I've got so many memories that bring physical pain with them... anything that would help to eliminate or even just take the edge off the pain would be welcome to me.
For me it's mostly about learning how to notice pain and respond before it gets out of control. The work with my therapist has helped and it sounds like your therapist is helping you with that too, maybe just in a slightly different way. It does just seem to take a long time. I often don't notice until things get bad too...though it's gradually getting better.
I definitely have a disconnect from my body. It comes through in the form of nasty illnesses because I don't notice the symptoms until things get way out of hand.
Yes...I don't get sick much, but my pain can get out of control and my mood plummets with it...I feel like I'm swamped, dying, trapped...all kinds of horrid feelings of being immobilized, even annihilated.
My therapist has done quite a bit of work to help me get in touch with my body.
That's great. I think a lot of trauma therapists do this. SE isn't the only trauma therapy that includes attention to the body and sensations, or how our feelings connect to our body (so obvious with the whole nervous system situation of trauma). SE just focused quite directly on the body, though even some SE therapists include a lot of talk therapy too. I don't talk much and it works better for me, personally.
We still pull out that diagram if I am having trouble identifying an emotion. Is that related to the SE therapy that you are talking about?
Not really, but if it's helpful, this sounds like a good idea...anything that helps you feel safely connected to your body. I've found some yoga rest poses that I like...and a few of the more strengthening ones that feel empowering. Any kind of body practice can be helpful because it places attention on the body and being connected. That can also be threatening or backfire, so helpful to do in conjunction with therapy and probably keeping notes. Ex: yoga can often make my symptoms worse, so I say f*ck it and totally quit yoga or any kind of mind-body exercise for a few weeks. But I can tolerate some poses, or really slow moving yoga, or just 10-20 minutes. So it's about finding what is helpful, which also seems to involve a few setbacks along the way because it's pretty experimental. My body overreacts. I don't get sore or achy...I just go right to stabbing pains and spasms.
But sometimes with fleeting pains and sensations that are connected to memories I can do the pushing thing, or just wrap myself in a soft blanket and feel protected....these are very different responses and it has taken a while to figure out what helps and when. And it's far from perfect, but progress...
Most important you feel like you have a good therapist for you and a helpful connection. Sounds like your therapist is creative and willing to work on the body stuff in ways that help you, so that sounds really good. Probably normal it will just take time and experimenting and finding what helps. My therapist is quite process-oriented (finding what works for me, encouraging me to notice what works for me) and though I don't know much about your therapist, just what you describe here, this sounds fairly process-oriented and geared towards helping you find what will help you heal. That's most important I think. Probably I could find another SE therapist and not do well because the connection wouldn't be right.
So stick with your therapist if the fit and therapy feels right. If you can find other body-centered resources to try, just keep some notes and also share with your therapist what you notice or what seems to help.