My previous T would not say anything about believing what I was saying. She barely said or did anything. I told her that I didn't feel like she believed me, according to her it didn't matter what she thought.
I didn't get anything out of therapy, I got worse. I would've been better off talking to my wall at home. The wall wouldn't have laughed at me. The wall wouldn't have told me that it's judging me and that being judged is part of therapy. The wall wouldn't have called what I told it had kept me alive a detail. The wall would've provided me with just as many coping skills. I fired her after the laughing at me incident, which came one or two weeks after she called why I'm alive a detail.
Now I'm with someone else.
He's said straight out that he believes me and that it's understandable that I'm a mess.
And my brain is attempting to convince me that that's a bad thing. That I should neither want to nor need to be taken seriously.
Is therapists being upfront about believing someone against some set of rules? What is wrong with me for preferring this approach and why can't I just get over it?
I didn't get anything out of therapy, I got worse. I would've been better off talking to my wall at home. The wall wouldn't have laughed at me. The wall wouldn't have told me that it's judging me and that being judged is part of therapy. The wall wouldn't have called what I told it had kept me alive a detail. The wall would've provided me with just as many coping skills. I fired her after the laughing at me incident, which came one or two weeks after she called why I'm alive a detail.
Now I'm with someone else.
He's said straight out that he believes me and that it's understandable that I'm a mess.
And my brain is attempting to convince me that that's a bad thing. That I should neither want to nor need to be taken seriously.
Is therapists being upfront about believing someone against some set of rules? What is wrong with me for preferring this approach and why can't I just get over it?