I've spent several days, sometimes pondering this, and sometimes doing my utmost to avoid thinking about it.
The message I'm getting here (Forum) overall, is that I'm being aggressive and defensive. That ties in with my original though that I'm using it all as a barrier. I can't mange to convince myself it's
all my fault though.
But when I think "Right, I'll resolve to put all that behind me and engage as fully as possible" I still don't know
how to do therapy , or how to ask T for the information I need in order to be able to do it. Whenever I do ask, it seems to be the wrong thing to do. That's why I thought it must be an issue of language.
I was expecting therapy to be a co-operative venture, but it seems to me that T wants me to be extremely passive and just go along whatever lines she has planned for the week. But if that's the case, why does she so dislike me asking what is on the agenda for the session?
And what am I meant to do with the thoughts, realisations, fears, questions that have come up through the week? Being so aware of the limited time, I skim over them, or ignore them completely to allow time for what has been scheduled. If I do raise anything, we never follow up.
For instance, a few weeks ago I insisted on discussing my fears because my first abuser would be visiting my mother, who lives in our annexe, and I couldn't cope with seeing him.
T said, "Well say you don't want to see him. You do have a choice you know. You could have a prior appointment"
I put it into action, and as I expected the consequences were dire.
My mother asked "Will you be eating with us when xxx comes?" and I replied that I wouldn't. She asked if I was sure, and said it had been a long time since I'd seen him. I said "I really don't want to". At the end of the conversation she said "So I'll cook for all of us"
On the day, I had planned to be out, but having not slept for two nights thought I would be unsafe to drive, and locked myself in the house, in bed. watching TV.
The outcomes were
- that my mother didn't acknowledge my existence for 9 days - she walked past with her head averted,
- and that I didn't answer the door to the support worker who was booked to come that afternoon, as I wasn't sure who was there.
But T hasn't asked about it since, so either she thinks it's fixed, or I shouldn't have raised it to start with.
You've used words here like "challenging her" and "pinning her down"
I used challenge because it's used so often here - I thought it was the right word. What I'm doing is saying "I don't understand"", or "That doesn't compute" or "Why are we doing this"
she probably has a perception of your approach in sessions that she's responding to with a strategy, albeit one that's not clear to you.
That's the whole problem. I have no idea where we are going, so I don't see how it can be a shared journey. I never know what's coming up, or if we are ignoring something we talked about last week because in her mind it's finished, or unimportant or out of sequence.
I want to get some clarity on what is happening, but I can't find a way to ask that she can hear.
We expect people to follow along and are mystified when they lose track or do not follow along. But it's because we haven't TOLD them or communicated how we got there.
It seems to me that T and I are both doing this.
Overall, my strategy is going to be to go to the next two sessions, do my utmost to put all the confusion aside and engage as fully as possible with whatever is presented. I'll pretend everything is OK, and focus on listening actively (by which I mean checking if I understand it, trying to remember what is said, find links to hang it on and look for applications).
I'm not sure if I should raise two "aha's" I've had recently,or whether I'm meant to be keeping them to myself, but I think if I ask, we'll get back into the same old circuit. So for now I'll just art journal them.