I agree with you, too, Thinkbig, anybody would be resistant, which was my excuse, although after a year plus of therapy with this woman, I personally had to take what she had to say about my resistance to heart and assess how much I wanted to get down to business in therapy,
Damn, it took me a whole year just to tell my therapist why i was really there and then I only said I was abused "badly" and was raised in a "weird religon" and its all i would say at that point.
I wasnt resistant really, I was terrified and very well "programmed" so i was taught to be resistant. I have no clue how my therapist has put up with me for 7 yrs but has has said many times that he can tell that I want to get better badly so maybe thats why he hasnt 'dumped' me yet.
I have hit spots of resistance here and there thoughout therapy and usually neither of us say it, he will push at me to get through it or work around it or a lot of times he gives me homework because i have to sit with something or read something many times over and we re-visit it next week.
So I think we all hit resistance throughout the entire therapy process to a point...but its all due to the same thing, i think, protection.
I do agree that the therapist needs to give someone a chance to gain trust before saying something like that. I think being told that soon into therapy would make you more defenisve and more resistant so def counterproductive!
As an example, they tell you to journal and you say no or ask you to meditate or take 5 minutes to sit quietly everyday and you say no and basically reject every tool they give you.
It doesnt have to be "no". You can resist the entire process, resist telling them anything, resistant moving without saying the word no. You can make up all the excuses in the world without the word no and it can still be resistance.
I think 5 yrs in and after going back and forth like a court room, having to "defend my position" (the cult beliefs) and in the end, ending up in a circle and crossing my arms and saying "I know its not rational but I believe it anyway" is major resistance but my therapist said "well that shows how good at programming you they were" and spent more time at cracking that programming...or teaching me how.
But you can resistance everything without a straight up no. And it doesnt even have to be rejecting every tool. A person can resist the process but journal or meditate...its about the process. Are you going through it or are you resisting it? If you journal or meditate or anything while resisting the process, you arent gonna go anywhere.
Its all about being willing to change; changing the way you think, the way you believe, the way you handle things, the way you cope etc...thats the process.
BUT when first starting with a therapist, resistance is to be expected and that is douchy on the therapist's side because that is there for protection and they should know that!
@Thinkbig you're gut is telling you right and i agree, trust it.
If you like the therapist thus far other than this then maybe ask for clarification and id even say "well resistance is normal until trust can be built due to protection" or some form of that. If they seem to be wanting you to just jump over your normal defenses and right into the process then id, at that point, would find a new therapist.
In my opinion, though, its a bit early to go searching for a new therapist over an unclarified phrase. Id give them at least a chance to clarify. Thats just my opinion.