You do sound like you're dissociating a lot. The forgetting sounds like dissociation. That's what grounding techniques are for, to keep us from dissociating as well as to keep us from getting overwhelmed. They're also to keep us anchored so we don't get hit by something without realising it. They give us some control over things.
Grounding/coping doesn't just happen, though. It doesn't just happen even when you know about these skills. You have to seriously rehearse them, practise them and keep bringing yourself back to them in various ways.
I've got to be honest and say that you seem very vague when you talk about any kind of coping. I think that's probably dissociation too, but I can't help feeling that you need to push yourself to be more involved with your own recovery. For example:
I'm not sure I understand what CBT skills are. I have been told over and over by people here to read about it and get the work books and I forgot about it.
I'd like to gently challenge you for writing in two threads about possibly switching to CBT when you're not all that clear about what it is. It feels like you're asking others on the forum to do some quite basic research and thinking on your behalf, that you need to be taking responsibility for yourself.
Also, there are loads of discussions here on the forum about grounding, as there are in any book about trauma. I'm puzzled how the idea of grounding techniques seems to be so foreign to you.
This is more than dissociation. There are moments when you haven't forgotten and you don't act in those moments. For example, when you wrote this or wrote about getting a CBT book before, it was in your mind. Why didn't you pause, go over to Amazon and order a book?
I've experienced a lot of dissociation and I know that it's actually comfortable for me to let the vagueness take over. I also know that there are times of more awareness and energy when I'm un-vague enough to take a little more action if I choose to do that.
This may sound tough, but you did start the thread by saying you wanted to get out of your comfort zone. I would suggest that your comfort zone is exploring your feelings of being triggered, anxious and vulnerable but not exploring what you can do about it. It feels like your comfort zone is staying vague about the steps you have to take for recovery. Steps like taking responsibility for having therapy that's appropriate for you.
I think I'm in Psychodynamic now, or depth. It's based on Jung and Freud I believe.
My T just got her license MFT last year. She must know a lot about it
I don't know what MFT is, and I don't know if that means it was her first trauma qualification/license. Whatever it is, it sounds like that's what you see as relevant and that she had only just got it when you started seeing her?
A therapist who has only just got licensed in something is likely to have a high awareness and alertness to seeing it. That doesn't mean she knows how to treat it, a lot of which comes from experience.
If your therapist is letting you wander around with no grounding skills, and telling you to eat well, rest and things will get better, then I have to question how much she knows about. I also have to question why you're not questioning it. Why you aren't clear about what kind of therapy you're having, and working in partnership with your therapist on the approaches you use? This is your therapy, probably one of the most important things you'll ever do in your whole life.
If you think I'm harsh, then you would probably find CBT very harsh if you engaged with it. It's all about challenging, pushing and questioning ourselves. As I've said before, I personally feel that it's too harsh and lacks aspects of understanding and validation. Just as you probably think I am too harsh and lacking understanding and validation right now. Sorry. But I feel I have to say it.