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Using Soft Toys To Help Healing?

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barefoot

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I've been seeing my therapist for a couple of years and we're about to start doing "the deeper work" related to my trauma.

I have sometimes dissociated badly during sessions when we start to touch into more difficult things, so we recently had a conversation about how we do the trauma work and manage my tendency to dissociate and reduce potential fall-out. She talked about finding ways to help me to feel safe in my body and suggested I practise doing body scans and to try to find positions that feel safe and grounded, which we could then use in sessions if need be.

Anyway...we then got on to talking about a favourite soft toy that I had as a child, which I used to sleep with.

I don't sleep very well...bouts of insomnia, lots of nightmares, night terrors, sleep walking etc.

At her suggestion, I retrieved the toy from my parent's loft a couple of weeks ago and I've been taking him to bed with me and falling asleep cuddling him.

My therapist's idea seems to be that if I can find ways to feel safe, comforted and soothed, we can use that in sessions if things start to hit the fan. I think she hopes that sleeping with the toy will soothe my trauma-based anxiety when I'm sleeping and that, if I use him when I do the body scans as well (so create more of a sense of safety in those exercises and positions) we can use him as a sort of anchor in sessions when things get difficult.

So...she's suggested that I sleep with him, use him in body scan exercises and take him to sessions every week.

I get why she is suggesting these things. The childhood associations I have with the toy mean that using him as a source of comfort makes sense. I haven't tried doing body scans yet, but I have enjoyed cuddling the toy in bed.

But I know I have some resistance:

1) I feel stupid taking a soft toy to bed at my age
2) I like sitting and cuddling him. But I feel ashamed of that.
3) I've taken him to the last couple of sessions and he's sat on the sofa next to me. I can't bring myself yet to sit and hold him in sessions. It's not that I don't want to...it's more that I feel mortified for wanting to.
4) I think I am partly cautious that this is my therapist's way of trying to sneakily do some inner child work with me. The very thought of doing that work freaks me right out.

I have a really good relationship with my therapist and have told her I feel embarrassed about it and that I don't think I should be sleeping with a soft toy at my age. She has been very lovely, reassuring me that this is about finding a way to comfort/soothe me, not about infantilising me and she keeps telling me how lovely he (the toy) is and how lots of adults sleep with soft toys. I guess maybe I just have to keep having him around so that I get used to it and get over the embarrassment...?

I'm interested to know whether anyone here has got a soft toy they use/cuddle/play with/whatever, if anyone has any tips around overcoming the embarrassment/shame I feel about it (will that just take a bit of time and getting used to it?) and whether people have taken toys to therapy sessions (and, if so, was it helpful?)

Thinking now that perhaps I should have posted this in the Therapy section...?

Thanks!
 
I don't know if it is a thing with the United States or just the people I know, but most every girl I know sleeps with stuffies. I am *cough* 38, and I have always slept with stuffies. So I don't think it is foolish at all, nor anything to be embarrassed about. A lot of my friends and I talk about the fact we sleep with stuffies. My niece brought hers to the hospital both times she gave birth. My friends have told me they have done similar. You might even be surprised to learn that if you asked some of your friends, that they have one (or several too).
x
 
Yes to all your questions. I have several pandas and a flying pig. My husband, who is 61 and an engineer, has recently bought a teddy bear who goes to bed with us every night. I usually have at least three pandas in bed with me. I have no problem with it at all. My old T recognised their value to me, and encouraged me to continue to use them both for comfort and as sources of wisdom. She wrote in a report that I used them " actively and creatively as transitional objects... their characters are compassionate and caring and can provide Sandstone with the comfort that she needs, but cannot generate for herself"

Each of my pandas has a full backstory, and I often think about their lives before we met when I can't sleep. It is a safe, soothing way to spend the time awake. They offer me wisdom as well, each taking a different viewpoint. T often used to ask how the key three would respond to my trauma experiences. Just knowing that one of them would want to bake me a cake allowed me to feel cared for. having both the imaginary and the sensory comfort on tap is enormously important to me.

So, having revealed just how crazy I actually am, I don't know if you are reassured or more worried?
 
Stuffed Calico Kitty. hugging it helps me feel secure when sleeping. Occaisionally I do bring it to therapy when doing some deeper stuff. its there if I feel I need it. I think most of us have a stuffed animal, blanket, ect of some sort. Sometimes 'Adulting' needs the comforts of childhood. Therapists have pretty much seen it all, I'm sure you arent the first who brought a toy to her sessions especially if she mentioned it.
 
Thanks all.

Having read all your responses, I'm thinking that perhaps I posted because I was looking for reassurance and for someone to "normalise" this for me and to...almost give me permission....?
So, thank you for doing all those things.

I think my discomfort around it is related to the fact that I am reluctant to connect with my child self. I don't really know why, but I know some resistance is there. And if I cuddle the soft toy and feel comforted by it...it feels like a child state and not an adult state and that feels...I don't really know what...but strange and somehow unsettling.

I will stick with it and try to get over the embarrassment/discomfort. Think I need to try to remember that it's ok (as a child and as an adult) to want to feel comfort and, if this "transitional object" is soothing and provides comfort, it's stupid not to use that.

The shame is maybe something I will raise with my therapist. Maybe. Hmm...
 
I mean why would you feel embarrassed about having toys if you weren't given this message?

In a world where toys are fine for everyone------Barbies dream home the desire of every 60 year old woman, men in their 50's lemming over the latest Lego set, and so on------would anyone bat an eye over a stuffed animal? I'd argue no.

Society heaps tons of shame and guilt on people for doing things which are perfectly normal/fine.
 
I understand the reluctance to connect with my child self. You have set my thoughts off on an interesting tack, so thank you. I've gone as far as threatening this hypothetical child with what will happen if she comes around here with emotions and making demands on me. Maybe I could let the pandas meet those demands? Interesting, challenging and scary.

If you need any more normalising, there is a whole thread - my pandas are at https://www.myptsd.com/threads/teddy-bears-anonymous.30392/page-7#post-665355
 
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