I had a question regarding my current therapy. I have been with a therapist for about 3 and a half months, and we have an excellent therapeutic alliance - I trust him more than I think I've ever trusted anybody. I've gone through like 4 other therapists who were not very helpful until I found him, which is incredibly fortunate. He's a dream therapist primarily, but also has training in the humanistic tradition.
So in the past I have had trouble with disclosing too much too soon, and then feeling empty with nothing to talk about. I've taken it slower this time, hoping to carefully work out little things first before getting into the meat of the trauma. Well, recently dreams have been coming up relating to my history of sexual abuse, so I think now is the time to start working through this stuff with him. But my question is this: how do you guys deal with the compounded stress that this kind of work puts you through? I am in school full time, and honestly it never feels like I need more stress, but then again my psychotherapy trajectory has sort of been on its own schedule for couple of years, and I think I'm really starting to get somewhere.
Also, he doesn't specifically have trauma training, so I have had to kind of supplement the work we do with reading scholarly papers and books on how to treat cPTSD etc. Do you guys have any tips on how to tackle difficult therapy sessions? Do you find it helpful to write out what you want to say beforehand? I'm always worried about checking out or dissociating and then basically becoming retraumatized, and in the past I've felt a spike in suicidal thoughts/self harm urges when I get into traumatic stuff. Do you have any suggestions on how to stay grounded/in the room when emotions run high? I have xanax, which I could take before the session, but I don't know how advisable that is.
Gahhhhhhhhhh,:alien: sigh, thanks in advance guys for any assistance.
So in the past I have had trouble with disclosing too much too soon, and then feeling empty with nothing to talk about. I've taken it slower this time, hoping to carefully work out little things first before getting into the meat of the trauma. Well, recently dreams have been coming up relating to my history of sexual abuse, so I think now is the time to start working through this stuff with him. But my question is this: how do you guys deal with the compounded stress that this kind of work puts you through? I am in school full time, and honestly it never feels like I need more stress, but then again my psychotherapy trajectory has sort of been on its own schedule for couple of years, and I think I'm really starting to get somewhere.
Also, he doesn't specifically have trauma training, so I have had to kind of supplement the work we do with reading scholarly papers and books on how to treat cPTSD etc. Do you guys have any tips on how to tackle difficult therapy sessions? Do you find it helpful to write out what you want to say beforehand? I'm always worried about checking out or dissociating and then basically becoming retraumatized, and in the past I've felt a spike in suicidal thoughts/self harm urges when I get into traumatic stuff. Do you have any suggestions on how to stay grounded/in the room when emotions run high? I have xanax, which I could take before the session, but I don't know how advisable that is.
Gahhhhhhhhhh,:alien: sigh, thanks in advance guys for any assistance.