I had my second session with my counsellor yesterday. In my first, I gave her the full outline of what had happened to me - I was bullied in my workplace and received little support at home, leading to a complete breakdown... After that session I felt better than I had for years - a feeling that lasted a few days. When the feeling ended, I crashed heavily.
I have received counselling therapy quite a lot over the years and found I am able to talk quite openly, able to explore feelings and even revisit them, all to great effect. I have even received counselling in the last couple of years. It proved useful, but in the end I realised I was not being treated for what was wrong with me. I was being treated for depression, but not PTSD.
Yesterday, my therapist used EMDR for the first time. I was open to it, had read around the subject, had satisfied myself that it was legitimate and potentially efficacious. When it began, I felt a kind of reluctance - which I reported to the therapist. Nonetheless, we persisted.
She asked me to focus on the moment I first realised I was being got at. As I was trying to allow the feelings to flow what I had in my head was a reluctance to accept the legitimacy of it all. At first, I thought it was just the treatment, then I realised it was everything - it was, in fact, a major ingredient at the time I first perceived my situation. It continues to be a major force in my head - maybe a major block to me getting better. It is as if it is the block that stops me from feeling my own feelings.
I guess it has something to with shame - I'm ashamed that I allowed someone to bully me. I'm ashamed that I didn't stand up for myself when my wife refused to accept that all I could do was walk off the job.
I guess it has something to with pride.
And if all that was true then, what is different now? Now that I am not working... Now that my 10 year old son struggles with that... And with the fact that I don't live with him any more? And when I go to see him and his sister, which is often, in his mothers home I am made to feel like a ghost by their mother... Or, if she sees me, it is to give me a hard time about something...
But, it is a huge realisation that - however much I can express my feelings now, I couldn't then - when the bullying had started: it was one of the things the bully used to control me. And ultimately, somewhere, tied up in that little package of self-loathing lies a key that I have to believe will open a door to a future for me - a future that I simply cannot see right now