Justmehere
Sponsor
:hug: @otakujome
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
THAT was an "interesting" thing for him to say. I have no idea how that would work. And, if you could "fool yourself" into believing you forget, there would have to be some sort of reason for doing it. I wonder what that might be? A question HE should be asking, at least of himself. (I just remembered that English isn't your first language and we might be "hearing" something slightly different that what you're trying to express. Your English is so good, it's easy to forget!)He says that I can fool myself into believing it's possible to forget like that, but that I can't fool him
Your therapist is wrong. I expect you already know that. I doubt very much that he actually believes what he is telling you. More likely that he is in severe denial. If he admitted that people often do forget trauma, he would have to face the severity of trauma in his patients, rather than blaming the patient for their symptoms. Therapists have been doing this since Freud recanted on his original statement that "hysterical" women were having memories of sexual abuse because he couldn't face the repercussions of admitting that the elite of Vienna were abusing their daughters.He says that I can fool myself into believing it's possible to forget like that, but that I can't fool him and that I need to be serious when talking.