship becomes very complex when one is essentially not there when one most needs to be.
One thing I am good at is that I am quite single minded and determined and that means that regardless of how difficult something is I will do it if I feel it is the correct path. And that would mean going back to therapy even when it is hard. In fact that tendency of mine has backfired more than once in my life.
It's like discovering that the person I thought I was turned out to have been a costume and now that I know my true self, I'm furious, grief-stricken, disgusted, and profoundly sorrowful of what essentially has been a lost life for over four decades.
Thank you sharing that. I feel very similarly. I have had a bit of time now for the majority of the realisations (more keep coming all the time) and have discussed a lot of it and so the initial intensity has softened quite a bit. But I still look back at was essentially not a life with a mixture of horror and disbelief.
The best way I can describe it is that I was not a person. I just wasn't at all. Despite the difficulties of recent years I feel like I have at least been born metaphorically.
I am hoping I will manage things better if I go back into therapy now. Since the last lot (it was through a charity and time limited) I have learned an enormous amount. I essentially evaluated as best as I could what I thought I needed to be able to tolerate therapy better. I then put myself through the equivalent of a boot camp trying to both break down the barriers and build skills to help my tolerance. I have called it T training to myself!
I did notice that in the real world and in therapy, I seemed to have a hearing problem, even when I'd try to listen.
I read up about Trance Logic yesterday and I wondered if that could partly explain why I never "noticed" these things up until a certain point in my life.
I have a sense of very often being outside my body and looking down on myself for example. I have a sense that I used to do it in T a lot too in the past when I was speaking more. And yet not once in those 37 + odd years of my life did I ever take even a microsecond afterwards to think to myself, "I just looked down at myself from above". That is only one example. Its like my general very good perception skills were entirely blocked my whole life when it came to me. There is no way to put that graphically enough to represent the reality. It was the same with flashbacks and traumatic events. Or even difficult situations. A happens. The next moment comes. There is no connection between the two. Its no wonder there is no story of my life.
Thank you soooo much for sharing about the lead up to the decision to record sessions and how you managed it. If I can get past some of my problems with it I truly think this could make therapy doable for me. Instead of being a confusing mass of disconnected interactions I have no recollection of.
I so wish I could go back and have some recordings of past T. So I could have more clarity about my patterns.
but employ my skills to stay within the window of tolerance.
This is what I need to do. I worked hard last time I had t to do this and I do think it paid off all in all in a relative terms. There were many successes. Just admitting I needed to get therapy at a place like that was such an achievement for me.
I can see someone helping me in the way you describe your T managing you would be very helpful for me. And I think this is the final deciding factor for me in deciding that online t is not going to be right for me right now in my life. The complex interaction you describe would not be possible if not in person I think.
We learn something new every session.
This is another thing I have been doing and been practising for the last couple of years. To see dissociation as helpful signposts of where the vulnerable points are for me. As a tool to understand myself better. It is enlightening. Even when the realisations are very unpalatable to me. Which is usually.
One thing I am grateful for is that I have never been someone to freak out about most of my dissociative symptoms. I mean in terms of thinking, "oh this is happening and it is awful!!!" I know that doing that just increases the symptoms. I am able to be quite accepting of them in the moment and not make it worse. Not surprising I guess considering I am someone who didn't even register them in the past.
The part I have no acceptance of is something I haven't discussed on the site yet. But with that I am not making it worse either as I have no idea I have done it until way after.
That doesn't mean to say that the whole thing does not bother me hugely on the whole of course. Just not in a panic-in-the-moment way. Not about the dissociation.
Dissociation is a prison made up of cells of avoidance. It takes a long time.
This is something I have been considering recently. I don't think I thought of myself as avoidant in the past because I am so single minded and determined. In the past I would barrel through things mercilessly. But more and more I have started realising how avoidant I really am. One has to barrel in the right direction and in order to do that there needs to be awareness of the problem in the first place! My levels of self delusion astound we looking back and even now I spend most of my time unable to tell what is truth, avoidance or plain delusion.
So the barrelling had to stop as it seems I had already got to the bottom of that barrel when it comes to its usefulness. Now I have to do everything counter intuitively. Carefully monitor emotions and reactions; carefully keep self awareness; carefully watch for responses and react accordingly - manage myself like some intricate and complex piece of equipment which just about makes me want to chop off my own head.
To have to deal with myself like this is nothing less than crazy making for someone who was used to treating my mind and body as the equivalent of a baseball bat.