am just finding it difficult needing help when I am usually the one giving it. Sorry it is perplexing.
No, I totally understand that part & the professional conundrum. And trauma is like an onion, layers upon layers, needing to be revisited.
Maybe I should not have said anything here either. I just think it is easy for everyone to listen and helps others than it is to help ourselves.
No, by all means seek out the support. (You see I knew I shouldn't have voiced the question!) You deserve it. :hug: I'm sure it will only enable you to be even more profoundly helpful, & you sound like you are already, as The Albatross said:
Perhaps the new circumstances will lead to a more beneficial process for both you and your clients.
think expertise and relational experience are two very different things that when integrated can be very beneficial... Also, training to become a therapist.. doesn't teach us to identify what we don't know in the client or what the experience is like for them.
I agree with the former
@falling_wave but am mortified by the latter. The relatively little psych I took emphasized the opposite. More importantly, I would never guide, advise or even speak to someone on anything I had no experience relationally. I would ask them to teach me. I think of the term, "a little knowledge is dangerous', & to me even if I had 10 degrees I would feel it would be 'little' in relation to that other person's world, history, experiences, beliefs, thoughts & values. (And I think of a Prof saying, "things you will learn will be found to be untrue/ inaccurate", just as he was taught Autism was the result of 'cool & aloof parenting'. :( ) How can anyone understand if they don't learn from those they treat? I just don't understand that at all. Those T's sound like they'd make good Accountants. :( That's frightening, in terms of finding a half-decent T.
Best wishes & healing to & for you both.