Most therapists wouldn’t jump into hypnosis and/or EMDR while someone already has unmanaged dissociation. It’s contra-indicated for EMDR to dive right in without stabilizing first and the client demonstrating an ability to ground out of really bad spots.
And yet she actually did dive right in, despite those factors -
hypnotherapy where she was practically yelling at me to amplify the negative emotion tied to memories so I don't really feel all that safe with her anymore.
She was pushing to go deeper. (I wouldn’t have liked the pushy style either.)
some parts that are too decompensated for the pace that I want.
Yeah. I rather rip off the band aid and be done with it, but had to learn to pace or I only end up having to work longer at it.
The work you want to do is likely to lead to some spikes in symptoms. Going through a divorce with symptoms off the charts isn’t going to help your healing and will magnify the divorce.
Right now, you are holding significant information back like a possible divorce, holding back information about work you want to do in therapy, holding back what leads you to feel unsafe with her, while also experiencing symptoms that are not well managed...
Your focus is that she is slowing your pace down. Maybe she is indeed going too slow.
But I think you holding back information and the unmanaged symptoms are also a big part of what is slowing you down.
Talking with her and developing the type of relationship where you can tell her what’s going well, and what isn’t going well, is part of the work. It’s not a tangent away from the work. It’s part of the work itself.
You are doing the work to heal when you tell her what you need, when you tell her of pending major life changes that could impact the work, and you area especially doing the work to heal when you tell her things like “let’s stop, this doesn’t feel safe to me right now.”
That’s part of healing.