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New Therapist--i'm Freaking Out

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krazyglued

New Here
Hi Everyone. I have been to therapy in the past--several times--and I have always had therapists that treated me with polite indifference, and I thought that was how therapy worked--I talked about what was bothering me and they gave me suggestions about my behavior and then we scheduled another session. Most of the time I came out of those sessions spun out, anxious, upset, and didn't even know why. Therapy was more of a trigger than a help, and I didn't even know what a trigger was then because nobody had bothered to tell me I have PTSD from childhood trauma. It's not that I was ever shy about admitting that I was abused--I am not afraid to sit down and tell that part of my story--the snapshot version of "this is what happened to me"--but the only thing that therapists have done is say "well, that makes sense why you feel depressed" or some such crap like that and we worked on why I was acting out in my current relationship or some useless tangent, and then I'd leave (spun out, anxious, upset). Until now.

Because I was never told I have PTSD, I just keep blowing my life up at intervals. All of my crisis occurs in the parameters of relationships, of course, since that's where the original trauma occurred, and I got married last year and didn't know that my spouse and I BOTH have PTSD. It's like the gift that keeps on giving. Now, imagine two people, crazy in love, and crazy with PTSD and don't even know it, and then they get married and STRESS happens . . . It was like the PTSD version of Coachella for the past several months--we camped out in CHAOS. So, my (still undiagnosed at this point) PTSD cracked me wide open finally, and I had a major rage episode (which didn't go well . . . ) and I finally went to therapy because I need help. I can't talk about getting help. I can't "intellectualize" this depth of pain or confusion. I can't keep providing my own internet-based therapy for myself, you know?

So I got a therapist, and she was the WORST therapist ever--she just happened to be the first one to call me back off the list of referrals, you know? I saw her for 4 sessions and every session I went to made me feel like I wanted to swerve my car into a tree after I left. I was so MESSED UP afterward---she looked at me in the first session and decided that I was bi-polar. I was crushed. Bi-polar. Thanks. By the 4th session she told me I had borderline personality disorder. BPD. Thanks for that, too. I said to her, "I don't think you like me very much." Here I was, in the middle of a PTSD meltdown--I'd cut contact with my mother, I'd gone to jail, my marriage was broken, I was broken--and the best she could offer me was BPD and a 30 day ultimatum to quit self-medicating with marijuana or she wouldn't see me anymore. I called the next therapist on the list.

That therapist stopped the session after 45 minutes and told me that she couldn't work with me. She only offered a very vanilla kind of therapy, she said, (what does that even mean??), and I was more depressed than any client she had ever worked with (my first mental health achievement award), and I was violent (yeah, in my house with my wife and undiagnosed PTSD. Yes, I was), so she told me to find a different therapist. She kicked me out. I had just told her all of my shame about what had happened to land me in her office and 45 minutes in she tells me I am too much for her. I was broken. And angry.

I called the next two therapists on the list. One called back. She told me to email her my availability and I took the opportunity of an email to tell her hey, I don't want to waste your time, so here's what's going on with me. She wrote back "I'd be happy to work with you." So she scheduled me for the very next day, and I went, and she listened to me and she said "you have PTSD from your childhood trauma. Hasn't anyone ever told you that before?" I said no, nobody. I cried.

That weekend I had a major rage fight with my wife--remember, we both have PTSD and we are both on complete tangents and I have had ONE therapy session with someone who is even on the right track, so we had a huge blowout and I ended up at my sister's house with a duffel bag of clothes. Broken again. I emailed this new therapist and she talked me down and got me in for a session the very next day, and then saw me for my already-scheduled session two days later, and she held me over in my session because she'd had a cancellation after me, and she just gave me a double session without even telling me. She just helped me. She is amazing. And that's the problem.

I have had 3 sessions with her (4 if you count the double) and I am probably already feeling major transference right now. I feel terrible about it, and full of shame. I have never had a therapist HELP me, and I have never had somebody identify with the source of my pain and hurt and shame and fear so immediately and so empathically. She has freaked me out. She isn't pushy, she completely lets me establish my own pace for trust, but I already feel enmeshed--like I want to trust her with things and invest in her and I really think for the first time in my life I can HEAL. I can have someone deconstruct these layers of shame from abuse, and heal that brokenness and help me to remove my mother's face from the sun, and this is scaring me so very much. I feel ashamed to need her. I feel needy. I am living at my sister's and the only thing that is keeping me going is the fact that I'm seeing this new therapist twice a week and she lets me email her in the empty days when I am struggling to get through. I already count on her and I've seen her three sessions. I'm freaking out and obsessing and I don't know if this is normal.

