Justmehere
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“What has helped you when this has happened in the past?” which gets paired with “How can I help you today?”
Totally legit question, especially when the therapist is new. I get the point of it. This question annoys the crap out of me and I get anxious whenever it is asked because I have yet to have a single conversation where it goes anywhere productive. With friends and co-workers I’m decent at communication. I get good feedback. But somehow there are a few things in therapy settings that I am not navigating with success.
The is how the conversation tends to go:
A
Therapist: “What has helped you in the past?”
Me: “I don’t know, I’ve never been through this before.” / “I can’t recall.” / “I don’t remember.”
Therapist repeats the question and I repeat some version of this answer, trying to explain I’m really trying to think of something, sometimes resorting to blurting out terrible ways I have tried to cope, only to have the therapist get more irritated... until I’m completely dissociated, or a mess, or apologizing for being an idiot, or I’m angry they won’t stop repeating the same question over and over and totally shut down or walking out.
B
Therapist: “What has helped you in the past?”
Me: “Running or being with others.” (Or some other coping skills I’ve used that are currently not working.)
Therapist: “Have you gone running today?”
Me: “No, I can’t, I have an injured ankle.”
Therapist: “Have you reached out to anyone?”
Me: “Yes, about 10 people and no one has time.”
Therapist: “Well it seems like you don’t like my suggestions so how can I help you today?”
Me: “I’d like to find some other ways to mange and talk about what is going on. I’d what I knew to do was working I’d just Lee doing it. I’m here because what I’m doing on my own isn’t enough.”
Therapist: “How can I help you today?”
Me: “I don’t know, I don’t understand.”
And around we go.
I have tried listing coping skills that work, but that somehow ends up with “ok go and do that.” Then we sit there silent in therapy.
C
Shortly after being sexually assaulted on a date I was asked, “what has helped in the past?”
Maybe I see it too concretely because I responded “after prior rapes? What? Really? What helped?” Then I’m jarred by recalling past trauma.
D
Therapist: “What has helped you in the past?”
Me: “Please don’t ever ask me that question.”
Therapist pushes. I suggest other options, the therapist pushes, shut down.
I have tried to explain what is more helpful to work on. Let’s talk through the problem brainstorm new ideas, coping tools together, maybe ask “how are grounding skills working?” and my old therapist and I even had a long conversation about state-dependent learning after purposefully triggering me in sessions, but this seems to never stick. It’s always much more helpful.
I have had a therapist explain they are not going to tell me what to do. Good. But if I’m not coming to therapy to work on doing old skills together or learn new skills, or to process trauma, then what am I doing in therapy?
I have tried to explain that the way this plays out in therapy feels like shit. It often gets paired with asking lots of intimate details that are hard for me to give, but I give them, and then just feeling exposed and being asked what has helped in the past.
It feels like going to a doctor with a broken leg and saying, “my leg is broken.” Then the doc details the broken leg, and then the doc looks up and says, “how can I help you?”
It makes sense to ask if I have broken my leg before, what helped them. Like physical therapy and etc. AND THEN the doc helps you get a cast and PT and etc - I’m doing all the work, but the doc is there for a trained purpose all the same.
And I have been told the point of the question is for me to come up with my own ways to cope. To avoid the therapist ever suggesting anything and 100 percent being all client suggestions to cope. Yeah ok cool. But if I could do that, then why therapy? Why not just go do that all on my own and keep doing what I have been doing? If I go to therapy, then I’m trying to do something new. Different. Not just the same that I have been doing.
I grew up with severe childhood neglect, other trauma too, but this whole thing might stir up what it’s like to be having really basic life and death needs as a kid (like needing an inhaler) and get a blank face. Or no one there at all.
Outside of therapy friends give me a hard time because I’m “severely independent.” Therapists have said more Han once I’m “pathologically independent.” I don’t have a chronic issue with being too dependent. Numerous therapists have told me I don’t let them in well enough, I need to rely on them more, etc. and then this pattern happens and it triggers me.
If I ever engage therapy again, I have to find a more productive way to handle these questions. Even if I don’t ever go again, I really want to know what I could change. It’s very likely I’m totally missing the obvious. Or maybe it’s my attitude.
