Here's some information regarding appropriate boundaries with therapists that might be helpful. Note that this is written as a set of guidelines which are expected to be adapted as needed.
"Counselors should develop and maintain a
treatment frame--those conditions necessary to support a professional relationship. Setting and maintaining boundaries is especially critical in treating survivors of childhood abuse and neglect. Several parameters of the treatment frame are discussed below, as well as special issues that may arise. Because childhood abuse is a profound violation of personal boundaries, adult survivors of abuse or neglect may never have developed healthy and appropriate boundaries, either for themselves or in their expectations of others. They often need a great deal of affection and approval, and counselors must make clear that they are not responsible for directly meeting all of those needs. Boundaries help the counselor as well as the client because counselors tend to be nurturing healers, which may lead them to fall unwittingly into inappropriate roles in response to their clients' stories."
Also, later in this article, "The counselor should guide clients in doing difficult interpersonal tasks themselves, not only to strengthen the clients' ability to take responsibility for their lives but also to maintain important adult boundaries. The counselor must maintain a calm, optimistic interest in his clients, recognizing that getting overly involved will rob clients of the opportunity to identify and build upon their own inner resources.
Other parameters of the counseling relationship, or treatment frame, set by many mental health professionals (
Briere, 1989) include
- Making regular appointment times, specified in advance
- Enforcing set starting and ending times for each session
- Declining to give out a home phone number or address
- Canceling sessions if the client arrives under the influence of alcohol or psychoactive drugs
- Not having contact outside the therapy session
- Having no sexual contact or interactions that could reasonably be interpreted as sexual
- Terminating counseling if threats are made or acts of violence are committed against the counselor
- Establishing and enforcing a clear policy in regard to payment
...A
lso, for some clients, telephone contact outside the therapy session is necessary and fosters a working alliance between client and counselor. Some clients may need ongoing support for dealing with difficulties with their children or suicidal feelings. A rigid rule stating no contact outside of therapy may be harmful for very needy clients. Clients may feel abandoned if a telephone call is not returned, damaging the therapeutic alliance."
Source:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK64902/
The therapeutic alliance is something both patient and therapist work on together, so I'd ask her what her boundaries with you are. Then, see how you feel about that. Be honest and open, and maybe you can both find what will be most helpful to you. But don't give up.