I'm not sure I've understood correctly. Is it an abusive/traumatic experience that you're wondering about telling the detail of? Or is it other experiences that you chose but which were influenced by your history?
If it's the first one, I don't know what would be true for other people but my experience has been that it was healing to talk about some of the details. If the touch was traumatic, then I tried to say what it was. I did this mostly by reading out bits from my journal, dream diary or something I'd written for the session. It was incredibly difficult, and I sometimes felt overcome with shame afterwards, but that was something I needed to look at and realise that it wasn't my shame to own. I had to do a lot of talking with my T before and afterwards about my fears of her judging me or thinking I was disgusting.
I had to pace myself as well. It's hard to know when it's right to talk and when it would be too much. All I could do was try a tiny bit then see how I felt.
If it was a forced or coerced experience I personally wouldn't call it sex because it isn't shared intimacy or physical pleasure. I say that because I think talking about that is very different from talking about sex, and I wonder if seeing it as different could help. I'm actually very open talking about sex with friends or T, but I find it awful to talk about trauma experiences or how they later influenced me. For me, it's things like being shamed and controlled that are so hard to disclose and that's abuse or assault, not sex. It's because I want to get through the feelings of having been powerless and degraded that I need to discuss it.
Do you think it would help if you had a clear idea of what you'd want to achieve by talking about it rather than why your therapist might want you to?
If it's the first one, I don't know what would be true for other people but my experience has been that it was healing to talk about some of the details. If the touch was traumatic, then I tried to say what it was. I did this mostly by reading out bits from my journal, dream diary or something I'd written for the session. It was incredibly difficult, and I sometimes felt overcome with shame afterwards, but that was something I needed to look at and realise that it wasn't my shame to own. I had to do a lot of talking with my T before and afterwards about my fears of her judging me or thinking I was disgusting.
I had to pace myself as well. It's hard to know when it's right to talk and when it would be too much. All I could do was try a tiny bit then see how I felt.
If it was a forced or coerced experience I personally wouldn't call it sex because it isn't shared intimacy or physical pleasure. I say that because I think talking about that is very different from talking about sex, and I wonder if seeing it as different could help. I'm actually very open talking about sex with friends or T, but I find it awful to talk about trauma experiences or how they later influenced me. For me, it's things like being shamed and controlled that are so hard to disclose and that's abuse or assault, not sex. It's because I want to get through the feelings of having been powerless and degraded that I need to discuss it.
Do you think it would help if you had a clear idea of what you'd want to achieve by talking about it rather than why your therapist might want you to?