This makes the silence and waiting for you really make sense. Horse people learn to wait for horses to come to them.
Been thinking about this. I'm no horse whisperer, but my understanding of the purpose of this activity is to establish with the horse that you're the leader and the horse is part of your herd. It's a submissive act by the horse to approach you in a non-aggressive way, communicating that he acknowledges you're in charge. Horses, as herd animals, find safety in being submissive to a strong leader.
How is this beneficial for a trauma client? Especially a long-term, developmental trauma client with deeply pervasive trust issues? And even more so, one with many years of psychological abuse from three, very intelligent manipulators (and one not-so-intelligent manipulator)? My step-dad would pull crap like this all the time, just to see what effect it would have on me or on someone else. He would talk about how he was going to try this or that...not for the other person's well-being, but for the purpose of amusing himself with their discomfort and psychological pain.
Mental trickery, out-of-the-box psycho-techniques, emotional manipulation...it's just not going to work on me (even though I soo wish it could be that easy to get help). I've got too many, well-developed defenses against that stuff. The two equine people (the equine T and the horse specialist) only know very little about that part of my background, but they do know it's an issue for me. The primary T knows more, although not everything (not that I've purposely withheld information...just that it's hard to know which parts are important and which are just whining and complaining). Maybe they didn't intend for this to turn into a standoff...maybe they had much more constructive ambitions, I don't know. But what I really don't understand is why they let it go on for the full hour??
Even if you just count the first half-hour, to the point when one of them asked me what was happening for the day...I
want to be responsive to them. I've told them that. If I can't respond, it's because I need help. The person who checked in at the halfway point was sitting behind me, and it was the horse specialist, not one of the Ts sitting in front of me. I like her and all...but she
never leads the conversation. That was another unexpected change yesterday. It was just too many obstacles to achieve communication without more help from their side.
I don't think they would have set off any
more triggers if they had given me a huge, tight, long group-hug, with caressing, and not caring where they touched. It's almost like...let's figure out the
worst things we can do, and do them, and see what happens. Maybe group hugs and initiating conversations at the very beginning of a session are good goals to work toward, but just like in education, you have to scaffold a person
toward the goal, not throw them in the pit and see if they survive.
I don't necessarily "feel better" when I leave a therapy session, although sometimes I do. I DO feel like we're accomplishing something, even if it seems to be slow.
I would love to walk out feeling like I've made progress. Maybe it's me, maybe it's a bad match, maybe it's them, maybe it's their approach, I don't know. As it is, it usually takes hours if not days of working
on my own to make progress after a session. It's like I have to do my own self-therapy in order to cope with the therapy...and in that process, I make progress. Is that how it's supposed to be?
Thing is, I like them, all three of them. And I like being around the horses. But what I
need is therapy that
works for me. I guess I just keep hoping we'll figure that out together.