Justmehere
Sponsor
Transference is hard and time off from support stinks. I think you have feedback that your therapist is being reasonable, appropriate, and has your best in mind, and that you are dealing with understandable negative transference and abandonment fears that will likely improve if you stick it out. I think you also blame her for your symptoms, when what you are experiencing is what it would be like without her. I’m honestly not sure how running and being without her support for even longer is the solution — and yet, the desire to RUN when highly symptomatic and struggling makes sense. That’s PTSD talking. Fight or flight. Stay or go, regardless of what you choose, even if you decide this isn’t for you, wish I could convince you she’s not the enemy. Your reaction is one very much of flight, fitting for trauma, but it’s flight from someone that really sounds like she wants to be there to help when she gets back. A safe support. Not perfect, flawed, maybe not the right therapist, but the situation is not fitting for a RUN response. Past trauma, yes. Now, not so much.
You are asking if you should leave. I ask that a lot about my own treatment. Probably just about every week lately. Ultimately, it comes down to my readiness and if the costs outweigh the long haul benefits.
At the end of the day, the choice is yours and you know the situation better than any of us. In fact, I think that it’s important to pause and recognize you do get to choose and you’ll be the one living with the outcome of that choice. Transference is hella painful, and it can take time to work it through. Not being ready to face it or being too burnt out is understandable.
Here are a few more thoughts:
1.) Let it go.
Pro: You get to continue with a therapist where you have done a lot of good work. You don’t have to start the process with someone new, which may take time to find, and whom will need time catch up. You have an opportunity to experience her returning and possibly diving back into trauma work.
Con: You miss out on talking more about this in therapy when she gets back. You will run into this happening again with almost every therapist out there and by bailing now, you’ll delay learning the skills and doing the healing you’ll need to manage this better without running.
Not sure if this is a pro or a con:
By simply letting this go, you may delay addressing underlying loss and trauma that’s been stirred up. More on this below.
2.) Switch Ts:
Pro: You’ll have someone take a fresh look at your symptoms and care. They may have tools and techniques your current therapist does not have. They may have a different way of responding that helps work this through.
Con: Most therapists take vacations. Few therapists accept regular in between session contact. The fear of abandonment and and distrust will follow you, because the unresolved trauma is still there. The original abandonment. But running now, you don’t get to have a possible reparative experience with your current therapist. You could run into a worse therapist.
Not sure if this is a pro or con:
You’ll possibly delay deep work on the trauma driving this transference reaction. Maybe that’s a beneficial thing, and the space would be good... in which case... is there perhaps other ways to put the work away now, regardless of what happens for therapy? Ways to stabilize.
Maybe running and switching therapists is unhealthy avoidance, and maybe it’s not time to run. So maybe there are ways to better face it more directly, instead of just through transference of hat pain on to your therapist?
3.) Heavily medicate and quit.
Pro: There are “benefits” of medicating. Avoidance will seem like it brings relief in the short run.
Con: studies have shown avoidance usually backfired and the pain usually comes back with a gusto, eventually.
Ok, so I am leaving out A LOT, but I hope you get the idea.
Listing out the benefits and drawbacks of each choice may bring up needs and issues and benefits you might be overlooking, and there might be ways to meet those needs better. It also will help you make an informed choice.
You did hire her to help. You can quit and run. There are also other options: talk to her more, seek adjunctive therapy or a higher level of care to stabilize, take a break and then go back when ready, find their skills other than heavily medicating to cope and quit, etc, etc.
The pain of transference is awful. You have done well at resisting the urge to quit and run. It’s hard to hang on. I’m glad you’ll talk more about this before making your decision.
You are asking if you should leave. I ask that a lot about my own treatment. Probably just about every week lately. Ultimately, it comes down to my readiness and if the costs outweigh the long haul benefits.
At the end of the day, the choice is yours and you know the situation better than any of us. In fact, I think that it’s important to pause and recognize you do get to choose and you’ll be the one living with the outcome of that choice. Transference is hella painful, and it can take time to work it through. Not being ready to face it or being too burnt out is understandable.
You can totally disregard any suggestion here that isn’t helpful to you. But I hope you think through what possible benefits of running that are driving the desire to run, and what possible benefits are there to staying - and bring it all into the session with the psychologist. You might find out another way through and get your needs met for stabilization better.so my thoughts are, do I just let it go? do I switch T’s or heavily medicate and quit.
Here are a few more thoughts:
1.) Let it go.
Pro: You get to continue with a therapist where you have done a lot of good work. You don’t have to start the process with someone new, which may take time to find, and whom will need time catch up. You have an opportunity to experience her returning and possibly diving back into trauma work.
Con: You miss out on talking more about this in therapy when she gets back. You will run into this happening again with almost every therapist out there and by bailing now, you’ll delay learning the skills and doing the healing you’ll need to manage this better without running.
Not sure if this is a pro or a con:
By simply letting this go, you may delay addressing underlying loss and trauma that’s been stirred up. More on this below.
2.) Switch Ts:
Pro: You’ll have someone take a fresh look at your symptoms and care. They may have tools and techniques your current therapist does not have. They may have a different way of responding that helps work this through.
Con: Most therapists take vacations. Few therapists accept regular in between session contact. The fear of abandonment and and distrust will follow you, because the unresolved trauma is still there. The original abandonment. But running now, you don’t get to have a possible reparative experience with your current therapist. You could run into a worse therapist.
Not sure if this is a pro or con:
You’ll possibly delay deep work on the trauma driving this transference reaction. Maybe that’s a beneficial thing, and the space would be good... in which case... is there perhaps other ways to put the work away now, regardless of what happens for therapy? Ways to stabilize.
Maybe running and switching therapists is unhealthy avoidance, and maybe it’s not time to run. So maybe there are ways to better face it more directly, instead of just through transference of hat pain on to your therapist?
3.) Heavily medicate and quit.
Pro: There are “benefits” of medicating. Avoidance will seem like it brings relief in the short run.
Con: studies have shown avoidance usually backfired and the pain usually comes back with a gusto, eventually.
Ok, so I am leaving out A LOT, but I hope you get the idea.
Listing out the benefits and drawbacks of each choice may bring up needs and issues and benefits you might be overlooking, and there might be ways to meet those needs better. It also will help you make an informed choice.
You did hire her to help. You can quit and run. There are also other options: talk to her more, seek adjunctive therapy or a higher level of care to stabilize, take a break and then go back when ready, find their skills other than heavily medicating to cope and quit, etc, etc.
The pain of transference is awful. You have done well at resisting the urge to quit and run. It’s hard to hang on. I’m glad you’ll talk more about this before making your decision.
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