barefoot
Diamond Member
I've been writing about my challenges with therapy quite a bit here lately. Apologies if I am going on about it a lot! I'm just finding it really hard and frustrating and I'm feeling very anxious and upset about the whole thing.
I wrote in this thread
https://www.myptsd.com/threads/has-anyone-conquered-dissociation-in-therapy.67621/
about my resistance to trauma work - that I consciously want to do it and intend to do it because I want to make progress and to "heal". And because my therapist said from the start that that was what I needed to do. But that, when I touch into it - even very slightly - I seem to trigger something and then have severely dissociated episodes, which are very distressing (during and afterwards) As a result, we haven't really been able to do any work on it.
As I mentioned in the above thread, a few weeks ago, my therapist said I had to listen to, respect and accept "the no" and that doing the deeper work wasn't in service to me. I was really upset and went in the following week on a mission to really nail the fact that I want to keep trying and to try to come up with new things to try to make it possible. Session went really well, I felt so positive, she seemed to feel that way too and it felt like we were completely back on track and committed to forging ahead.
The last couple of weeks though, she's gone back to saying that we need to be realistic and it doesn't really matter what I write on my brain storm sheets that I've been taking in to facilitate our conversations or what I say in these kinds of planning sessions because, when it comes to actually doing it, the resistance appears and a shed load of defences kick in (including dissociation), which means we can't do the work. She isn't questioning my intention. Just that talking about wanting to do it is one thing - actually doing it is another. So, she's now back to saying that I have to accept that I can't do "the deeper work" and we should instead focus on more surface level here and now stuff, like managing my symptoms of anxiety/depression and being connected to/living my life more fully and building my business etc.
I feel devastated. I understand that saying I want to do it and actually doing it are totally different things - but I thought we'd come up with a couple of different things to try. And it's not that I don't see the value in the here and now stuff. My anxiety and depression has got worse lately and the lack of motivation that has come along with that means that I've pretty much given up on my business, so I don't have any work and am not earning any money, which is causing more anxiety. But I can't find the motivation/energy to fix it. So, if we can ease those symptoms and get my work mojo back and get my finances into better shape again, that would obviously be brilliant.
I just feel so crushed and deflated about the "deeper work" totally coming off the table. Because she isn't saying, "let's get you into a better position and get your symptoms better under control and then we can try again." She's talking as though it's a blanket "no more" and very clearly and firmly saying that I need to accept that.
It feels like a massive failure on my part.
And it feels totally dispiriting - she's kind of held that work up as being the beacon of all things healing so all along I've thought that's what I was aiming to do and that would make a real difference. And is now telling me I can't do it. So that feels horrible and frightening - that this is as good as I can get with that stuff, which feels nowhere good enough to me. Because if doing that work means healing, not doing it means...not healing? And that feels really upsetting and unbearably disappointing.
Any thoughts on what you would do next if you were me? I suppose what I'm asking is, do I now need to:
- Keep pushing to try to work on the deeper layers around the trauma-related stuff again - though we seem stuck here at the moment as I keep saying I want to and she keeps saying I can't.
- Accept her professional opinion and try to find a way to accept that it isn't going to happen.
- Something else?!
Thanks
barefoot
I wrote in this thread
https://www.myptsd.com/threads/has-anyone-conquered-dissociation-in-therapy.67621/
about my resistance to trauma work - that I consciously want to do it and intend to do it because I want to make progress and to "heal". And because my therapist said from the start that that was what I needed to do. But that, when I touch into it - even very slightly - I seem to trigger something and then have severely dissociated episodes, which are very distressing (during and afterwards) As a result, we haven't really been able to do any work on it.
As I mentioned in the above thread, a few weeks ago, my therapist said I had to listen to, respect and accept "the no" and that doing the deeper work wasn't in service to me. I was really upset and went in the following week on a mission to really nail the fact that I want to keep trying and to try to come up with new things to try to make it possible. Session went really well, I felt so positive, she seemed to feel that way too and it felt like we were completely back on track and committed to forging ahead.
The last couple of weeks though, she's gone back to saying that we need to be realistic and it doesn't really matter what I write on my brain storm sheets that I've been taking in to facilitate our conversations or what I say in these kinds of planning sessions because, when it comes to actually doing it, the resistance appears and a shed load of defences kick in (including dissociation), which means we can't do the work. She isn't questioning my intention. Just that talking about wanting to do it is one thing - actually doing it is another. So, she's now back to saying that I have to accept that I can't do "the deeper work" and we should instead focus on more surface level here and now stuff, like managing my symptoms of anxiety/depression and being connected to/living my life more fully and building my business etc.
I feel devastated. I understand that saying I want to do it and actually doing it are totally different things - but I thought we'd come up with a couple of different things to try. And it's not that I don't see the value in the here and now stuff. My anxiety and depression has got worse lately and the lack of motivation that has come along with that means that I've pretty much given up on my business, so I don't have any work and am not earning any money, which is causing more anxiety. But I can't find the motivation/energy to fix it. So, if we can ease those symptoms and get my work mojo back and get my finances into better shape again, that would obviously be brilliant.
I just feel so crushed and deflated about the "deeper work" totally coming off the table. Because she isn't saying, "let's get you into a better position and get your symptoms better under control and then we can try again." She's talking as though it's a blanket "no more" and very clearly and firmly saying that I need to accept that.
It feels like a massive failure on my part.
And it feels totally dispiriting - she's kind of held that work up as being the beacon of all things healing so all along I've thought that's what I was aiming to do and that would make a real difference. And is now telling me I can't do it. So that feels horrible and frightening - that this is as good as I can get with that stuff, which feels nowhere good enough to me. Because if doing that work means healing, not doing it means...not healing? And that feels really upsetting and unbearably disappointing.
Any thoughts on what you would do next if you were me? I suppose what I'm asking is, do I now need to:
- Keep pushing to try to work on the deeper layers around the trauma-related stuff again - though we seem stuck here at the moment as I keep saying I want to and she keeps saying I can't.
- Accept her professional opinion and try to find a way to accept that it isn't going to happen.
- Something else?!
Thanks
barefoot