In a different thread (https://www.myptsd.com/threads/how-to-find-the-right-therapist.37178/#post-601131), TeaLeaf said:
I'm wondering if something like this could help. I understand that you would need to communicate with her to look into the possibility of anything like this, and that difficulty communicating is the whole point.
You've obviously managed a lot, though, given how you feel. You found a therapist, arranged to see her, and are going regularly. Can you identify the things that you've done that have been successful towards communication so far? What was it that enabled you to successfully arrange to see her initially? Perhaps you could use the same approach to get more help from her to get through the sessions with less difficulty.
I think it comes down to three things. One is coming up with strategies that you and your therapist can use together to reduce the stress/distress of trying to talk with her. Like the card game or maybe something else. Anything using your hands is good, as well as things that distract your mind a little, like colouring or drawing geometric designs - this is what I do while making phone calls that fill me with anxiety. It distracts and soothes me a little while I'm talking.
The second thing I think always comes back to coping and grounding skills. I think we need far more of these than are usually suggested. I think we also need to devise them for particular situations, like staying grounded while walking into therapy, staying grounded while sitting down, staying grounded while telling her how your week has been etc. Then we have to practise them almost constantly, including a lot of imaginary walk throughs in advance to make them more automatic for us and to reinforce their effectiveness.
The third thing may be related to what others have said about expectations, I'm not sure. I think we need to break therapy down into stages. Getting used to going, building a relationship with the therapist, saying one thing that's hard to say, etc. We can't expect ourselves to go from zero to being able to open up and talk freely. Measuring ourselves against that is counter-productive. The steps along the way take time, and they may need to be tiny steps. Recognising them is important. If you're talking at all, if you've got yourself there at all, then I think you've achieved things and I'd encourage you to give yourself credit for them.
Is there a very small goal you could set yourself and work towards, regarding talking more? Something specific and measurable that you can plan for and you'll be able to see when you achieve it? It's those very small goals that add up to successful therapy, over time.
In my early 20's, my whole first year with one therapist was playing a card game while we talked, a lot of it was superficial at first. Because of my history, I couldn't trust people but slowly as she was patient with me, supportive of me and gave me lots of control over what I was going to talk about, I was able to build trust and talk about things that were going on in my life and it started to get more into my trauma.
I'm wondering if something like this could help. I understand that you would need to communicate with her to look into the possibility of anything like this, and that difficulty communicating is the whole point.
You've obviously managed a lot, though, given how you feel. You found a therapist, arranged to see her, and are going regularly. Can you identify the things that you've done that have been successful towards communication so far? What was it that enabled you to successfully arrange to see her initially? Perhaps you could use the same approach to get more help from her to get through the sessions with less difficulty.
I think it comes down to three things. One is coming up with strategies that you and your therapist can use together to reduce the stress/distress of trying to talk with her. Like the card game or maybe something else. Anything using your hands is good, as well as things that distract your mind a little, like colouring or drawing geometric designs - this is what I do while making phone calls that fill me with anxiety. It distracts and soothes me a little while I'm talking.
The second thing I think always comes back to coping and grounding skills. I think we need far more of these than are usually suggested. I think we also need to devise them for particular situations, like staying grounded while walking into therapy, staying grounded while sitting down, staying grounded while telling her how your week has been etc. Then we have to practise them almost constantly, including a lot of imaginary walk throughs in advance to make them more automatic for us and to reinforce their effectiveness.
The third thing may be related to what others have said about expectations, I'm not sure. I think we need to break therapy down into stages. Getting used to going, building a relationship with the therapist, saying one thing that's hard to say, etc. We can't expect ourselves to go from zero to being able to open up and talk freely. Measuring ourselves against that is counter-productive. The steps along the way take time, and they may need to be tiny steps. Recognising them is important. If you're talking at all, if you've got yourself there at all, then I think you've achieved things and I'd encourage you to give yourself credit for them.
Is there a very small goal you could set yourself and work towards, regarding talking more? Something specific and measurable that you can plan for and you'll be able to see when you achieve it? It's those very small goals that add up to successful therapy, over time.
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