@anonymous - yes, having the agreement written down and with us in the session might be a good idea. I'll do that.
She doesn't ever get me to name things in the room/colours etc. She'll sometimes try to encourage me to talk about other things. So, she'll try to engage me in conversation about where I live. Or my cats. It doesn't often get us very far though because I generally find it too hard to work out and then articulate my answers. So, I tend to not really answer her.
I actually have an oil in my bag but don't think she knows that, so I should probably tell her! She has a room spray. In retrospect, I'm surprised she didn't spray that around.
Perhaps it would be a good idea for me to just have some things out on the table right from the start of the session (the oil, my hand cream, some strong mints) instead of me then having to find things in my bag when I'm in a state. I might be more likely to catch it early and do something then. And it will mean that I won't be thrown by my bag suddenly not feeling like it's my bag, which is what happened last week.
A few weeks ago I was dissociating (not in such a state as I was in last week) and my therapist spoke quite sharply and it really made me jump. And I think the adrenaline of being startled snapped me out of it. So, we said that was helpful to know - that she can sort of scare me out of it - and we agreed that she could do that in future (make a loud, sudden noise) She didn't do that last week though. I think she's probably forgotten.
My memory of last week is that she was sitting quietly with me while I dissociated, or she was asking me about train times, getting home, calling a cab/my partner, or she was encouraging me to spray my perfume/use hand cream/eat mints. Perhaps I need to remind her about the making me jump thing (I suppose it's possible that she hadn't forgotten and that she made an assessment that scaring me in that state wasn't a good idea). But perhaps we also need to talk about other ways to help ground me.