- Admin
- #13
anthony
Founder
You can take that negatively, or you can take that from a therapist viewpoint, being they need to establish goals. Therapy without a goal to end is actually just as dangerous as therapy with a goal that is too short.
There is purpose in your therapists question, because you contract yourself to a time frame in which you are saying, "I am going to improve by x enough that I can walk the path myself without a therapist holding my hand."
That is the idea of an end date. It is unethical to continue longevity of therapy...
Saying that, if the therapist is not astute with complex trauma, then they may not be aware that it may take years of therapy to accomplish societal normalcy... compared to most therapy which is defined on short periods of time. Trauma therapy is vastly complex within itself, hence why most just don't understand it.
There is purpose in your therapists question, because you contract yourself to a time frame in which you are saying, "I am going to improve by x enough that I can walk the path myself without a therapist holding my hand."
That is the idea of an end date. It is unethical to continue longevity of therapy...
Saying that, if the therapist is not astute with complex trauma, then they may not be aware that it may take years of therapy to accomplish societal normalcy... compared to most therapy which is defined on short periods of time. Trauma therapy is vastly complex within itself, hence why most just don't understand it.