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Anything That Helps When Trying To Let Young States Or Parts Show Up In The Therapy Session?

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I'm DID, so my approach to this may also be a little different, but I am responding because of your last statement - that "...it's happening other places." That sounds to me like there is an element of lack-of-control, which is very familiar to me and, I imagine, others with DID, and I know that can be scary, especially with younger parts.

I agree with @pixel that, if I don't give my insiders adequate body time, they will become resentful and show up at inconvenient times and places, and sometimes I will not be aware of it. I almost always negotiate time out with them in therapy these days. I chat with them beforehand, ask them if they want to talk today, or if they know someone who might. Sometimes someone is just annoyed or sad or worried and talking that morning, and I suggest they take the session. Sometimes they say they want to, and I agree.

I have one very young insider who just doesn't like to come out and talk, but she holds most of our deepest hurts and sadness. My therapist did a meditation with me last week that was very helpful in connecting with her (sort of by accident - that wasn't the original goal). We focused on the feelings I was having and where they were in my body. Also, when I felt these feelings when I was younger, at what age. This was about a 20min meditation and led me to directly connect to my insider (and brought up a lot of intense emotions). Totally not intended, but very helpful.
 
I'm really struggling to allow myself to feel so young and so vulnerable in therapy and let this state be there. Any suggestions on how to allow it to happen?

Why?
Why do you want to force this part into therapy? You could retraumatise her and stuff everything up.
Let them come out when they feel safe to do so.
If you know what the part enjoys doing (eg: drawing), maybe ask your therapist to always have pencils & paper on the table during your appointment. That's just an example.

Be patient. That part might be holding who knows what.
 
I am not DID but have dissociative parts. I've been in therapy with the same therapist for nearly 2 decades. Just in the last three years have my younger parts come out in therapy. This is the deepest work I've done and it requires, for me anyway, immense deep trust with my therapist. This is the most vulnerable, wounded parts of me and it takes so much energy. When the young parts come out, I basically crash when I get home. But lately, those parts are becoming more integrated and I'm able to play and laugh more. The core thing for me is not pushing it. No rush. These parts need to trust not only the T but you.
 
i agree: don't force an emergence during therapy; that isn't helpful for other issues, right, so why would it be for this? i also agree about finding out what the younger part enjoys/needs and see if that can be made available, especially during therapy (for me/us: bubble wrap, corduroy, peppermint (scent or flavor) and something creative to do). if your younger part is coming out at non-opportune moments, write down what you can about those moments and see the pattern.

also agree: loads...boat loads, truck loads, tonnage loads of trust first...
 
Thanks for this thread. I just started parts work last summer and was overwhelmed by repressed memories that emerged, fell into sadness, took a break and am finally feeling right again. My T is gently encouraging me back to it by writing to rhe helper protector. I appreciate reading the time and trust needed to let the hurt ones show up in session. They will write but no freaking way will they talk. Silence was my defense as a child, but maybe some day?
 
I also find that it's difficult when I feel there is tension inside and not enough communication. I don't have a Dx regarding dissociation, but I feel that it's a large part of my inner world.

It is exhausting for me to attempt any communication. I believe there is some kind of "program" or I just auto-dissociate when I try to face my internal fragmentation.
 
Really relating to this thread, and also pretty confused.

I had a young part (? - this is new wording for me) show up in therapy last week. I was so drained after. My therapist said it didn't look much different than my usual dissociation, but it FELT different. I felt YOUNG.. like the whole adult part of my brain just deserted me for a while. And so vulnerable. But I was still THERE, which is different from total flashbacks when I'm just "gone". It was weird. And really painful.. so much pain held in that part.

Thank you for this thread and giving me some words for what happened. Will be following for any advice on how to let that part come back - I think there's a lot that it's holding.
 
I'm really struggling to allow myself to feel so young and so vulnerable in therapy and let this state be there.


Hey Justmehere,

vulnerability is a state I try to avoid, so I can relate to that. Severly traumatized parts are hard to perceive, as our inner guardians do a good job in keeping them safe,unfelt. So, my T. suggests that these extremely vulnerable states need to feel safe in the first place. Only if I make them understand “You are safe, in a good place, in 2017“ will they be able to felt.

I was asked to draw all parts, their behaviour, talk, their feelings....

After that, you find characters, anyone, actors or filmfigures, animals...that are being there as preotection. They are being integrated in the circle of self parts.
 
