She is therapist with goal to help me build my skills to handle emotions.
This. Our T’s perspective on the relationship is so often completely different to the one we have in our head. For us, it’s incredibly personal, we’re vulnerable, we need to learn trust, we need to share intimate details.
For them, this is their job: this person needs this kind of professional assistance with these specific clinical issues.
In that, they’re helping us learn to manage our bigtime emotions, but also how to manage a healthy relationship, with healthy boundaries, healthy communication skills - the whole lot.
I know it feels good to express your anger and what i learned is that once we hit send we cannot take it back.
Being able to differentiate “this is my emotion: I’m angry”, and hit pause? For me helps change the behavioural responses to that emotion.
So, if I come away from therapy feeling paranoid (my personal one was that my T now had “control” of my story, and was out there walking around doing unknown things with it)? That’s pretty normal. What I’m learning, though, is how to notice that and hit pause, so that I can choose what behaviour I use to manage that emotion. My gut instinct to cut all ties with my T, and look at moving interstate would be a series of behaviours that are reactions to my paranoia. But they’re aren’t helpful for me, they are self-destructive. The paranoia and fear is real, and I need to manage it, do something with it. That moment of pause, between the emotion and the behavioural response to the emotion, can be 2 seperate things, rather than one big self-destructive mess.
@susannahsays - you recognise that this isn’t exactly in your Top 5 Best Choices I’ve Ever Made. But don’t for a second feel like you need to attach any shame to this.
I’ve done worse than a few angry text messages. With one of my T’s I crossed the line big time. He could’ve called the cops or an ambulance for me. He terminated me instantly instead. But the point is? Loads of us have been exactly where you are. So, be gentle with yourself. Working through this stuff is hard, but the skills you’re gaining in the process are so incredibly helpful with navigating interpersonal relationships.