@Bird33 - you have a new therapist who obviously knows what is happening and as you said in one of your responses, wants you to cut ties completely with this ex-therapist.
I thought when I started reading your posts that it may have been possible to taper off from this ex-therapist but now I don't think so. You are going to linger and long and suffer endlessly if you don't take your own new therapists advice, your husbands advice and obviously your other well balanced friends advice. They are there
on the ground with you !
You did have a plan in place at one point. How is this going? You are concerned about feeling humiliated by your husband and other's who probably mean a great deal to you and possibly
love you far more than your ex-therapist could ever love you. Your family and friends are your real future and probably they are sitting back wondering what they can do to help.
You have to make the decision to either pull out of this situation once and for all and ask these people to support you through this. Or, stay in this relationship and allow yourself to be a slave to this ex-therapist whims and woes. Both of these situations are going to be painful.
The staying in the 'relationship' will be ongoing and uncomfortably painful for who knows how long.
The other decision ...yes you may long for, or remember
'being that special person she chose' and I am sure there have been great moments you will remember for ever.. However, you will be remembering the past, be relieved your not in it anymore probably and have a professional relationship with a therapist who can help you heal from your childhood abuse and this ex-therapist and the problem she has developed into.
When you say this therapist says she loves you?? I don't get that... it sounds very weird really. She punishes you for going away (to France) without you. That's just creepy. She should have been celebrating your ability to maintain yourself and grow into a more whole and healthy person. Not punish you.
What type of 'love' is this therapist on about? I have friends (a couple) that may say to me they love me...from time to time. And that's ok..I know what and why they have said that to me, the context is correct. I've had lovers & partners who have said they loved me. My children tell me they love me. All have been in the context of the relationship. But never a doctor, psydoc or therapist...and I have seen a few. I have discussed the meaning of love with a psydoc from a mental health perspective and probably also with friends etc., It is a very big word
@Bird33. Maybe I am old fashioned but I don't throw it around casually.
I keep reading your responses
@Bird33 to those ppl here on the forum that have actually experienced this problem and successfully exited from their own situations. None have said it was easy or without pain. But all have said emphatically that they are glad they did get out and look back on that time as a learning curve that they don't want to have to experience again. I can understand why too.
May I suggest you take your husband to therapy with you? Would that help? He can possibly listen to your new therapist explain the hold this ex- therapist has on you and maybe why. Your husband sounds like a tolerant sort of person and may gladly assist you, when he understands how 'deep you are in'. Don't feel humiliated by this happening or feel exposed. He already knows you have a problem and you are suffering.
Emotional pain is very real
@Bird33 - I have felt it. I hear you when you say it is hard. It is. I haven't ever had this attachment with a therapist but I have felt profound emotional pain and grief and yes..it's a huge deterrent to actually doing something.
You mentioned you are a professional person in your working life. You are also a mother and a wife. I am sure if 'someone' came into any of these sphere's and began manipulating dependency on your loved one's or those you are responsible for; you would be the first to step up and either stop it from happening or assist in ending it.
Allow your therapist, husband and friends to help you.