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- #109
Do you also find it easier to open up when she is not sitting across from you, looking at you?I get more out of our in-between conversations than out of our meetings.
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Do you also find it easier to open up when she is not sitting across from you, looking at you?I get more out of our in-between conversations than out of our meetings.
Do you also find it easier to open up when she is not sitting across from you, looking at you?
I think you noted something very profound Pencil when you said that your realisation that you had been allowed special access to your T (her having told her husband you could call her any time) actually ensured that you treasured and respected that access - and this is the paradox Springer referred to I suppose. And I think it's true. For some people, those with the insight and self awareness to understand, I do think that special trust and access to the relationship can be both the carrot that lures us into it, and the bind that keep us there, and the boundary, albeit a modified one, which ensures that we respect that level of attachment.
To add something about the issue of boundaries. Boundaries ARE important, but in ALL relationships, not just in therapy.
I think it's possible that you might have seen me as saying that relying on a therapist in any way and a therapist saving us in any way is not healthy. There is a huge difference between accepting help from a therapist and working with that in a responsible way and actually regressing and not doing anything so that the therapist is "saving" us in a dynamic that is disempowering. As I said the difference is subtle but important.waiting for a therapist to save us
listening to others for me to change my mind.
Pencil,I guess what I'm trying to illustrate is that although 'therapeutic boundaries' are in place even with the counsellor, and those are considered somehow sacrosanct, my 'ordinary' boundaries are somehow on a lower level on the hierarchy of boundaries.
I guess what I'm trying to illustrate is that although 'therapeutic boundaries' are in place even with the counselor, and those are considered somehow sacrosanct, my 'ordinary' boundaries are somehow on a lower level on the hierarchy of boundaries.
I would disagree about this though as dialectical behaviour therapy has been specifically developed to help those who suffer from severe abandonment issues and self hatred and struggle verbalising asking for help rather than through actions. I am not assuming it would help with every single person but just pointing out that it is one of the main ways of dealing with that particular issue.DBT o
So impressed you did it!:tup: It is so important to be able to do that I have found. For me I always assumed I was wrong and said nothing but that actually kept me very stuck.Asking you to clarify was not easy for me.
Too late to edit so just wanted to clarify that what I meant is "be adult when needed". Child states are perfectly good and important in certain situations and normal for us to deal with when it comes to trauma.be adult.
I gather this is par for the course for some people, or for people with specific issues. I'm not even in therapy but the therapist assures me regularly that she won't disappear. Without that reassurance I start spinning. At this point I'm struggling to stay attached to her even in her absence. It may sound nonsensical, but just staying attached to her, and not fighting it, is difficult enough for me at the moment. If I ever return to therapy, her presence will make it much harder.which both comforts and frightens me
Ditto. This thread is about attachment issues, after all :)I appear to be regarding everything to do with my relationship with my therapist right now... and in regard to relationships in general...
when something isn't helpful to you that he says or does it seems to me that you are able to own your part in that and therefore hold it's affect on your relationship until you talk it through with him rather than labelling him "bad" without the possibility of resolving it.
Abstract, about my ability to own my feelings and reactions in our relationship... I think I might have regressed on that score in the past few days, which is sad... too sad for words almost. I am trying to, but that attachment feels bruised and in jeopardy right now, and it's been a long long time since I found myself stuck in this place.
Maybe you and your therapist aren't a good fit. I have no idea, so I'm not suggesting you are or you aren't. It's just making me think how hard it is to know sometimes, when there are so many other things going on in the relationship.But I'm beginning to think that we are perhaps not a good fit. I don't think attachment should always be such a drama.
Maddog, thank you for saying that. Obviously, I'm not at all glad for you that you're in that place, but your honesty about it has helped me because I'm feeling
This is both relevant and helpful. But I think it also contains something important in terms of your situation: You do have a solid and strong attachment, you have a solid foundation.This might not be relevant to your situation, or helpful. It's just a thought.
It makes sense to me, I do this type of thing too - and then I start feeling desperately trapped.but my worry that maybe we can't almost makes me want to not think we can... which makes sense to me until I put it into words, and then it doesn't seem to.
This was exactly what I felt. But, although it took time, the T really put effort and time into turning that around.but then I still think obectively that she has let me down with something.