@GWhizz - couple of things I learnt about trust along my nightmare:
1. Trust MUST be earned. Your T must earn your trust - don't care who or what she is or how many bits of paper she has or how wonderful she seems. Actually she can answer your question. If you and I were in a room together and I was suggesting that you should trust me, I would be very able to tell you why I thought you should or could trust me and in which ways - because it would be so important to me, having been through similar betrayals, that you are 1000% comfortable. (Though the decision to trust is always entirely yours of course.)
2. Everyone in our lives has different 'trustability levels' and/or different things you can trust them with. Trust, I've found, is not a blanket thing. It's more like a mosaic of things - you can trust some people e.g. to make sure they feed your cat and water your plants when you're away but you'd never trust them to use your car; others you could trust with your life savings but you'd never ask them to pick the children up from school because they're so absent-minded.
3. Oh yes, there's another thing - I am a one-striker now: let me down once and I will never trust you again. Sounds a bit extreme, but a) life is too short even when you're healthy to be messed about and b) as a PTSD sufferer I'm far too messed up to allow any more untrustworthy people to mess me around any more. (I think this may be called 'defining your boundaries'! Yayay! Got there eventually!)
1. Trust MUST be earned. Your T must earn your trust - don't care who or what she is or how many bits of paper she has or how wonderful she seems. Actually she can answer your question. If you and I were in a room together and I was suggesting that you should trust me, I would be very able to tell you why I thought you should or could trust me and in which ways - because it would be so important to me, having been through similar betrayals, that you are 1000% comfortable. (Though the decision to trust is always entirely yours of course.)
2. Everyone in our lives has different 'trustability levels' and/or different things you can trust them with. Trust, I've found, is not a blanket thing. It's more like a mosaic of things - you can trust some people e.g. to make sure they feed your cat and water your plants when you're away but you'd never trust them to use your car; others you could trust with your life savings but you'd never ask them to pick the children up from school because they're so absent-minded.
3. Oh yes, there's another thing - I am a one-striker now: let me down once and I will never trust you again. Sounds a bit extreme, but a) life is too short even when you're healthy to be messed about and b) as a PTSD sufferer I'm far too messed up to allow any more untrustworthy people to mess me around any more. (I think this may be called 'defining your boundaries'! Yayay! Got there eventually!)