One thing that may reassure you is that I don't see how it could be ghosting now. You did go back and you have addressed this directly with him. If he would ghost you he would disappear without telling you anything. It doesn't sound like he is going to do that. Do you think his responses have left you feeling uncared for and judged? Is there some part of you that was hoping for him to show a different side of him and more emotional and reassuring if you confronted this? That you hoped if you did or responded in certain ways that would happen?
I think what we were referring to is if you maybe had a father or someone else in your life where you kept trying and they never responded and met your need for connection. If this is familiar in some way. With someone else.
There are two aspects of this that I can see. One is that different things work for different people. Example? A talks about trauma with his T. T responds by having tears in his eyes. A is really upset with t and leaves as that wasnt helpful for him. He had a dramatic mother who always made everything about her. He ended up reassuring her instead of being cared for. Client B discusses trauma with his t and his t doesn't respond. Client B leaves as B needs to have some empathy reassurance shown. Have a response as the trauma being wrong. Its not about one of them being defective or weak and the other not. They just have different pasts and different personalities. Lets just say for argument's sake that both are good t's but very different.
The other issue other than this Your B possibly being too buttoned up and coldly challenging for you is if he is possibly not that good a t. That is something for you to decide. But regardless you only need to think if he is good for you. Ive had a combo of both in retrospect. Took ages to figure that out. The style did not suit me. Very challenging, fairly remote, not attuned, not for me but I didn;t realise that. Also didn't understand trauma symptoms (thats why I asked if is a trauma t). I also possibly had some not great t's.
When you say if he is going to turn on you do you mean with one of his typical comments? Being in therapy makes me very hypervigalant and see the therapist as very threatening unfortunately regardless of what they do. Especially if they push my buttons. My own special set. Sometimes what they are doing is harmful though even when they aren't about to physically attack me,
As long as you are respectful it is your t's job to look after himself. Is that a hard one to absorb?
I think what we were referring to is if you maybe had a father or someone else in your life where you kept trying and they never responded and met your need for connection. If this is familiar in some way. With someone else.
There are two aspects of this that I can see. One is that different things work for different people. Example? A talks about trauma with his T. T responds by having tears in his eyes. A is really upset with t and leaves as that wasnt helpful for him. He had a dramatic mother who always made everything about her. He ended up reassuring her instead of being cared for. Client B discusses trauma with his t and his t doesn't respond. Client B leaves as B needs to have some empathy reassurance shown. Have a response as the trauma being wrong. Its not about one of them being defective or weak and the other not. They just have different pasts and different personalities. Lets just say for argument's sake that both are good t's but very different.
The other issue other than this Your B possibly being too buttoned up and coldly challenging for you is if he is possibly not that good a t. That is something for you to decide. But regardless you only need to think if he is good for you. Ive had a combo of both in retrospect. Took ages to figure that out. The style did not suit me. Very challenging, fairly remote, not attuned, not for me but I didn;t realise that. Also didn't understand trauma symptoms (thats why I asked if is a trauma t). I also possibly had some not great t's.
When you say if he is going to turn on you do you mean with one of his typical comments? Being in therapy makes me very hypervigalant and see the therapist as very threatening unfortunately regardless of what they do. Especially if they push my buttons. My own special set. Sometimes what they are doing is harmful though even when they aren't about to physically attack me,
As long as you are respectful it is your t's job to look after himself. Is that a hard one to absorb?
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