If anyone has had these feelings so quickly, so suddenly, so intensely, I would like to know how you were able to function--to go from obsessing about the darkness of my pain to obsessing about the light of therapy is really messing with my head and all I want to do is self-medicate and be self-destructive, but I know that would disappoint my therapist and already I care enough about her not to disappoint her. I feel so lost right now. Unhinged, untethered and drifting. I know I'm supposed to trust in the process. I'm a control freak--I can't just trust in anything, and everything feels amplified--even the good things. This is the first time in my life I have ever said "I am in crisis" and I am--without trumping it up for attention. I am in crisis, and this therapist is helping me and it's too much for me. I already tried to quit therapy after our double-session on Thursday--I walked out of there feeling so good that I had to quit. I sent her an email that night--full of emotional turmoil and confused feelings--and I was probably all burned up with transference and I can't even deal with it. I don't know if I should tell her these things or not. Three sessions. I feel ridiculous.
 
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Breathe. The opportunity to work toward healing with a person who inspires hope and light and safety can be really scary. Nothing you describe is weird or ridiculous. It will just take time and patience and gentle self-compassion for your system to adjust to this new possibility. We all find our teachers when we are ready. Perhaps you have found one of yours. Namaste.
 
Thank you so much for that reply--and you're right. Breathe. Slow down. Trust process. I have this great ability to really get myself amped up emotionally over things that I perceive as being "right or wrong." Maybe there is no "right or wrong" to how I feel and it's really about just feeling right now and building trust and being optimistic with the hope that has been offered instead of being paranoid that the hope is being served in dirty spoon. I will breathe. Thank you.
 
I have this great ability to really get myself amped up emotionally over things that I perceive as being "right or wrong." Maybe there is no "right or wrong" to how I feel
I can completely relate to that. You're outlook that there is no right or wrong to how you feel is a good one. Taking a moment to breathe and just sit with all that is going on is a good idea. Just breathe. Then, notice that you have hope in a therapist being able to help you. And that can be scary, but you can try to accept that and move forward. A good therapist can truly help you and it sounds like you may have found one at a really necessary time in your life. I would keep going and keep reminding yourself to breathe and to take things one at a time.
 
Thank you, and I'm glad you understand that crazy-making ability to really get internally amped over whether or not FEELINGS are right. I guess when you have been living with a whole set of coping skills that you made with scotch tape and bailing wire, you don't have much to tap into and I didn't know how badly off I was until I saw how good it felt to think I could get better and it sort of scared me, like you said. Scared. And I'm scared that I instantly feel so connected to this therapist--as though I need her so badly--and those are uncomfortable feelings, too. Maybe I will just roll into her office next week and say hey, I need to talk about transference. And fear. Let's get through those two things and then maybe we can figure out how I can navigate my world without hurting myself or someone else. Would that be weird to just lay it out there in session 4? I'd rather let it get weird right away and work through it than be this spun out and obsessed about my feelings only to feel rejected and misunderstood down the road.
 
...generally, I have found that doing what i am irrationally terrified to do is good for me.
So, yeah, talk about it with her.

...another plan of attack: use this site, use in-real-life support groups as well. That way she's not your ONLY connection to getting better, right?
Which is as is should be.

The fact is? Even the most awesome therapist ever can only be a tool for you to get yourself better. The work is still yours to do. It should not just be done in therapy sessions, it's something you work on all the time.

It's your drive to become healthy you're seeing mirrored in her, methinks. I'm glad it's such a powerful thing. Keep going.:)
 
Maybe I will just roll into her office next week and say hey, I need to talk about transference. And fear. Let's get through those two things and then maybe we can figure out how I can navigate my world without hurting myself or someone else. Would that be weird to just lay it out there in session 4?
Probably wouldn't be weird and it's honest feelings and concerns you have so they can be important. I felt an instant connection to my therapist, but I couldn't talk to her about anything important for quite some time (but that's a whole other story). I think if you can talk to her about all that you are feeling- the fear, the concern about transference, the hope, etc., than you'll still be going in the right direction.
 
@Stickler, yes all the way around. Great advice. I completely understand what you're saying in terms of finding other means of support and validation--and maybe that's what it is, too. I know for myself that I have disconnected from others, withdrawn and gone into hiding for a long time now, and it's probably my habit--find ONE comfortable source and MINE it for all it's worth . . . That's what I have done with relationships in general--you love me so much that it's ALL I need--I don't even have to love myself, so I won't . . . What is happening is maybe that this is where I learn to love myself and help myself, and I have to learn that healing will come from within--not from some divine external force--I need that external force to hold my hand--not hold me up. That's what I have to remember. It's so easy to forget. So, yes, part of my strategy for getting healthy is that no matter how uncomfortable it is, I will stay at my sister's for the rest of the month and not go home until I get some coping skills and more therapy, and maybe some stabilizing medication--and my wife gets some, too. And I need to do things like go out to coffee with a friend--reach out--and not think that my therapist is the only life raft in the ocean I got dumped into a long time ago when I was too young to know the difference between water and land. Thank you so much for your kind advice and direction. I hear ya.
 
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