No More
Diamond Member
I’m interpreting the most recent email the same way as @Sideways.
To me it sounds like quite a kind email to say he’s very proud of all the work you’ve done together, and that he’s available should you wish to continue - but he’s giving you space to easily step back and pickup in the future should you wish.
If this approach really doesn’t work for you, and you need someone that’s highly affirming of the diagnosis rather than just taking it symptom by symptom, perhaps his school of thought is not quite the right one for you at this point in your journey. That’s not to say he doesn’t have some excellent help and advice on various points, but if this is the specific area you wish to focus overall, perhaps you’d be better to persue the over avenue you mentioned re the nhs referral (I believe?)
I really think if you are going to continue with him a discussion re this referral needs to be had sooner rather than later, out of respect & fairness for all parties involved - and the fact that a lot of the time it’s unethical for multiple therapists to be working totally independently of each other with no collaboration between them. Perhaps he might be really interested on splitting the work together with the other centre focussing on the dissociative element, while he focus’s on the more humanistic element?
To me it sounds like quite a kind email to say he’s very proud of all the work you’ve done together, and that he’s available should you wish to continue - but he’s giving you space to easily step back and pickup in the future should you wish.
That said, for some people (me included) the non-diagnostic approach works really well. This is totally aligned with how I feel and think. And there are a lot of very experienced/qualified/learned therapists that do work and think along the same lines as him in regards to dissociative disorders.His training is in humanistic psychotherapy and he's clear he doesn't agree with diagnoses (gets visibly defensive in session if diagnosis is discussed to the point i don't feel comfortable owning my own diagnosis in session). He's made it clear he doesn't agree there's enough evidence for dissociative disorders.
If this approach really doesn’t work for you, and you need someone that’s highly affirming of the diagnosis rather than just taking it symptom by symptom, perhaps his school of thought is not quite the right one for you at this point in your journey. That’s not to say he doesn’t have some excellent help and advice on various points, but if this is the specific area you wish to focus overall, perhaps you’d be better to persue the over avenue you mentioned re the nhs referral (I believe?)
I really think if you are going to continue with him a discussion re this referral needs to be had sooner rather than later, out of respect & fairness for all parties involved - and the fact that a lot of the time it’s unethical for multiple therapists to be working totally independently of each other with no collaboration between them. Perhaps he might be really interested on splitting the work together with the other centre focussing on the dissociative element, while he focus’s on the more humanistic element?