I agree with all that's been said so far particularly
@LunaticOnTheFritz and
@Friday but this in particular stood out to me. I talk about this a lot so bear with me lol. But I have trauma from human trafficking and I have RAD which morphed into schizoid.
Because of how severe it is most people have a kneejerk negative reaction to hearing about it.
I was indoctrinated into an armed group and forced to be in a gang as a child as well as sexually trafficked. So pretty serious stuff. When I tell most people they have a clear aversive response.
Oh G-d! That's horrible! OMG! And what happens is that I have to comfort them because they lack emotional fortitude and I'm comforting them over
their reaction to
my trauma. So when I'm looking for assistance, I wind up expending even more energy that I
already don't have because of avolition, to making
them feel better.
What I need more than anything else from a clinician is composure. I can handle my emotions and you handle your emotions. The modalities and odds and ends I can teach them. I can't teach them calmness. It gives me a complex on top of it because I feel alienated and cut off from others anyway, only to learn even the
therapist can't deal with it.
For the record the best therapists I've found who have the skillset we need are pediatric/forensic. My current T administered the violent sexual offender treatment (VSOT) here. Once your patients are the abusers you evidently develop a thick skin due to hearing constant unrepentant smug entitled pedophiles justify why their victims were "asking for it."
But yeah. This is your side of the tracks as a patient/client! Tell him his response isn't working for you and explain why. If he is a good therapist he will set aside his ego and adjust. If he isn't maybe he will get offended and that is when you know it's time to move on.
PS There is a study which shows that in patients with PTSD and developmental trauma,
neutrality is perceived as hostility.