@
radicalgratitude , @
Jennifer76
I really do think that having a meeting set up and then confirming that meeting via email is proof that there is a continuing relationship. If my doctor, father of my childhood friends and a family friend, told me to stop smoking and I got pissy at him, and he seemed upset at that behavior and then scheduled me to come in for tests, I guarantee you he would not have for me wanting to know if we were still doctor/patient.
Look at it from her perspective. She has a patient who has attachment issues asking her if the relationship is continuing when she made it clear you two would meet in just two days. She probably has a busy schedule, other patients to meet, maybe a family, and all the everyday stresses life puts upon people and, especially, high functioning professionals.
Again, from a *much* more relaxed profession: in the tutoring center, we had very emotional writers who used the center too much or would corner tutors when they weren't working, tried to develop non-professional relationships with us based on our relationships as tutors, and took advantage of our agreement to represent the tutoring center when in public at the school, which meant making an effort to represent ourselves as keepers of a "safer space" on campus. We had to start developing policies that protected tutors from this behavior because it was impossible to serve all these writers in this fashion and created unfair demands on both our work schedules and personal lives.
I just mean to say... Although I don't necessarily agree with how she handled your "tone" personally, the boundaries she is setting and the professional communication she is holding you to as a patient are all good things, for your health, for hers, for your continuing relationship (what would you do if she couldn't take the emailing behavior anymore because she let it go on and maybe even get more intense, and then said she couldn't see you?), and for *your* future or current professional relationships with others?
Am I right that some of the major downfalls of borderline is interpreting behaviors as exaggerated, forming attachments that are inappropriately intense, and taking forms of rejection as foundation-rocking? Maybe she is worried about these manifesting in your relationship?