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Therapist Scolded Me

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I've been at my job for 5 years. There are various reasons I need a new job, and I have a lot of work to do in terms of communication and work relationships. I'm hearing a lot of you say similar things about what message she was trying to get across, and I'm not blind or in objection to that at all. What I'm bothered by is her delivery and the contradictions in it, and the fact that she is a trauma therapist, knows my history and my fears of confrontation, yet she came at me so intensely that I was triggered and it just seemed reckless and inconsiderate. It literally scared me. I'm not just looking at her delivery, i have really tried just looking at the message. But when it comes down to it, I felt threatened and scared and unsafe, and I just don't know if I will be comfortable with her or be able to trust her.
 
Totally agree this should be addressed. Can you email her so that you can address this or do you feel you can't move forward with her?
 
Sometimes our T will comfront us on our bullshit, and because we aren't used to having someone tell us the truth it can feel very confronting, and scarey, and we over react.

My previous T confronted me on my avoidance of life, and I was very offended and perhaps took out of context the manner in which he delivered. Would he have got my attention if he hadn't have been so in my face, probably not, because everything he tried to get me to see the truth I was dismissing.

When we refuse to listen to the truth, and refuse to be willing to change our disfunctional habits, then sometimes it takes shock tactics. If you want therapy to change yourself then sometimes we need to except that we won't always like what we hear, or want to change what we are doing, even if it is in our best interest.

It's important to trust our therapist, her intentions were well meant, if you looked at the message and took away your emotional reaction to it, would you still believe she didn't deserve your trust.
 
I don't perceive myself as misinterpreting the volume, tone, intensity and anger in the delivery of my therapist's message to me. I can easily compare how she spoke to me to the way my mom would "fly off the handle" if I did something bad aa a kid. No one else has ever spoken to me like that except my mom, and it was scary for me to experience that in a setting that is supposed to feel safe.
 
I felt threatened and scared and unsafe
Those are unpleasant feelings and most people want to avoid them, no doubt about it. But, WERE you threatened and/or unsafe?

If you know of a warm and fuzzy way for her to make her point, by all means tell her that, It's only been 3 months, SHE has to learn how to communicate things to you as a part of this process. For me, anyway, therapy hasn't been a comfortable process and my therapist (who I like, respect, and trust about as much as I trust anyone) is one of the scariest people I know. Not saying that's "right" just saying it's one experience. Dealing with people is an uncomfortable process. "Therapy" is a setting where you can work on that with a knowledgeable party who can understand what's happening when things go less than perfectly. And help you understand it too. Myself, I don't see it as a setting where nothing ever goes "wrong". I see it more as a controlled setting for when things DO go wrong.

The person you're working with has to know what they're doing. They have to respect you and appreciate what you're dealing with. I'm not sure you always have to be comfortable, In fact, for myself, if I was always comfortable it would mean I was avoiding things forever. You might need a different approach though. The combination of personalities is important and you DO have to be able to trust your therapist, especially when you find something difficult.
 
But she gave me no tools to move forward other than telling me to stop. If this negative talk is stemming from early childhood, I can't imagine it's much different than trying to kick a drug habit...I'm pretty sure there is much more to it than saying "stop doing drugs."
Out of everything you've said, I think this is the biggest issue. If she isn't giving you a process you can use in order to challenge those negative thoughts, then she might not have the tools herself that are needed to help you.

In some cases, regarding some things, it can actually be as straightforward as "stop doing that". Not easy, but straightforward. Like @FridayJones was writing about, evaluating your speech habits and combing them for statements that you are not aware you are making. Anything from habitually using "I feel" instead of "I think", to inserting "kind of" into everything (example: "I feel like my therapist isn't helping me, and I kind of want to ask her if she could kind of be more specific about how I can do the things she's talking about." - I know you didn't say that, I'm just using it as an example).

And as @Solara said, being disciplined about catching yourself right when you start to spiral into negatives.

But if you don't know any methods/processes for challenging those negative thoughts, then you will actually just get stuck - dealing with the core beliefs behind those thoughts, those are what stem from early childhood, and those take some working through. She needs to give you tools.

Only thing I've experienced similar: seemingly out of the blue I developed a problem with hitting myself. When I was having intense intrusive memories, I would hit myself, very hard. I had never done that in my life and it was very, very confusing. It took me two weeks to admit it to my therapist, and even then, I did it in the last five minutes of the session. We were early in our relationship, perhaps five months in. When I finally managed to say "I'm hitting myself", his appeared to be very taken aback, his eyes grew wide, and he said (loudly), "Well, you better stop doing that!".

That was not his finest moment as a therapist.

I guess what I'm saying is, they do make mistakes. It wasn't til the next session that I could pull it together enough to tell him how unhelpful his reaction was, and he was glad I brought it up, acknowledged that he was completely caught off guard and that he was sorry for not handling it better. It then turned into a very productive session focusing back on me and getting at the underlying issues causing the hitting behavior. I also learned that the last five minutes is not the time to bring up the thing that I have been wanting to bring up since the beginning of the session. So, the whole exchange was ultimately productive.

I'd recommend (like others have) you talk with her about your experience of what happened. Honestly, if she's good, she will engage in that conversation openly, and she will follow through with giving you a process you can use to address your negative thoughts. And if she's not very good, she will defend herself and have an appearance of frustration and fluster. I would not think of this as a situation where you need it to work with this T because she's your second one and you won't ever find one - she just might not be good enough for what you need. So you go back and look some more. It's pretty normal, that.
 
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