I really agree with everybody's comment and have had similar feelings and thoughts in therapy search but I will also highlight
@Justmehere a bit more.
I will elaborate. I have been in trauma therapy for very short time couple years and in that time I have gone through more than 2* and now settling with the 4. Except the first one who was truly narcissistic, the last two when I look back, were really good at their jobs but it was the wrong time for me.
I am here and strong because of them BUT the biggest learning was my experience of saying no and leaving them - something that is pretty hard to do to be honest with you but I did and it did not kill me and the world did not stop functioning. The main reason I left when I look back today is that I have had very strong psychical and spatial boundaries but not psychological. If I am in a situation that is unbearable, I can remove myself and put that person out of my mind and move on - I guess that is avoidance. But how do you move on if that person is in your head and all I could think of is what you said in your post? What I learned is that if I am talking and defending and fighting and generally angry or hostile or pissed or just super annoyed with my therapist outside of therapist - it is not the therapist that is bad; it is my mental states that are developed to focus on others -not me. I am out of therapy and thinking of the therapist in negative way is no different than being in abusive relationship and all I am thinking is he gonna hit me or yell at me or call me names while I am out of earshot? I am no longer thinking of me and my life and my feelings. The biggest problem of being obsessed with the therapist is I forgot got eat, or sleep or do normal things for myself and of course end up blaming all this on the therapist. I also asked them to help me and got the lame response of I do not know. But I know now. What is the help they could give me other than hear me out and support. They could not go inside my head and make me like them or soothe myself or teach me things I did not learn as a child - simple self-care. These take a long time to learn with another person.
The good thing though: I was no longer obsessed with my mother! ha! The anger and hostility and the hate toward my mother took back seat and I was like how I can survive this therapy rollercoaster the same way? That is the skill I did not learn. How do you stop being played by a person in your head -aka have a strong psychological boundary? Well that recognition for me worked wonders because I realized. I was screwed because my mother was riding my head all my life (or ex b/f or annoying g/f or the clerk at the store or my teacher or my boss...the list goes on) now I found a bunching bag - the therapist. So I have the power to change the mental state - the psychological boundary. This is after a year of dissociation and deep depression, and anxiety that could energize an airplane to fly!
I am going on and on. about myself (after all I am my mother's daughter) but the reason I agreed with justmehere more or less is that the trust you speak of - is really a way to ask: can you trust yourself to survive and to take care of yourself and work with the therapist? you do not need to fall in love or trust anyone until you know them. They are not our parents. They are professionals who know what they are doing. We can judge them in their competence. do they show up on time? do they take criticisms with grain of salt? do they express when they are wrong? We can judge them on these things but not loving them or trusting them or blalahahah in our heads. We go to therapist to learn how to trust - most of us we do? So that takes time and should not be something that happens so easy. By the time you consciously learn to trust a therapist, imho, you are already up in our alley for recovery. If you never do and stay for years defending them in your head, that is like psychosis level, and rightfully so. But if you are falling in love, trusting them on the first session, hmmm that is questionable too and actually probably just as hard to change if you cannt trust them at all. There has to be some improvement in the trust spectrum.
Of course much easier saying than done, of course.
In your post, the fact you are aware that your reflections are down is huge plus. It shows you are not as out as you may think otherwise. I honestly do not like therapist who says to me you are negative especially so early on but maybe, you appear and are more functional (or pretend) and she thought you could handle that comment now and it is obvious you did not. Humans are fallible. You can use your functional side and state you are vulnerable now and need support. No way a good therapist will push that back. Ask what you need rather than having her read your mind.
much easier saying than done of course but his has been my experience.
I left them and I benefited from the leaving experiences and learned a lot more about myself like I can speak up and leave even though I felt guilty and trapped just like when I was a child. I felt abandoned even though I was abandoning. I felt stupid and I felt crazy like I do not get along with anyone - even professionals...but I did and I am happy for learning all those things. But I live in a big city and could also find other therapist which could impact if I was in a small town.
I hope you stay and share your experience and take your time to get back your reflection skills but do not turn off your ability to be alert and assess the situation if it does not feel right. Be safe and be kind to yourself.