NightSky
Gold Member
I've been working on processing my lack of emotional engagement in the room with my T. We've gotten it down to my high level of dissociation, depersonalization specifically. And while I do not have DID, I'm starting to recognize that I have parts that are fairly distinct from each other, and they don't play well. I'm realizing the one small part of me that is able to connect with others on an emotional level is very skittish and rarely comes out. When it does, it's ready to run at any hint of distraction or lack of engagement on the part of the other person.
So- I tend to pick up on every nuance of T's demeanor when I get there. I look at her face and body language, listen to the tone and volume of her voice, and pretty quickly figure out if she's engaged or distracted. (I could be wrong.. it's all done on a gut level) I also take into consideration whether or not something overt is going on (like if her kid is sick, for instance..I usually know that stuff). If I feel like she has something going on or if I feel she isn't as engaged, I can "talk" but i am on guard and feeling guilty. Even though it's her "job," It feels selfish.
So..assuming she seems engaged and I don't know of anything going on in her life, now it comes down to distractions in the room. Voices outside the door, sun that shines in her window into my face at my appointment time every week, texts that come through on her phone that vibrate, having to know what time it is and how much time we have left.. these things all prevent me from letting my guard down. I realize some can be tweaked and some can't. I could talk to her about this stuff but it has never bothered me before. I'm just now realizing though that distractions keep me from being engaged though I'm not sure why.
Today after several distractions and knowing her daughter was having an issue, I left the session obviously disengaged and she asked me to email her with specifics regarding what worked and didn't work in session. That has made me think about all of this.
Does everyone need the perfect set of circumstances to emotionally engage? Obviously that can't happen all the time... curious about your experiences in this area.
Thanks!
So- I tend to pick up on every nuance of T's demeanor when I get there. I look at her face and body language, listen to the tone and volume of her voice, and pretty quickly figure out if she's engaged or distracted. (I could be wrong.. it's all done on a gut level) I also take into consideration whether or not something overt is going on (like if her kid is sick, for instance..I usually know that stuff). If I feel like she has something going on or if I feel she isn't as engaged, I can "talk" but i am on guard and feeling guilty. Even though it's her "job," It feels selfish.
So..assuming she seems engaged and I don't know of anything going on in her life, now it comes down to distractions in the room. Voices outside the door, sun that shines in her window into my face at my appointment time every week, texts that come through on her phone that vibrate, having to know what time it is and how much time we have left.. these things all prevent me from letting my guard down. I realize some can be tweaked and some can't. I could talk to her about this stuff but it has never bothered me before. I'm just now realizing though that distractions keep me from being engaged though I'm not sure why.
Today after several distractions and knowing her daughter was having an issue, I left the session obviously disengaged and she asked me to email her with specifics regarding what worked and didn't work in session. That has made me think about all of this.
Does everyone need the perfect set of circumstances to emotionally engage? Obviously that can't happen all the time... curious about your experiences in this area.
Thanks!