DogwoodTree
Platinum Member
When people offer you empathy...that is, they give you a healthy, empathetic response to something you're struggling with...how does that make you feel? What happens for you on the inside?
My T and I recently uncovered a new insight into why I don't feel "connected" with people. (I'm autistic, and this has been a topic of conversation with him many times.) I went on a short vacation about a month ago, and things didn't go well. It was a scary risk for me to spend the money on that vacation, but the timing was connected to a conference I was going to already, and I decided to take the chance. But a couple of particular things about it didn't go well at all, and I was deeply disappointed and frustrated and angry at myself for having spent the money on that trip.
When I got back, my T expressed empathy and all that for my disappointment. He did all the "right" things for how he responded, and then he challenged the story I was telling myself about why I should never go on vacations again and that I had made some really stupid decisions (hindsight is 20/20) and then didn't handle my emotions well after. Clearly, my brain was making this into something worse than it really should have been. But I went on the vacation to do something I had dreamed of doing since I was a kid (30+ years of wanting this), and it didn't happen, and I was deeply disappointed, while also stressed over the money because of an income issue that arose after I paid for the trip. Anyway, my reaction seemed reasonable at the time. And my T said that made sense, considering how much I wanted to do this thing. He didn't challenge my story until after he made that point clear.
And yet, I still felt like his expressions of empathy were empty and pointless and fake, even before he challenged my thoughts about it all.
I know he's supposed to challenge the stories I tell myself. I get that, and I keep going to therapy so that he can continue doing this. I recognize I have to tolerate painful emotions while I shift my cognitions into healthier patterns. That's all well and good. What we realized, though, is that I'm missing the piece that's supposed to make this a little easier...the part about feeling validated by his empathic response before he challenges my stories.
We took some time for him to describe in detail what he felt in response to my experience, how he felt sadness and disappointment along with me. He said that for most people, knowing the other person shares their emotions about an event helps the first person to not feel so alone in it all, to know that someone cares and that their emotions are valid and acknowledged and real. But it doesn't feel like that to me at all...ever. He asked me what I did feel in response to his empathic expressions. I said it felt like he was just being nice, that he was following his training, that it didn't really mean anything and was just a way to reframe invalidation, like wrapping yucky medicine in a candy coating.
So basically, my experience with therapy all along has been...the T is saying the nice-but-empty things to try to get me to reconsider my emotions and feel differently. I kept thinking that was what was supposed to be happening, because I guess that's what it seemed the T was doing on purpose. So it must be okay, and I must be really messed up if this is so painful. There must be something wrong with me, and with my emotions, that I should change my emotions so this doesn't hurt so much.
But...we had started the conversation where I was asking what it means for someone to invalidate your emotions, and how you're supposed to handle that. And he explained that no one should be invalidating my emotions. So basically I came back around and asked him, then why does it feel like you're always trying to talk me out of what I feel? And that's when we dug in and realized I'm not getting the "empathy" part before the "challenge the story" part. He totally backed off of challenging the story around the emotions at that point, and tried to focus solely on helping me feel something comforting from his empathy. But it wasn't working. There's nothing there. It doesn't make sense to me at all. For example...why would people go to a funeral after someone dies? It seems like everyone is having their own emotions within their own, siloed ecosystem, and there's no benefit in doing that around other people. What is it people get out of being around each other when they're sad? It doesn't make sense to me. Why would his sadness about my disappointment help me feel better?
My T and I recently uncovered a new insight into why I don't feel "connected" with people. (I'm autistic, and this has been a topic of conversation with him many times.) I went on a short vacation about a month ago, and things didn't go well. It was a scary risk for me to spend the money on that vacation, but the timing was connected to a conference I was going to already, and I decided to take the chance. But a couple of particular things about it didn't go well at all, and I was deeply disappointed and frustrated and angry at myself for having spent the money on that trip.
When I got back, my T expressed empathy and all that for my disappointment. He did all the "right" things for how he responded, and then he challenged the story I was telling myself about why I should never go on vacations again and that I had made some really stupid decisions (hindsight is 20/20) and then didn't handle my emotions well after. Clearly, my brain was making this into something worse than it really should have been. But I went on the vacation to do something I had dreamed of doing since I was a kid (30+ years of wanting this), and it didn't happen, and I was deeply disappointed, while also stressed over the money because of an income issue that arose after I paid for the trip. Anyway, my reaction seemed reasonable at the time. And my T said that made sense, considering how much I wanted to do this thing. He didn't challenge my story until after he made that point clear.
And yet, I still felt like his expressions of empathy were empty and pointless and fake, even before he challenged my thoughts about it all.
I know he's supposed to challenge the stories I tell myself. I get that, and I keep going to therapy so that he can continue doing this. I recognize I have to tolerate painful emotions while I shift my cognitions into healthier patterns. That's all well and good. What we realized, though, is that I'm missing the piece that's supposed to make this a little easier...the part about feeling validated by his empathic response before he challenges my stories.
We took some time for him to describe in detail what he felt in response to my experience, how he felt sadness and disappointment along with me. He said that for most people, knowing the other person shares their emotions about an event helps the first person to not feel so alone in it all, to know that someone cares and that their emotions are valid and acknowledged and real. But it doesn't feel like that to me at all...ever. He asked me what I did feel in response to his empathic expressions. I said it felt like he was just being nice, that he was following his training, that it didn't really mean anything and was just a way to reframe invalidation, like wrapping yucky medicine in a candy coating.
So basically, my experience with therapy all along has been...the T is saying the nice-but-empty things to try to get me to reconsider my emotions and feel differently. I kept thinking that was what was supposed to be happening, because I guess that's what it seemed the T was doing on purpose. So it must be okay, and I must be really messed up if this is so painful. There must be something wrong with me, and with my emotions, that I should change my emotions so this doesn't hurt so much.
But...we had started the conversation where I was asking what it means for someone to invalidate your emotions, and how you're supposed to handle that. And he explained that no one should be invalidating my emotions. So basically I came back around and asked him, then why does it feel like you're always trying to talk me out of what I feel? And that's when we dug in and realized I'm not getting the "empathy" part before the "challenge the story" part. He totally backed off of challenging the story around the emotions at that point, and tried to focus solely on helping me feel something comforting from his empathy. But it wasn't working. There's nothing there. It doesn't make sense to me at all. For example...why would people go to a funeral after someone dies? It seems like everyone is having their own emotions within their own, siloed ecosystem, and there's no benefit in doing that around other people. What is it people get out of being around each other when they're sad? It doesn't make sense to me. Why would his sadness about my disappointment help me feel better?