BloomInWinter
VIP Member
I have found on my own personal journey that establishing a good, safe, productive therapeutic relationship with my therapists required me to push myself to tolerate the distress of some things which I used to avoid or escape from.
Here's what worked for me (so far) in making major headway in being able to receive help and put it to work in my life.
I had to force myself to tolerate the distress of:
Here's what worked for me (so far) in making major headway in being able to receive help and put it to work in my life.
I had to force myself to tolerate the distress of:
- Accepting that I need the help of a human being to get better. The best I had been able to accomplish on my own only made me sicker.
- Accepting that my therapist is able to see needs I have which I am unaware of.
- Accepting that I must put to work the grounding & safety skills in my real world situations or my work in therapy is pointless.
- Accepting that I am not an expert on therapy, or even what I truly need in therapy.
- Trusting that all my feelings that come up are ok and I can feel, express, and survive them.
- That my therapist is a just a human being who cannot read my mind, be expected to remember every detail I express, or even always be on top of his or her game.
- That the negative feelings which come up in therapy about my therapist are actually my brain projecting unresolved issues onto the therapist....and that only by expressing them and talking them out helps me finally heal the original wound that was inflicted on me earlier in life.
- That every moment I spend wondering what was behind the words & facial expressions of my therapist were wasted moments of my life. Usually, I was wrong. When I gave myself permission to ask rather than be in distress & worry, I started learning how differently my therapists think about me as opposed to my abusers.
- That forcing myself to look at those things which I most want to avoid are the shortest distance between where I am and where I want to go.
- That every minute I spent trying to prove to my therapist why s/he was wrong is actually avoidance at work and a completely unproductive waste of my time and energy
- That I cannot read anyone else's mind, and what I tell myself about other people's thoughts are rarely even close.
- That I must tell my therapist what I feel, think, and experience about anything coming up in therapy or my treatment plan is incomplete.
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