P
p-no
I can really only do it on paper or to some degree over the phone. Once face to face with anyone who wants to poke into me I fold up and collapse. It starts in the waiting room where I am trapped and exposed, with all those competent people walking past me and the risk of encountering former colleagues who will see my abject failure.
By the time I've got into the room I can't think properly, can speak very little and I'm sure I don't really hear what they are saying. If I do manage to get it together, I end up in formal work mode and act/speak as if I'm in a meeting.
@stenni
Just an idea: Can you *now* (i.e. today, tomorrow, the day after...) write out a letter to those people that will be there later at the appointment and start off with what you wrote in the post I have quoted above?
Explain yourself, stenni. If it takes three pages, let it be three pages. Those people you can't talk to are not here now. But you can write to them now and later take that "letter" with you to the appointment. If you explain to people in the letter, in writing, in your own words, someone, whoever, can read it out to them on your behalf.
And if you explain what you have said in your post above, people will understand. Some here said it: you're not the only one shutting down/folding up and collapsing in such a difficult situation, so "experts" (i.e. the forensic psych etc.) will understand.
And they may well see this as a genuine sign of you trying to reach out and make yourself heard even without speaking any words.
Best wishes.
Last edited by a moderator: