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Yes, well, I feel like I ought to talk more detailed about it, but I´m not sure if I can without bursting into tears :( )
patients re tell their trauma through the eyes of an observer.
I also do not feel like I am helped at all by being told to replace a real image with a fake one.
(I know this was posted a while ago, but I read it just now, and I want to answer it since I really can relate to what you are feeling!)She does this in asking, what would you have needed? What would have been better?
This would be the narrative way of working with traumas, and it don't need to exclude that one work with other methods too. :) - But as I explained above I'm more capable of talking about my traumas without having flashbacks or numbing out now than I was before..I too believe that I am helped most when able to detail my experience - exactly as it happened, without any fabricated nonsense - to someone who will be supportive.
Amen to that. :) But I find that quite difficult- to KNOW what I want, need and what will actually help me. Part of my problem. And I do need to trust the therapist sometimes to know "better" than me what will actually help- since my own way of tackling things haven't really worked. (I have struggled with this and fought against my therapist sometimes, and he told me at one point that I decide what I want to work with, and he control the methods, since he is the one who is the expert at those. :D :D :D ) So I think it's a 'relational thing' in therapy, with a good therapist, to find the way forward. A "co-operation-thing", and therefor communication is what it's all about. :) (The HARD part for people like me..)It all comes down to what you need, what you want, and what will actually help you.