Third session is complete. I avoided completing three stuck point worksheets until 1 hour prior to this session. Completing these right before put me into a flashback as I went into the session, and I wanted to rage. This actually turned out to be very helpful, even though it was uncomfortable.
A few minutes after I walked in, the therapist told me "Your interaction with me seems highly controlled on your end", which is 100% true. When I am in a flashback, I often dissociate, am expressionless and on high alert to make sure I am IN CONTROL and SAFE. This is typical most of the time for me, but is on another level during a flashback. So, I am going through the motions and following the procedure of CPT, but I am not emotionally invested in the process yet or in the relationship with my therapist. In the past, this type of behavior has allowed me to fool both the therapist and myself into thinking I am better...simply because I have "checked all the boxes". This is a self-defeating behavior of mine because through avoidant coping behaviors, I hide myself from the rest of the world and isolate myself. I struggle to connect with others out of fear for my own safety which is a new realization for me, though seems obvious looking back. That is why having a trained trauma specialist witness my flashback behavior and then work with me to dissect and understand it was very helpful. Basically, when I hide from others, I also hide from myself because I identify more closely with my shell persona, and dissociate from what is really going on inside me. In doing so, I have lost touch with reality and my own identity which has caused me a lot of confusion and struggle. I'm always "reinventing" myself and using that as a vehicle to obsess/avoid. It's maddening to have a shifting identity as an adult.
Shortly after this, the Dr. asked me to participate in an experiment. He asked me how safe I felt in the room with him on a scale of 1-100. I said 50, and that 50 is typical for me most of the time. He then asked if I would be willing to close my eyes, and I immediately said "No", but I also asked specific questions about what he wanted that for and for how long. After I got all the details, I became willing to try to close my eyes in the room alone with him and the door closed for 30 seconds. So of course I close my eyes, but my ears are WIDE OPEN because I am on high alert now. I hear movement that is not mine, and in my mind I have this picture of him getting up and approaching me from across the table. I had a thought something like "This motherf*cker is getting up to get you. You can't trust him, be ready to fight!". My instinct was to jump up and raise my fists, but I just opened my eyes instead. Turned out he hadn't left his seat and only moved his foot slightly. I made it 12 seconds. He then asked me "did what you thought might happen actually happen"? This is the nature of the type of questioning used in CPT. Of course it didn't, and most of me knew that it wouldn't, but I can not think my way out of the adrenalized fear response. I suppose that is the nature of PTSD.
The work out of the CPT manual in this third session consisted of reading and discussing the stuck point worksheets. During discussion of the stuck point beliefs, the Dr. engaged in the questioning that challenges those beliefs and guide the patient (me) to come up with evidence against them or a new way of thinking. I do find this to be very helpful because it helps me to identify what my distorted thinking is, AND to logically think of a new way of thinking about the world and how I fit in it. I also find this very challenging because I can logically think that these beliefs don't make any sense. In my mind I know that the beliefs are self-destructive and harmful. The problem is that these are emotional beliefs that I have tucked away for decades. My heart and mind are in two separate places and moving in different directions. It's difficult for one to access the other, so part of this work for me is connecting the two and untangling the decades of denial I used to cope with my situation.
Over the next week, I will be writing an account of the worst trauma I experienced and reading it out loud every day. If I can not make it through this writing in one sitting, I am supposed to draw a line where I stop each time, then pick back up when I can. The Dr. mentioned that this will likely put me into another flashback and that I should expect that. As a side note, I find that MMJ helps a lot with flashbacks. I am also to continue working stuck points, but in the context of present day manifestations. For example, "All the people in the grocery store are watching me. If they get too close, I might need to attack".