Hey all,

You all have such great ideas and I'm really glad to know I'm not alone in this struggle. I want to write more, and I will soon - just dealing with a health matter. I wanted to post this and let know all know I'm reading and so grateful for the discussion on this.
 
I finally got somewhere with this! (and I can finally also respond to the responses like I wanted to be able to do awhile ago.)

At my last session, I started off the session telling my therapist I had repetitive nightmares about her physically pushing me down. So she had me practice being able to say no to her, so that ALL of my brain would know I'm safe, and she asked how I felt in my body, and I felt young when I was telling her no...

I felt like me, not like someone else, and I didn't feel adult. I felt really sad and really horribly vulnerable. OMG, I nearly got up and left.

Instead, I told my therapist I was rather irritated with her, "Why are we doing this? I don't want to feel this." I have the most. patient. therapist. ever. She was quite unphased.

My voice sounded different. The tone was different. It was my voice, felt like my voice, but was different in a way I can't describe. I had a hard time not going numb and letting myself feel that state.

She could tell what was happening and that I couldn't sit with it very long, so we worked on how to feel adult again. She had me tell her about my process of filing my small business taxes - not because she cared about that, but because in order to do that, I would have to get the adult me back online. I was talking about my taxes, saying all the things an adult would say, but she said the tone wasn't adult. Just the tone! ugh. It took me awhile to figure out what she meant. Apparently my inner kid state is overly intellectual and practical? So I had to talk about a boundary I held with someone that only and adult could do in the way I did it. Then I finally felt like the normal adult me.

We spent the rest of the session practicing my ability to set boundaries with her --- feeling those young feelings when I did --- and finding the adult me again. It helped me feel safe somehow?

I really don't understand what exactly happened in the session, but I do think I'm trusting my therapist, and myself, a lot more lately. I think this is the work I have been avoiding for a long time. Not the young state itself, but the sadness that is wrapped up with it.

Therapy. is. so. weird. I'm really not sure about what is happening.
Holding onto a pillow while sitting on a corner of the couch helped me. I sure hope that you find what best works for you.
This is a good idea - I was holding on to something in my hand that helped me not walk out. I thought we were just going to talk through my repeated nightmare, which was a doozy in and of itself!
What do you mean it's happening other places? Do you mean like the grocery store or other public places you go? I do know what you mean about speaking in a young sounding voice and having one that is shut out. This happens to me as well. My situation is similar, but my T is not going to understand this unfortunately. I also have trouble allowing myself to feel vulnerable
It's hard to explain. My emotional reaction to a couple of very specific triggers is more fitting for how a child or teenager would emotionally respond. I hide all of it to other people, but not to myself - it's exhausting and confusing. For the longest time, I couldn't even let myself feel any of it with my therapist... but I easily can feel it in a couple of very specific situations.

@pixel - Thanks for the good advice about how to open up more. It made a lot of sense to me. It helped to ask my therapist to tell me more about how the session went at the end of the session. I get so concerned we will go so far into something that I will dissociate and forget!
I have one very young insider who just doesn't like to come out and talk, but she holds most of our deepest hurts and sadness.
I think this is the case for me too - I didn't realize that state in me was holding so much vulnerable sadness... It hit me like a freight train.
No rush. These parts need to trust not only the T but you
This was spot on. I think the trust in me has been missing for a long time and only recently has been there...
They will write but no freaking way will they talk. Silence was my defense as a child, but maybe some day?
When I was in this state, all I wanted to express was my anger at my therapist... which was my defense mechanism as a child. I was the one who talked back, screamed, etc. -- only to my abuser and the one who neglected me. Everywhere else, I was the silent one.

@Muse - trying to have any internal communication was so hard for many years, I didn't even understand what therapists meant when they talked about it, until it just suddenly started to work when I started writing letters to my inner child. I started to write what I needed to hear as a kid. Now, it usually just feels like a self directed pep talk through tough times because I'm a lot more integrated - but at first, I could only do it by writing letters to myself... sort of... so hard to explain how it started to happen.

@Lissar - :hug: it was exhausting for me too! It is different than a flashback for me too.

@PURUSHA - vulnerability is usually my enemy! I hate it. :/ Feeling safe in 2017 and like the abuse is over seems to be a very key step to being able to feel any of this.
 
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