Meadowsweet
Diamond Member
I've been with this therapist for a few moths now. The positive effects are that I feel more confident with having my own thoughts and opinions. I feel less dissociated at work and am able to recognise that I am the same person who goes to therapy while I'm there (I used to completely shut it out for work). Also, I have one friend, still only online, but I've handled the challenges that friendship brings well, and we're still friends.
But in therapy I still find incredibly difficult to talk in detail about trauma. I want to talk about it, but I feel uncomfortable doing that. I've been trying to work out why.
One problem is that there is no structure or forward planning to the sessions. I get in, therapist says, how was your week, and sort of leaves it up to me to talk about whatever. Or she will ask questions about the lighter stuff (relationship with my mother etc) and we end up talking about that, when I've gone there wanting to get trauma out.
She says this is my time to talk about whatever I want. I've never been allowed to talk about emotion, so this free for all type of session, is a bit like opening the door for an animal born in captivity, and expecting it to know how to be a wild animal. In life I look at what other people are doing, I look for indications of how I'm meant to be in situations, of what is considered normal, right or wrong and what it is safe to be like.
I know in therapy I'm allowed to talk about trauma, but in what words? can I go into detail - re-live it? How do I start? With my last therapist we did a re-living session, where she helped me ground, then I closed my eyes and went through a trauma. She'd suggested doing it the week before, so I knew what was going to happen, then we prepared with grounding and then I talked. Somebody asking me how my week was doesn't give me any indication that it's ok to go from that into talking about something traumatic in any detail.
Then, because I was struggling I wrote down 2 traumatic memories for her to read. She read them and said we would talk about the easier one, and do the more difficult one another day. So that indicates to me that the more difficult one is too difficult. She also has a thing about my nervous laugh, she asks me if I find it funny. I've explained that it's a nervous laugh, but she still asks and I'm starting to feel very self-concious about it. It's an inappropriate expression of feelings, but it is me expressing my feelings.And her question indicates that I'm doing it wrong. But this is a place I NEED to feel comfortable expressing feelings without criticism.
On top of this, because of work commitments that I can't get out of, I can't go to therapy weekly. So last week she started off by asking me what I wanted out of therapy. I told her that I would like to talk in more detail about trauma. She responded by challenging me and saying well why don't you do that, now. So I did, and it was a relief to be able to. But at the end of the session, she brought up that she didn't think the limited number of sessions was going to work - that she would have a think, and she wanted me to have a think about 'where we go from here'.
It really is my worst fear - that I will talk about trauma and be rejected. I've worked through this a bit, and realise that she isn't rejecting me because of what I talked about. But I've lost trust, because her timing showed such a lack of understanding for the issues that I come to her to help me with.
If I was in a country where I could choose therapy, I would leave and find something that suits my needs better. But there isn't anywhere I can go from here. It's this or nothing. For next time we meet, I thought I would put what I've written here in a letter for her.
I'm terrified that she will either say it's not going to work and get rid of me, or that she will tut and put herself out going to the trouble of bothering with me. I need to trust and feel comfortable with my therapist, but that trust is broken right now, and I feel over-reliant on her words and actions to prove that she can be trusted.
I don't know how to handle this situation. Any advice please.
But in therapy I still find incredibly difficult to talk in detail about trauma. I want to talk about it, but I feel uncomfortable doing that. I've been trying to work out why.
One problem is that there is no structure or forward planning to the sessions. I get in, therapist says, how was your week, and sort of leaves it up to me to talk about whatever. Or she will ask questions about the lighter stuff (relationship with my mother etc) and we end up talking about that, when I've gone there wanting to get trauma out.
She says this is my time to talk about whatever I want. I've never been allowed to talk about emotion, so this free for all type of session, is a bit like opening the door for an animal born in captivity, and expecting it to know how to be a wild animal. In life I look at what other people are doing, I look for indications of how I'm meant to be in situations, of what is considered normal, right or wrong and what it is safe to be like.
I know in therapy I'm allowed to talk about trauma, but in what words? can I go into detail - re-live it? How do I start? With my last therapist we did a re-living session, where she helped me ground, then I closed my eyes and went through a trauma. She'd suggested doing it the week before, so I knew what was going to happen, then we prepared with grounding and then I talked. Somebody asking me how my week was doesn't give me any indication that it's ok to go from that into talking about something traumatic in any detail.
Then, because I was struggling I wrote down 2 traumatic memories for her to read. She read them and said we would talk about the easier one, and do the more difficult one another day. So that indicates to me that the more difficult one is too difficult. She also has a thing about my nervous laugh, she asks me if I find it funny. I've explained that it's a nervous laugh, but she still asks and I'm starting to feel very self-concious about it. It's an inappropriate expression of feelings, but it is me expressing my feelings.And her question indicates that I'm doing it wrong. But this is a place I NEED to feel comfortable expressing feelings without criticism.
On top of this, because of work commitments that I can't get out of, I can't go to therapy weekly. So last week she started off by asking me what I wanted out of therapy. I told her that I would like to talk in more detail about trauma. She responded by challenging me and saying well why don't you do that, now. So I did, and it was a relief to be able to. But at the end of the session, she brought up that she didn't think the limited number of sessions was going to work - that she would have a think, and she wanted me to have a think about 'where we go from here'.
It really is my worst fear - that I will talk about trauma and be rejected. I've worked through this a bit, and realise that she isn't rejecting me because of what I talked about. But I've lost trust, because her timing showed such a lack of understanding for the issues that I come to her to help me with.
If I was in a country where I could choose therapy, I would leave and find something that suits my needs better. But there isn't anywhere I can go from here. It's this or nothing. For next time we meet, I thought I would put what I've written here in a letter for her.
I'm terrified that she will either say it's not going to work and get rid of me, or that she will tut and put herself out going to the trouble of bothering with me. I need to trust and feel comfortable with my therapist, but that trust is broken right now, and I feel over-reliant on her words and actions to prove that she can be trusted.
I don't know how to handle this situation. Any advice please.