J
Joanne47
Last week in therapy my therapist said something that made me worry that I am stressing him out.
I've been having unbelievable anxiety and a lot of significantly painful physical reactions to things we've been working through. Last week he mentioned that sometimes he feels light-headed during our sessions. He said he thought it was probably because we were at such a delicate point in our therapy--which is true. If he'd even looked at me the wrong way in our last session, I never would have opened up to anyone again. I know that sounds extreme, but in addition to depression, anxiety, and PTSD, I have serious social phobia. (I don't know if I will even be able to post this) It was hard enough approaching my T and asking him to take me on as a patient and it has been excruciating getting myself to the point where I could talk to him as freely as I do. I literally have nightmares about him dropping me as a patient because I just could not start over with someone else.
I have a really hard time accepting that the abuse I went through was as bad as it was. Even after my first flashback a few months after I got married (20+ years ago) and moved out of my parents' house, I minimized it and denied it. T may have just been trying to show me that if even hearing me talk about some of it was making him have a reaction, then it was okay that I was having (a far worse) one, too. And it was very--freeing? comforting? validating?-- to have him walk through that memory with me and basically say, "That would have scared the hell out of me." He's spent a year trying to get me to stop ignoring my own feelings and worrying about everyone else instead, so I don't think he would deliberately say something that would cause the exact reaction he's been trying to weed out of me.
But what if I have pulled him so far into my pain that I'm burning him out?
I've been having unbelievable anxiety and a lot of significantly painful physical reactions to things we've been working through. Last week he mentioned that sometimes he feels light-headed during our sessions. He said he thought it was probably because we were at such a delicate point in our therapy--which is true. If he'd even looked at me the wrong way in our last session, I never would have opened up to anyone again. I know that sounds extreme, but in addition to depression, anxiety, and PTSD, I have serious social phobia. (I don't know if I will even be able to post this) It was hard enough approaching my T and asking him to take me on as a patient and it has been excruciating getting myself to the point where I could talk to him as freely as I do. I literally have nightmares about him dropping me as a patient because I just could not start over with someone else.
I have a really hard time accepting that the abuse I went through was as bad as it was. Even after my first flashback a few months after I got married (20+ years ago) and moved out of my parents' house, I minimized it and denied it. T may have just been trying to show me that if even hearing me talk about some of it was making him have a reaction, then it was okay that I was having (a far worse) one, too. And it was very--freeing? comforting? validating?-- to have him walk through that memory with me and basically say, "That would have scared the hell out of me." He's spent a year trying to get me to stop ignoring my own feelings and worrying about everyone else instead, so I don't think he would deliberately say something that would cause the exact reaction he's been trying to weed out of me.
But what if I have pulled him so far into my pain that I'm burning him out?