Some therapists really think transference is an awful thing and to be avoided at all costs. I think it is because they get scared of their own possible counter-transference. My therapist teaches about transference in trauma therapy. She is of the school of thought that it happens all the time, transference is inevitable in trauma therapy, and working with it is a crucial part of the process of healing from trauma. I was able to watch a video of one of her colleagues in her practice teaching about it before I started therapy with her.
My own trauma as a child was at the hands of family members who were helping professionals. One of my abusers as a kid was my uncle and my pediatrician. He was also one of people in my family who told me to stop making my abusive father mad or my father would keep hurting me and my mother's depression would never get better... My uncle abused me and bandaged the wounds from my abusive father as my doctor.
There's more than just that example, but maybe that sort of explains the gist of why I can really struggle with helping professionals now.
I had a therapist in the past who suddenly, mid-session, tell me "you have too much negative transference, and I can't be your therapist anymore." I didn't even know what negative transference was, or how it was happening. Since then, I have learned more about it and I have been able to do a lot of work on trusting people, coping on my own, not trying to read others minds, and etc. If I started to feel really negative towards a helping professional, I have usually just quit or occasionally acted out and they quit. With therapists, I never really dealt with it and why it was coming up. We never really dealt with processing trauma, just coping skills for life now.
I have been working with the trauma therapist that I am seeing now for about a year. We have been really working on processing trauma. I haven't had any significant transference with her, until now. But I've also never dealt with the trauma from childhood until now.
Every time she so much as mildly suggests something, anything at all, to me, I want to yell at her, "I don't want to make others happy. That's stupid and impossible and I hate you." She isn't even suggesting anything that is about making anyone else happy... So it feels really crazy. I just hate that she is a helping person. It's like I hate her for even being a therapist. I don't want her to be anything different. It's really confusing.
Ride it out and she will seem like "her" again or your connection will just improve in a different way.
Thanks for this encouragement. I'm glad you have someone who can ride it out with you too.
I think that if you know the reason for the transference, and you know that you could find a therapist you don't have transference issues with, then maybe switching wouldn't be a bad idea.
I think if the reason was more isolated, I would totally do this. I already do, to some degree. I am the exact opposite from you on gender - I have a harder time with male therapists than female ones. So I have a female therapist now... and yet now I hate all therapists of any kind.
My therapist appropriately brought up that someone from vic comp called her to confirm an amount I paid her. I was suddenly said, "I gave them the receipt, why are they now invading everything? They know my boundaries on this and it never matters!" I stopped myself from the rant that was building.
My therapist said, "I'm sorry, I didn't mean to bring up another "helper" who was being pushy and triggering you..."
I'm curious as to whether others have truly been able to work through the transference, and not in a "just plow through it!" sort of way. In the past, therapists have wanted me to work through it, but never really gave me any skills to do so. Does this make sense?
This does! My therapist talked a lot before this ever happened about how to get the transference to shift back, but I still don't get it. So much of it feels like, "just hang on through it."
She says it helps to realize it, figure out the connection, and if it is from trauma, to actually experience the therapist not being like the abuser. Its a way to re-write the implict memory that is driving the transference. My therapist told me that she used to hate her own therapist at times, even flipped her therapist off. She said that her therapist still liked her, was still safe, still never hurt her. And it was very confusing. Until it wasn't. Then she told me to not think too hard about it.
Uh, right.
@honeypie058 - I'm sorry you struggle with this too. It is so tough. My therapist has done a lot to invite me to talk to her if I ever got to the point of being mad at her. I hope you find the courage to talk to your therapist about it too. :hug:
I might be going through a different version of the same thing. I seem to be dreading my appointments a lot like I'd dread dealing with my mom when I was a kid. Like I'm sure I've done something "wrong" but have no idea what it is or what's going to happen. And yet, he's TOLD me I worry too much about "wrong" and is nothing like my mom. Weird!
This feels is familiar to me - not he specifics per se, but overall pattern. It is a weird experience! It helps to know I'm not alone in this...
But, I've always dealt with this kind of thing by avoiding it in the past. I know how THAT works. This time maybe I'll experiment and see what happens if I DON'T disappear.
Good experiment! I hope we both end up with good outcomes... maybe we will at least see what happens if we do hang on through it...
This is so hard...