Hi @
Pencil. I just read this entire thread (whew!). I hope that you have found a place to be tomorrow? On the other thread about attachment and touch that I posted, I think you indicated that you'd be open to my jumping into this thread, so I'm going to. Hang onto your socks...
Is there a form of therapy that solely deals with the inner child?
Yes. I am doing it...and I'm learning I don't have just one inner child, but a LOT of them. The therapy actually deals with lots of parts, but my predominant needs seem to be the little kid parts. I am crowded with them. Sometimes one or more of them get so frantic and demanding that I "lose" the adult part of me. Well, not totally, as I am a hyper-vigilant, hyper-emotionally controlled person for the most part and I am perfectly capable, like you, of holding a conversation that makes me appear that I am fine, when I am a wreck inside. I learned to do this as a young child as a sort of protection. Really I think it is a form of dissociation. I'm doing a therapy called IFS (Internal Family Systems) that is a somatic-based psychotherapy.
How is the child thing dealt with in therapy, if at all? do you have separate relationships with your T, or is it only a relationship between the adult and your T? Are other parts acknowledged?
I'm still in the pretty early stages of this therapy, but my T sometimes talks directly to one of my inner children, and sometimes has me (? which me I don't know) give voice to it. He guides me in a lot of visualizing and asks questions to help me give voice to these parts of me (I am not very good at that even though I am a hyper-verbal person...it is very weird).
I survived by becoming overly analytical on the one hand, and creating a fantasy world on the other.
me too
Yes, her response was that I have to 'befriend the pain of unmet needs' and be kind to myself. I constantly feel as if she simply sends me back to myself. My question to her was along the lines of - if being kind to myself (which I try to be, but struggle with) and accepting that my needs will never be met is the answer, why do I need to attach to you? Why not just stay with myself by myself as I've always done? She did not answer.
I SO hear you on this. It seems like it always comes back to the self. I'm finding though that I am so miserable in my self/selves that I need another person to bond with and help me be less miserable. I can't do it by myself (as I mentioned on the other thread). I have started to push back when my therapist tells me to be gentle and compassionate with myself...and I think he is starting to get it. He has been increasingly warm and gentle and empathetic with me.
I was also attached to people here on the forum
I'm getting freaked out by how attached I'm getting to this forum and some of the people on it.
I'd like to know what you mean when you say he is warm and shows empathy.
I don't know if anybody answered this. It is hard to describe--more of an intuitive sense that he cares--not just out of form or duty, but genuine care/compassion. He smiles and laughs at the right times for me, his eyes are very warm and friendly, he shares little nuggets of himself personally with me (not too much, just enough that I continue to feel certain that he is a real human being with interests and needs and hopes and fears), he calls me sometimes just to check in (I wish he would do that every day--I may ask him). We do "talk" a lot, but there is also a lot of space for quiet. He seems comfortable giving me time to just "check-in with my parts...very hard for me to do). I have been having an issue with believing that stuff from my past is actually as severe as it was, and he seems to understand how hard that is for me (my parents did so much denying of reality that I lost all sense of what's true and what's not--great for a writer/artist type but very bad for healing from complex trauma). So he gently validates... It is so hard to explain...really just a gut feeling.
On your struggle with your email therapist...I get the child's attachment. Any port in a storm! I somewhat attached to my father to escape my mother, but he was no treat and did an awful lot of damage himself. Your email T seems to be your only port and maybe that's why it is so hard to seek out others to replace her. I get the loyalty thing too (are you a capricorn by any chance?) as I have a terrible time unattaching myself from any but the most profoundly abusive relationships (and, given that I am still caring for my mother, I can't even do that very well). But there is a clear-thinking part of you that knows it is time to move on. You've read the literature--her style will not work for you. While there will never be the perfect therapist, there's definitely better out there.
Just cover your bases...for example, I have been working with a guy on bodywork since October. I am extremely attached to him. I have no idea why. He just makes me feel safe and cared for. Yet, his therapy doesn't seem to be helping me much. I get nuggets of wisdom now and again, but part of me knows I just keep going back because I like how I feel when I'm with him. But now I have an appointment for an evaluation with a different therapist whose approach might work better for me. I feel disloyal and scared and devastated by the possibility that I won't see the other guy again. So I have given myself permission to continue both for a little while and see which one "works" better. Someone suggested that you do that as well, and I agree. Keep your email T as your safety net while you try to connect with someone who can better meet your needs.