I will come back to this again when I'm thinking a bit straighter, but it's too much text for me to take in today, but just wanted to get a couple of thoughts down, about what we were speaking about on the other thread, while I can actually remember them ;)
What seems to be going on with you and trying to sort out therapy, seems to be quite similar to something I'm experiencing at the moment (and have been for a while) with sorting out paperwork for certain things, or dealing with them. For example, I get a utility bill in which needs paying, I fully intend to pay it, there's no reason why I can't pay it, I don't have a query about it, I have enough money to cover it, but I can't actually physically get round to paying it. I can write out a 'to do' list and include it on it, leave a note to remind myself. It doesn't get paid. I get a reminder. Same thing happens, a lot of the time it's not until they are sending the threatening to pass it on to debt collection that I can finally manage to do it and even then I don't always manage to do it straight away. And I'm not entirely sure what happens in the gap between me fully intending to go online, or to get the chequebook out to pay it, and my not paying it, but it doesn't happen, and I don't think it is as simple as just forgetting (although my memory is pretty terrible at times) because it happens again and again. And a lot of the time I won't even open the letters. Now for me, I think this links in with the sheer bulk of papers that I had to go through when my dad died and to do with the amount of paperwork and dealing with 'official' type stuff to sort out the estate after (which took a couple of years because of the mess he left everything in) that I think I am dissociating from it in some way either because I am finding it triggering or I am having some kind of phobic reaction to it now - not sure which, possibly a bit of both.
Anyway, back to you and therapy, and I'm trying to remember back to how I dealt with getting myself sorted with that in the end because I think I probably had a bit of this going on with that as well, but I think what it came down to in the end, and what it comes down to with the above problem, is urgency.
I haven't told anyone about the paperwork thing, or how bad things really are mental health wise at the moment, and I think I get to the point where I realise that if I don't do something about it then, extreme example, but I get to thinking well what would happen if I don't pay and end up having to go to court over something stupid like this when I could have paid it all along and then people would find out..... etc etc and the need to deal with it to carry on pretending to the world at large that everything is fine becomes more urgent than the need to avoid dealing with things and so takes priority.
I think with therapy, it also came down to urgency in a way for me, although not in quite the same way. I was repeatedly trying to get help through the NHS and coming up against so many problems and barriers and cock ups and so much misunderstanding of what I needed or was asking for. But I have quite a lot of mistrust around doctors and the medical profession anyway and because of that I was scared of really explaining fully how bad things were because of what they might do about it, that I think I realised I was going to need to sort it out for myself. But at the same time absolutely petrified of the idea of therapy or talking to anyone about any of it. But the urgency of needing to sort it out, perhaps a little ironically, for the sake of people not knowing how bad things were, trumped the urgency of not entertaining the idea of talking about it to anyone <<<and yes I do realise how skewed that is!
It's a bit lot more complicated than I'll put down here, but the urgency for me, basically mostly came out of my being a single parent and parenting always trumping anything else for me. I need to be here for my son and need to be as together and present for him as I can be. So the need to sort myself out was/is probably more for my son than for me, although I think I am slowly coming round to doing it for me as well now.
I am wondering if you can identify such an urgent need in yourself for therapy, or whether the 'need' to put it off is still stronger in you than the 'need' to take it on? That at some level you are allowing yourself to put it off because even though it's hard to live without therapy, it's still not as hard as living with therapy (the 'it gets worse before it gets better and what if even if I do therapy it still doesn't get better' stuff)
You may already have done this, but I'm wondering if writing out a brutally honest list of pros and cons about therapy and about where you envisage your life heading with and without it might help.
What I do think is promising from reading your posts recently is that you are identifying that you are gaining strengths in different areas through persistence and can see a point where you will be able to do this too. And, as I think I said in the other thread, there are lot of people here on this site I think who believe you will get there and believe in you.
I'm not sure if any of this helps, and that I'm not missing the mark by miles - as I said I will come back and read this thread more thoroughly at some point, but I think that focussing more on what is stopping you getting a therapist is probably key to getting a therapist.
Just one other thought, but I'm wondering about past experiences with therapists and how that might be affecting how willing you are to try again? I am pretty sure that one of the reasons that I am so stubbornly sticking with my therapist, even though it has been, and is, such a difficult journey, is that if I don't, then I don't think I would be able to make myself try again with therapy for a long time.