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Is My Therapist A Crock?

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I think that sometimes a therapist needs to say factual things in order to kick start healing in the right direction. If we were left to figure out everything by ourselves we'd finish therapy at the age of 147.

I agree with this 100% Though only I could move blame and did it here 6 and a half yrs with my current therapist; my therapist went back and forth a millon ways, me saying how and why it was all my fault, him saying how and why it wasnt.

Did it make an difference? Probably some. I think it chipped away at the programming a little so that when my walls were down and I was in a vulnerable state, I could push myself when the question was asked that had to be answered to shift blame, I could do it.

But the main thing with a therapist is that you two 'click' and you can learn to trust and feel safe with them. My therapist didnt know why I was really there for a year but we spent like forever building a trusting working relationship where I can say now, 7 yrs later that he is the only person on this planet i 100% trust.

If you guys dont 'click' then you may spin your wheels forever and not get far. If that makes sense.
 
"Cure" was a bad call - but can people "recover"? Absolutely.
Sexual assault is NEVER the victim's fault? Absolutely right.

And when you tell your T "I'm ready to talk about this", you know what the worst response is? "No, not yet, sit on it a bit longer".

Always (always) check your T's credentials - what are they actually qualified as?

But if this guy is uncomfortable because he's confronting you with the truth, and encouraging you to talk if that's what you say you want to do, then maybe this is you feeling what we all feel when it comes to therapy - this is scary.

If you and this guy don't fit, then keep looking for someone new. But if you're looking for someone who isn't aiming for recovery, someone who thinks "it might've been her fault", or someone who doesn't want to let you talk, you'll be looking for a while.

Therapy is tough. We have to listen to things we don't want to hear, say things we don't want to talk about, and feel things we want to keep held down...It's awful. But you can do it, whether it's with this guy or someone else.
 
I used an "online therapist" once and it turned out to be a total sham, some random woman with no qualifications at all. A scam artist. But she had her own business set up, this online therapy website that used other "therapists" in addition to her. They were just duping desperate people, and I was one of them.
 
Like everyone else said :it is never your fault. EVER. And I think its right that therapists push on that as if we were left to ourselves most of us would never get there. In fact a lot of us were brainwashed to believe it was our fault or we only notice our part. The other side of that is that taking responsibility can be a coping method in part. Believing it wasn't our fault can feel devastating initially if we had a tendency to be the independent good child. It means we were vulnerable and victim. For some of us that is the last thing we want to admit. It collapses the sense of control. And it can collapse the sense of who others really are/were too. A total turning upside-down of our previous reality.

But we do have control. We have control in the sense that we can confront the truth about the past and put blame where it belongs. That we work on healing. Only when we ourselves can accept we weren't to blame will this aspect of things be there. That can take some time but we need someone to help us get there. If this is a power issue for you (it sounds like it is in part) then you might need to discuss with him how to slow things down a little.

I think curable and treatable can be a bit of a slip and I wouldn't get hung up on it.

You asked to speak about the trauma and he agreed. Again thats not the end of in my opinion as you don't know how slowly he may have approached it. I have to say this is the part that gave me pause though. I think there are plenty of trauma t's that rush in there too quickly before properly finding our how hot the water is. I would definitely check his credentials. Look if he is registered. And if the relationship doesn't feel like a good match for you then go elsewhere. And have a frank conversation with him about pacing and grounding.

An important part of therapy is discussing your sensitive spots with the therapist so they can learn how things work for you. We are all different and sadly noone is a mindreader. Much is the pity!
 
An important part of therapy is discussing your sensitive spots with the therapist so they can learn how things work for you. We are all different and sadly noone is a mindreader. Much is the pity!

I agree with this and most found it odd that my therapist and I didnt really have this discussion but he reads my body langage and micro expressions (damn him) and apparently I tell him via that way when its too much, or by trying to disocisate and sometimes he will push, but not too hard and will even say "Im going to push" or "ok, im gonna stop pushing" and sometimes he just will back off althogether; depends on what we are discussing and where im at mentally & emotionally.

This is what you wont have for an online therapist so checking credials needs to happen anyway but it makes it so much more important to do this as there wont be body language, tone etc to pick up on.

If its not a fit, ok, but on any therapist (online or in person) check those creditials and if online more communication will be needed in both parts.
 
You might also want to clarify with him what he meant by feeling better from talking about it. We absolutely do get more symptomatic straight after but he may well be meaning in the longer term or he may be meaning the sense of relief that is sometimes mixed in with everything initially getting worse symptom wise. If we didn't hope to feel better as a result of talking then none of us would do it. But if he doesn't know symptoms get worse initially then he isn't a real trauma therapist and you need to run run.
 
Lillie,

I have wrestled with self blame for trauma and abuse perpetrated against me for a long time. I write this response to your thread as someone who can relate and wants to challenge you, perhaps both of us, to think of this a little differently.

It strikes me that you are equating things that are not equal.

When I was abused, I did nothing to stop it. I told no one, even as an adult. I helped to covered it up for him. To tell me I'm not at fault doesn't help me work through these things- in fact, it's shocking.
Not telling someone about abuse and not stopping the abuse is VERY different than being at fault for the abuse.

If someone steals my car, and I don't run up to them to tell them, please don't steal my car, I don't file a police report, etc... Is the act of stealing my car my fault? No, of course not.

Someone committed a criminal act of abuse against you. Suggesting that their actions are not their own fault, but that you are at fault for their choices... That's attributing an awful lot of power and responsibility to yourself Think about that. If their choice to abuse you is your fault, then you have TREMENDOUS power over others.


And finally, this guy said to me " I look forward to talking to you later because talking through it will help you feel better"
Ummmmm
When I first disclosed my trauma to my first therapist... The world crumbled around me. My symptoms got so much worse. I was falling apart. To tell me that "our relationship is the end all be all fix all" is callous and frankly it's lying.
Did he say"our relationship is the end all be all fix all"? Or did he suggest that talking about trauma would help you feel better? I have run into a therapist or two who thinks they are the savior of mankind. I usually run away from them, FAST. Based on what you have shared here, I don't know if this guy is a crock or not, but saying talking about trauma will help is not the same as saying the relationship will be the end all fix all.

I would suggest having an initial session with a couple of therapists. Then you can compare contrast them, and see which therapist clicks the best for you. I would caution you against finding someone that is always going to agree with you though, or never say anything that feels shocking, but at the same time, it's important to find someone you are willing to risk staying in a relationship with even when they may say things that are shocking. I also suggest finding a therapist who is trained in one or more very specific trauma therapy techniques. EMDR, or Trauma Focused CBT, or etc. Usually it takes more than just talking alone about trauma. At the same time, since this was an initial session, it might be that he simply hasn't had the time to get more in depth into how he plans to help you feel better. Ask them things like "how will talking through it help me feel better?" They should be able to explain how.

I think your reaction to some pretty common statements a generic therapist (rather than a trauma trained one) would typically say, is very much about what happened with your last therapist, and feeling re-traumatized by getting worse after disclosing your symptoms.

Put the blame back where it lies. The abuser. They are responsible for their choice to abuse you. They are the ones that caused and event that has now lead to the development of PTSD. Talking alone about it can be very unsettling and stir up massive symptoms. It makes sense you are resistant to talking alone being proposed as the solution if the past therapist handled it badly and/or they didn't help you have the tools you needed to pace and contain the work of disclosure about trauma. It can really be awful to endure that. This therapist isn't to blame for the past therapist failing you, but perhaps they are seeking to take a similar approach, and it's time to use what is under your power and control, your own choices, and find someone to choose that is a better fit for you.
 
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