Totally legit question, especially when the therapist is new. I get the point of it. This question annoys the crap out of me and I get anxious whenever it is asked because I have yet to have a single conversation where it goes anywhere productive. With friends and co-workers I’m decent at communication. I get good feedback. But somehow there are a few things in therapy settings that I am not navigating with success.
The is how the conversation tends to go:
A
Therapist: “What has helped you in the past?”
Me: “I don’t know, I’ve never been through this before.” / “I can’t recall.” / “I don’t remember.”
Therapist repeats the question and I repeat some version of this answer, trying to explain I’m really trying to think of something, sometimes resorting to blurting out terrible ways I have tried to cope, only to have the therapist get more irritated... until I’m completely dissociated, or a mess, or apologizing for being an idiot, or I’m angry they won’t stop repeating the same question over and over and totally shut down or walking out.
B
Therapist: “What has helped you in the past?”
Me: “Running or being with others.” (Or some other coping skills I’ve used that are currently not working.)
Therapist: “Have you gone running today?”
Me: “No, I can’t, I have an injured ankle.”
Therapist: “Have you reached out to anyone?”
Me: “Yes, about 10 people and no one has time.”
Therapist: “Well it seems like you don’t like my suggestions so how can I help you today?”
Me: “I’d like to find some other ways to mange and talk about what is going on. I’d what I knew to do was working I’d just Lee doing it. I’m here because what I’m doing on my own isn’t enough.”
Therapist: “How can I help you today?”
Me: “I don’t know, I don’t understand.”
And around we go.
I have tried listing coping skills that work, but that somehow ends up with “ok go and do that.” Then we sit there silent in therapy.
C
Shortly after being sexually assaulted on a date I was asked, “what has helped in the past?”
Maybe I see it too concretely because I responded “after prior rapes? What? Really? What helped?” Then I’m jarred by recalling past trauma.
D
Therapist: “What has helped you in the past?”
Me: “Please don’t ever ask me that question.”
Therapist pushes. I suggest other options, the therapist pushes, shut down.
I have tried to explain what is more helpful to work on. Let’s talk through the problem brainstorm new ideas, coping tools together, maybe ask “how are grounding skills working?” and my old therapist and I even had a long conversation about state-dependent learning after purposefully triggering me in sessions, but this seems to never stick. It’s always much more helpful.
I have had a therapist explain they are not going to tell me what to do. Good. But if I’m not coming to therapy to work on doing old skills together or learn new skills, or to process trauma, then what am I doing in therapy?
I have tried to explain that the way this plays out in therapy feels like shit. It often gets paired with asking lots of intimate details that are hard for me to give, but I give them, and then just feeling exposed and being asked what has helped in the past.
It feels like going to a doctor with a broken leg and saying, “my leg is broken.” Then the doc details the broken leg, and then the doc looks up and says, “how can I help you?”
It makes sense to ask if I have broken my leg before, what helped them. Like physical therapy and etc. AND THEN the doc helps you get a cast and PT and etc - I’m doing all the work, but the doc is there for a trained purpose all the same.
And I have been told the point of the question is for me to come up with my own ways to cope. To avoid the therapist ever suggesting anything and 100 percent being all client suggestions to cope. Yeah ok cool. But if I could do that, then why therapy? Why not just go do that all on my own and keep doing what I have been doing? If I go to therapy, then I’m trying to do something new. Different. Not just the same that I have been doing.
I grew up with severe childhood neglect, other trauma too, but this whole thing might stir up what it’s like to be having really basic life and death needs as a kid (like needing an inhaler) and get a blank face. Or no one there at all.
Outside of therapy friends give me a hard time because I’m “severely independent.” Therapists have said more Han once I’m “pathologically independent.” I don’t have a chronic issue with being too dependent. Numerous therapists have told me I don’t let them in well enough, I need to rely on them more, etc. and then this pattern happens and it triggers me.
If I ever engage therapy again, I have to find a more productive way to handle these questions. Even if I don’t ever go again, I really want to know what I could change. It’s very likely I’m totally missing the obvious. Or maybe it’s my attitude.
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