• We are a multilingual website again. Read the notice about this.
  • Understand AI use at MyPTSD: all AI use is explained in our AI help page. AI use is by choice here. It exists if you want it, but does nothing unless you choose to use it.

Therapists Who Won't Talk About What's Bothering You

Status
Not open for further replies.
I wasn't willing to pay a lot of money to figure out what her issue was. That's the thing about therapy, it's expensive. I can't pay to find out why other people are shutting me down.
So having played the "Wait until you stabilize," game and then took the other route--basically, "Hurry up and process this, so that I can stabilize," would you say the latter is definitely better?

For myself, the only times during my last stint in therapy where I felt like I was getting somewhere towards stabilizing was after real processing was done. The sessions where she lingered on small talk, I left frustrated and swearing to myself that I would fire her next time.
 
Last edited:
Hoo boy. I won't say "definitely better". It's fraught.

I am not a stable person. I am getting slowly more stable... but not at the rate that outside observers wish. It is not ok for me to pay for services at a rate someone else feels like delivering them. I'm asking for what I need, how I need it, when I need it. Don't bleeping tell me that you think I don't need it.

So... it's fraught. Things are improving... my life is still very rocky.
 
I think the one I saw was simply scared and not experienced enough. I could see she had issues but I was stupid enough to think that I could work with her despite what I was seeing and despite my mind, body and soul were telling me to get the hell out of there. I thought maybe this was a chance to challenge my own 'comfort zone' and learn to trust someone finally.

Some nasty stuff happened that red-flagged me early but she consistently shut me down the entire time. She never explained why. She never talked about stabilizing but when I would approach telling her about a specific trauma she would tell me she didn't know what to do with what I had just told her. And then uncomfortable and unusual silence.

My attempts at disclosures would just sit there and we never went back to any of it - she never commented, never offered any thoughts, except her not knowing what to do with it. This happened enough times that after I thought about the pattern I did eventually say to her that it seemed to me as though I scared the crap out of her by trying to tell her things.

She stumbled over her words when I asked her directly what the deal was - she mumbled that it seemed like I had told her all my traumas already and that there probably wasn't much left to tell. I wasn't shocked by what she said, but I was terribly saddened. I had barely been able to talk about anything and I knew it was over then - I wouldn't be able to 'unsee' how bad this was.

I never would have expected I would have been so affected by a situation like this I guess because I tend to stay fairly guarded my entire life but I found the experience intensely retraumatizing, destabilizing, and humbling.

I haven't been able to consider finding someone new to work with. The thought of it makes me sick and I never felt that way before I saw this past one. The whole retraumatizing thing with her kind of disrupted me for a while there. I still feel it and that was almost a year ago now that I ended therapy with her.
 
@City Slicker, that's the whole thing--this idea that they have to "do something" with what you tell them. Such as dice it into cubes and make a stir fry with it? Who told them they had to do anything with it? That must be what the happy talk from my old therapist was all about--doing something with it. No thanks. I'm not looking for a ping pong game. It would be infinitely better if they would just shut up and listen to what we say. Was that too hard for her?

I hope to God you weren't paying her out of pocket. Was she a trauma specialist?
 
Hey @Dana1010 - Yes I was paying out of pocket - $160 per session (it went up while I was seeing her - I should have taken that as an early sign lol!!).

No, she wasn't a trauma specialist.
The funny thing was when I went to see her I didn't know I had PTSD, I didn't know the scope of PTSD so I had no idea I should have been looking for a trauma specialist. Early into our work she told me I had PTSD so I set about researching and studying everything I could find about it. I asked her if she was able to deal with ptsd and she said she was. I see differently now.

I know what you mean about the ping pong - she needn't have 'done' anything. But by not being able to reach out and connect in any way, by not being able to even make a simple empathic comment to me to acknowledge what I was saying, or to 'witness' in some way, her inability to facilitate a shared alliance created not just irreparable ruptures in our relationship but it lead to a flood of all kinds of stuff I am just now feeling able to start breathing through.

She did say that she had no idea the extent of the 'trauma' I had experienced when I made that first phone call to her. lol, neither did I.

Then she said her 'career trajectory' was taking her on a different path. It was all really loaded so that ultimately I felt I was shameful and wrong - and I hated that I had given her this kind of power.

She still wouldn't say she was out of her depth - In the end I felt like a monster, - wanting something from her, expecting something from her that she couldn't give - and I felt cruel, like a bully for even wanting what she couldn't give. It replicated the kind of kind of childhood I had - wanting a mother to just pay attention long enough to stop the horrible things that were happening - so I thought I would make use of what I could learn from the experience.

In the end the 'corrective experience' came from me in that I was the one that ultimately was there for me when I felt no-one else was or could be.
 
Hmmm. I am certainly glad that I have such an excellent therapist. She is very good at dealing with PTSD. I think that is in part because her own husband has PTSD.

One thing to remember is that it only takes a slight pause in the word therapist to create the rapist, especially when your own money is involved.
 
One thing to remember is that it only takes a slight pause in the word therapist to create the rapist, especially when your own money is involved.
Right, because that's appropriate helpful, or even some what accurate.... and in a 4 month old thread.
Some therapists are awful. Sometimes we just aren't seeing ones who are skilled in what it is we need (trauma IS a specialization after all), and yes depending on where you live the cost can be prohibitive. It can also be more than a bit frustrating trying to cover out of pocket fees on your own, and then discovering the therapist you were seeing wasn't what you needed or was generally sub-par.

Typically though I'd personally consider conflating someone who is in my employ taking an agreed upon fee for a service that can be terminated at will with a rapist as rather crude and unnecessary. Maybe that's just me though.
 
It may be four months old but it's near the top of the list the forum provides in my weekly e-mail. I thought it was a somewhat appropriate joke, somewhat.... At least here the expense is covered by the government. They even have very good people available too, at least in the therapy department. I can't say the same for certain other areas of psychiatric treatment I recently was treated to and by, against my will. They cranked up my PTSD to maximum and the word rapist isn't nearly strong enough.

I am currently considering suing the government for more money than they have. I don't want the money, I want it to hit the supreme court and I have enough to get lawyers to do that. I don't want to ever see anybody else subjected to the abuse that dissolved my ex wife and my marriage of 44 years.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Donation drives

2026 Donation Goal

Goal
$1,800.00
Earned
$910.00
This donation drive ends in
0 hours, 0 minutes, 0 seconds
  50.6%

Trending content

Featured content

Back
Top Bottom