different approaches to T can mean that the experience is totally different. And I think different approaches suit different people and also different points in recovery.
I mostly ended up with the wrong types at the wrong points of where I was for me. I look back and think :(. Such a shame.
And this is exactly why I think that Ts should be more 'in charge', so I reiterate my point made earlier about hairdressers - of all things. I think the T should be able to say: "My approach is xyz, which is not the best for un-recovered or un-recalled trauma, and therefore what you need is someone whose approach is abc and will do mno with you."
I've had exactly the same experience, Abstract, where I had the wrong types at the wrong time, or the T and I just did not gel.
What does anyone want from therapy? We basically want to heal, in order to function and be happy. Does anyone else want more? Does anyone want less? I'd like to know. But how therapy will get me there - that I don't know. Use this technique? I don't know. Address that issue? I don't know. Talk about it? I don't know. Go for some progressive method that excludes talking? I don't know. What works best - psychoanalysis or CBT? How the hell should I know?
When people go to therapy when they are basically whole (i.e. no trauma), THEN it makes sense to ask them what they want: uuuh, I want to have a more fulfilled life / I want more romance in my marriage / my kids are growing up and I wonder where my life went, etc etc. The majority of people who go for therapy have such issues that to me - from my perspective - seem incredibly minor to the point of being ridiculous (I am NOT making a universal statement here - I am saying that it is my subjective and highly coloured/skewed view). Someone with trauma? What does such a person want? Deal with the trauma and the repercussions (that could be anything from DID to anxiety to ... whatever) and get to the other side and try to have a normal life which mainly revolves around not having stuff constantly intruding. And the repercussions only the T will be able to diagnose correctly. I've had stuff that I was never consciously aware of, but one very astute T spotted.
So, what do I want from therapy?
I want a sharp, compassionate T, who has the insight to see the things I can't even see, to hear more than I can ever tell, and to work with me in a way that will not re-traumatise me or bore me to tears or waste my money.
My very first (and in a way, my only) T was like that, but gave up her practice in the wake of a family tragedy. So, what I want from therapy is not wishful thinking - I've been there, done that, only never got very far in the process. And I've been looking for the same qualities ever since.
I really DO understand that there are people who go for therapy without envisaging an outcome, or even the possibility of a life-after-trauma. But this exactly the point Pirate (or someone else - I can't check now without risking losing all this blather) made when he/she said, 'I know what I want to end-result to look like, but this was not what the T meant " - or something to that effect. Why is the END-RESULT not the answer to give the T?? Why would a T ask you for a road map? And so, when a T diagnoses me with complex trauma, yet asks: What do you want from therapy?, I will scream. Loudly.